`cp -a` is a GNU extension. Use an alternate combinaison of POSIX options
(`-PRp`) that do nearly the same.
The difference is `-a` will preserve context, links and xattr attributes,
whereas `-p` not. But as we use it only for copy a file, there is no
difference in the current context.
This is a patch for #22291.
PLEASE_BENCH=1 adds --bench to the arguments passed to the executable to be tested. At the moment, compiletest does not accept a --bench argument, because it is not needed for any test in src/test/, even the tests in src/test/bench do not use #[bench].
I have updated the makefile to only add the --bench flag for crate tests. I do not think that changing compiletest add --bench to the run arguments of all compile tests makes sense, because it would mess up tests which check command line arguments. Also the bench option can be added as comment in a compile test as well.
Highlights:
* Adds an 'uninstall.sh' script to `/usr/local/lib/rustlib/uninstall.sh`, the path to which is printed during installation.
* Components can be deselected during install, like `install.sh --without=rust-docs`.
* Components can be listed with `install.sh --list-components`.
* Vastly reduces spew during install (but supporting a `--verbose` option).
Typicall install run looks like:
```
brian@brianX1:~/dev/multirust⟫ sudo ./install.sh
[sudo] password for brian:
install: creating uninstall script at /usr/local/lib/rustlib/uninstall.sh
install: installing component 'rustc'
install: installing component 'cargo'
install: installing component 'rust-docs'
Rust is ready to roll.
```
Needs to be merged right before corresponding PRs to cargo and rust-packaging.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/21117
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/20283
`cp -a` is a GNU extension. Use an alternate combinaison of POSIX options
(`-PRp`) that do nearly the same.
The difference is `-a` will preserve context, links and xattr attributes,
whereas `-p` not. But as we use it only for copy a file, there is no
difference in the current context.
This restructures tidy.py to walk the tree itself,
and improves performance considerably by not loading entire
files into buffers for licenseck.
Splits build rules into 'tidy', 'tidy-basic', 'tidy-binaries',
'tidy-errors', 'tidy-features'.
This adds a new lexer/parser combo for the entire Rust language can be generated with with flex and bison, taken from my project at https://github.com/bleibig/rust-grammar. There is also a testing script that runs the generated parser with all *.rs files in the repository (except for tests in compile-fail or ones that marked as "ignore-test" or "ignore-lexer-test"). If you have flex and bison installed, you can run these tests using the new "check-grammar" make target.
This does not depend on or interact with the existing testing code in the grammar, which only provides and tests a lexer specification.
OS X users should take note that the version of bison that comes with the Xcode toolchain (2.3) is too old to work with this grammar, they need to download and install version 3.0 or later.
The parser builds up an S-expression-based AST, which can be displayed by giving the "-v" argument to parser-lalr (normally it only gives output on error). It is only a rough approximation of what is parsed and doesn't capture every detail and nuance of the program.
Hopefully this should be sufficient for issue #2234, or at least a good starting point.
The regex library was largely used for non-critical aspects of the compiler and
various external tooling. The library at this point is duplicated with its
out-of-tree counterpart and as such imposes a bit of a maintenance overhead as
well as compile time hit for the compiler itself.
The last major user of the regex library is the libtest library, using regexes
for filters when running tests. This removal means that the filtering has gone
back to substring matching rather than using regexes.
Initial support for aarch64-linux-android (#18920)
- Add new configuration files
- Modify some options to compile & link succesfully.
(PIE, disable tls on jemalloc, modify some external function linkage, ..)
- To build, refer to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/wiki/Doc-building-for-android.
(tested with platform=21 and toolchain=aarch64-linux-android-4.9)
This does the bare minimum to make registration of error codes work again. After this patch, every call to `span_err!` with an error code gets that error code validated against a list in that crate and a new tidy script `errorck.py` validates that no error codes are duplicated globally.
There are further improvements to be made yet, detailed in #19624.
r? @nikomatsakis
Removed use of unused LDPATH variable on Windows as is done for other platforms, and added GCC flag to ensure MINGW's ANSI compatible STDIO functions are used wherever available (required by jemalloc).
Without these changes it ends up setting the PATH twice, and the second time the PATH begins with `:` which is invalid. Also the regular msvcrt printf-like functions would be used which don't understand stuff like %hhd and %z which jemalloc uses.
This change ought not to make any difference to the output but it fixes the build process for me since at least my build environment couldn't handle that broken path caused by LDPATH being empty.
The script is intended as a tool for doing every sort of verifications amenable to Rustdoc's HTML output. For example, link checkers would go to this script. It already parses HTML into a document tree form (with a slight caveat), so future tests can make use of it.
As an example, relevant `rustdoc-*` run-make tests have been updated to use `htmldocck.py` and got their `verify.sh` removed. In the future they may go to a dedicated directory with htmldocck running by default. The detailed explanation of test scripts is provided as a docstring of htmldocck.
cc #19723
The script is intended as a tool for doing every sort of verifications
amenable to Rustdoc's HTML output. For example, link checkers would go
to this script. It already parses HTML into a document tree form (with
a slight caveat), so future tests can make use of it.
As an example, relevant `rustdoc-*` run-make tests have been updated
to use `htmldocck.py` and got their `verify.sh` removed. In the future
they may go to a dedicated directory with htmldocck running by default.
The detailed explanation of test scripts is provided as a docstring of
htmldocck.
cc #19723
In accordance with [collections reform part 2][rfc] this macro has been moved to
an external [bitflags crate][crate] which is [available though
crates.io][cratesio]. Inside the standard distribution the macro has been moved
to a crate called `rustc_bitflags` for current users to continue using.
[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0509-collections-reform-part-2.md
[crate]: https://github.com/rust-lang/bitflags
[cratesio]: http://crates.io/crates/bitflags
The major user of `bitflags!` in terms of a public-facing possibly-stable API
today is the `FilePermissions` structure inside of `std::io`. This user,
however, will likely no longer use `bitflags!` after I/O reform has landed. To
prevent breaking APIs today, this structure remains as-is.
Current users of the `bitflags!` macro should add this to their `Cargo.toml`:
bitflags = "0.1"
and this to their crate root:
#[macro_use] extern crate bitflags;
Due to the removal of a public macro, this is a:
[breaking-change]
Originally, this was going to be discussed and revisted, however I've been working on this for months, and a rebase on top of master was about 1 flight's worth of work so I just went ahead and did it.
This gets you as far as being able to target powerpc with, eg:
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/ x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin/rustc -C linker=powerpc-linux-gnu-gcc --target powerpc-unknown-linux-gnu hello.rs
Would really love to get this out before 1.0. r? @alexcrichton