[CI] Use the latest Python available on Windows
This PR changes our Windows CI to always use the latest Python interpreter available in the GHA tool cache instead of hardcoding Python 3.7.6. This is needed because occasionally GitHub bumps the installed version, deleting the previous one.
This fixes the current GHA outage we're having. I fully expect the outage to propagate to Azure Pipelines in the coming days if we don't merge this, as both GHA and Azure use the same underlying image. Once the PR is merged we can re-enabled the double-gating.
r? @Mark-Simulacrum
This commit changes our Windows CI to always use the latest Python
interpreter available in the GHA tool cache instead of hardcoding Python
3.7.6. This is needed because occasionally GitHub bumps the installed
version, deleting the previous one.
The liveness dataflow analysis now lives in
`librustc_mir/dataflow/impls/liveness.rs`. The borrow-checker has an
abstraction around of "defs" and "uses" that I've made module private. I
would have moved it to `util/def_use.rs`, but there's a slightly
different abstraction used for copy propagation with that name.
reword "possible candidate" import suggestion
This suggestion has always read a bit awkwardly to me, particularly the "possible better candidate" variant.
This commit rewords the suggestion to be more concise and mention the kind of the suggested item. There isn't a nice way to label individual suggestions, so I opted to use "items" in the case of multiple suggestions.
Allow a few warnings.
On Windows, these types were causing warnings to be emitted during the
build. These types are allowed to not have idiomatic names, so the
warning should be supressed.
use hex for pointers in Miri error messages
Also refine vtable error message: distinguish between "drop fn does not point to a function" and "drop fn points to a function with the wrong signature".
Grammar
I've split this into individual changes so that people can veto individually. I'm not attached to most of them.
`zeroes` vs. `zeros` is why I took the effort to run this through app.grammarly (which disappointingly didn't even notice).
On Windows, these types were causing warnings to be emitted during the
build. These types are allowed to not have idiomatic names, so the
warning should be supressed.
Ensure that `./x.py doc --stage 0 src/libstd` works via CI
This was split off from #71645, which recommends that users first try building `libstd` docs with the bootstrap `rustdoc`. This should work in most cases, but will fail if we start using a very recent `rustdoc` feature outside a `#[cfg(not(bootstrap))]`.
It would be very nice to guarantee that `./x.py doc --stage 0 src/libstd` works, since it allows documentation changes to be rendered locally without needing to build the compiler. However, it may put too big a burden on `rustdoc` developers who presumably want to dogfood new features.
The App Store performs certain sanity checks on bitcode, including that
an acceptable set of command line arguments was used when compiling a
given module. For Rust code to be distributed on the app store with
bitcode rustc must pretend to have the same command line arguments.
At this time Apple recommends Bitcode be included for iOS apps, and
requires it for tvOS. It is unlikely that a developer would want to
disable bitcode when building for these targets, yet by default it will
not be generated. This presents a papercut for developers on those
platforms.
Introduces a new TargetOption boolean key for specific triples to
indicate that bitcode should be generated, even if cargo attempts to
optimise with -Cembed-bitcode=no.
`check_match` creates a new `TypedArena` for every call to
`create_and_enter`. DHAT tells me that each `TypedArena` typically is
barely used, with typically a single allocation per arena.
This commit moves the `TypedArena` creation outwards a bit, into
`check_match`, and then passes it into `create_and_enter`. This reduces
the number of arenas created by about 4-5x, for a very small perf win.
(Moving the arena creation further outwards is hard because
`check_match` is a query.)
Prevent compiler stack overflow for deeply recursive code
I was unable to write a test that
1. runs in under 1s
2. overflows on my machine without this patch
The following reproduces the issue, but I don't think it's sensible to include a test that takes 30s to compile. We can now easily squash newly appearing overflows by the strategic insertion of calls to `ensure_sufficient_stack`.
```rust
// compile-pass
#![recursion_limit="1000000"]
macro_rules! chain {
(EE $e:expr) => {$e.sin()};
(RECURSE $i:ident $e:expr) => {chain!($i chain!($i chain!($i chain!($i $e))))};
(Z $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE EE $e)};
(Y $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE Z $e)};
(X $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE Y $e)};
(A $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE X $e)};
(B $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE A $e)};
(C $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE B $e)};
// causes overflow on x86_64 linux
// less than 1 second until overflow on test machine
// after overflow has been fixed, takes 30s to compile :/
(D $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE C $e)};
(E $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE D $e)};
(F $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE E $e)};
// more than 10 seconds
(G $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE F $e)};
(H $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE G $e)};
(I $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE H $e)};
(J $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE I $e)};
(K $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE J $e)};
(L $e:expr) => {chain!(RECURSE L $e)};
}
fn main() {
let x = chain!(D 42.0_f32);
}
```
fixes#55471fixes#41884fixes#40161fixes#34844fixes#32594
cc @alexcrichton @rust-lang/compiler
I looked at all code that checks the recursion limit and inserted stack growth calls where appropriate.