They are only used by rustc_lexer, and are not needed elsewhere.
So we move the relevant definitions into rustc_lexer (while the actual
unicode data comes from the unicode-xid crate) and make the rest of
the compiler use it.
Since its inception rustbuild has always worked in three stages: one for
libstd, one for libtest, and one for rustc. These three stages were
architected around crates.io dependencies, where rustc wants to depend
on crates.io crates but said crates don't explicitly depend on libstd,
requiring a sysroot assembly step in the middle. This same logic was
applied for libtest where libtest wants to depend on crates.io crates
(`getopts`) but `getopts` didn't say that it depended on std, so it
needed `std` built ahead of time.
Lots of time has passed since the inception of rustbuild, however,
and we've since gotten to the point where even `std` itself is depending
on crates.io crates (albeit with some wonky configuration). This
commit applies the same logic to the two dependencies that the `test`
crate pulls in from crates.io, `getopts` and `unicode-width`. Over the
many years since rustbuild's inception `unicode-width` was the only
dependency picked up by the `test` crate, so the extra configuration
necessary to get crates building in this crate graph is unlikely to be
too much of a burden on developers.
After this patch it means that there are now only two build phasese of
rustbuild, one for libstd and one for rustc. The libtest/libproc_macro
build phase is all lumped into one now with `std`.
This was originally motivated by rust-lang/cargo#7216 where Cargo was
having to deal with synthesizing dependency edges but this commit makes
them explicit in this repository.
Update rustfmt to 1.4.5
This update includes a bug fix that fixes generating invalid code when formatting an impl block with const generics inside a where clause.
**Changes**
0462008de8...1de58ce46d
Do not emit JSON dumps of diagnostic codes
This decouples the error index generator from libsyntax for the most part (though it still depends on librustdoc for the markdown parsing and generation).
Fixes#34588
This commit changes the lock file format of this repository to an
experimental format that isn't rolled out by default in Cargo but is
intended to eventually become the default. The new format moves
information around and compresses the lock file a bit. The intention of
the new format is to reduce the amount of git merge conflicts that
happen in a repository, with rust-lang/rust being a prime candidate for
testing this.
The new format wille ventually become the default but for now it is
off-by-default in Cargo, but Cargo will preserve the format if it sees
it. Since we always build with a beta version of Cargo for the
rust-lang/rust repository it should be safe to go ahead and change the
lock file format here and everyone building this repository will
automatically pick it up.
It's intended that we'll evaluate this lock file format in the
rust-lang/rust repository to see if it reduces the number of perceived
merge conflicts for changes that touch the lock file. This will in turn
help inform the development of the feature in Cargo and whether we
choose to stabilize this and turn it on by default.
Note that this commit does not actually change the contents of the lock
file in terms of a resolution graph, it simply reencodes the lock file
with a new format.
This commit updates the `backtrace` crate from 0.3.34 to 0.3.35. The
[included set of changes][changes] for this update mostly includes some
gimli-related improvements (not relevant for the standard library) but
critically includes a fix for rust-lang/backtrace-rs#230. The standard
library will not aqcuire a session-local lock whenever a backtrace is
generated on Windows to allow external synchronization with the
`backtrace` crate itself, allowing `backtrace` to be safely used while
other threads may be panicking.
[changes]: https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/compare/0.3.34...0.3.35
This drops the parking_lot dependency; the ReentrantMutex type appeared
to be unused (at least, no compilation failures occurred).
This is technically a possible change in behavior of its users, as
lock() would wait on other threads releasing their guards, but since we
didn't actually remove any threading or such in this code, it appears
that we never used that behavior (the behavior change is only noticeable
if the type previously was used in two threads, in a single thread
ReentrantMutex is useless).
bump rand in libcore/liballoc test suites
This pulls in the fix for https://github.com/rust-random/rand/issues/779, which trips Miri when running these test suites.
`SmallRng` (formerly used by libcore) is no longer built by default, it needs a feature gate. I opted to switch to `StdRng` instead. Or should I enable the feature gate?
Deduplicate rustc_demangle in librustc_codegen_llvm
This commit removes the crates.io dependency of `rustc-demangle` from
`rustc_codegen_llvm`. This crate is actually already pulled in to part
of the `librustc_driver` build and with the upcoming pipelining
implementation in Cargo it causes build issues if `rustc-demangle` is
left to its own devices.
This is not currently required, but once pipelining is enabled for
rustc's own build it will be required to build correctly.
This commit removes the crates.io dependency of `rustc-demangle` from
`rustc_codegen_llvm`. This crate is actually already pulled in to part
of the `librustc_driver` build and with the upcoming pipelining
implementation in Cargo it causes build issues if `rustc-demangle` is
left to its own devices.
This is not currently required, but once pipelining is enabled for
rustc's own build it will be required to build correctly.
Some fixes for i686-msvc and Windows have landed on the `backtrace`
crate but hadn't made their way here yet. Let's update that and see if
it passes CI.
Last two commits bumped rustc-ap-* crates which also transitively
updated rustc_data_structures. That crate enables the "nightly"
whereas Cargo's dep does not hence why we need to unify the features
to deduplicate the artifacts.
bump crossbeam-epoch dependency
The new crossbeam-epoch release depends on a memoffset with a whole bunch of soundness holes fixed.
The old memoffset is still indirectly depended on (at least) by rustc-rayon, though -- a crate that looks rather unmaintained (no change in more than a year).