Commit Graph

530 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Valerii Lashmanov
0600b178aa SsoHashSet/SsoHashMap API greatly expanded
Now both provide almost complete API of their non-SSO counterparts.
2020-09-26 14:30:05 -05:00
Valerii Lashmanov
5c224a484d MiniSet/MiniMap moved and renamed into SsoHashSet/SsoHashMap
It is a more descriptive name and with upcoming changes
there will be nothing "mini" about them.
2020-09-26 14:30:05 -05:00
est31
12187b7f86 Remove unused #[allow(...)] statements from compiler/ 2020-09-26 01:25:55 +02:00
Jonas Schievink
6f3da3d53f
Rollup merge of #77121 - duckymirror:html-root-url, r=jyn514
Updated html_root_url for compiler crates

Closes #77103

r? @jyn514
2020-09-25 02:29:45 +02:00
Erik Hofmayer
138a2e5eaa /nightly/nightly-rustc 2020-09-23 21:51:56 +02:00
Erik Hofmayer
dd66ea2d3d Updated html_root_url for compiler crates 2020-09-23 21:14:43 +02:00
Andreas Jonson
6586c37bec Move MiniSet to data_structures
remove the need for T to be copy from MiniSet as was done for MiniMap
2020-09-23 08:09:16 +02:00
bors
6d3acf5129 Auto merge of #76928 - lcnr:opaque-types-cache, r=tmandry
cache types during normalization

partially fixes #75992

reduces the following test from 14 to 3 seconds locally.

cc `@Mark-Simulacrum` would it make sense to add that test to `perf`?
```rust
#![recursion_limit="2048"]
#![type_length_limit="112457564"]

pub async fn h0(v: &String, x: &u64) { println!("{} {}", v, x) }
pub async fn h1(v: &String, x: &u64) { h0(v, x).await }
pub async fn h2(v: &String, x: &u64) { h1(v, x).await }
pub async fn h3(v: &String, x: &u64) { h2(v, x).await }
pub async fn h4(v: &String, x: &u64) { h3(v, x).await }
pub async fn h5(v: &String, x: &u64) { h4(v, x).await }
pub async fn h6(v: &String, x: &u64) { h5(v, x).await }
pub async fn h7(v: &String, x: &u64) { h6(v, x).await }
pub async fn h8(v: &String, x: &u64) { h7(v, x).await }
pub async fn h9(v: &String, x: &u64) { h8(v, x).await }

pub async fn h10(v: &String, x: &u64) { h9(v, x).await }
pub async fn h11(v: &String, x: &u64) { h10(v, x).await }
pub async fn h12(v: &String, x: &u64) { h11(v, x).await }
pub async fn h13(v: &String, x: &u64) { h12(v, x).await }
pub async fn h14(v: &String, x: &u64) { h13(v, x).await }
pub async fn h15(v: &String, x: &u64) { h14(v, x).await }
pub async fn h16(v: &String, x: &u64) { h15(v, x).await }
pub async fn h17(v: &String, x: &u64) { h16(v, x).await }
pub async fn h18(v: &String, x: &u64) { h17(v, x).await }
pub async fn h19(v: &String, x: &u64) { h18(v, x).await }

macro_rules! async_recursive {
    (29, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(28, $inner) }.await };
    (28, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(27, $inner) }.await };
    (27, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(26, $inner) }.await };
    (26, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(25, $inner) }.await };
    (25, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(24, $inner) }.await };
    (24, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(23, $inner) }.await };
    (23, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(22, $inner) }.await };
    (22, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(21, $inner) }.await };
    (21, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(20, $inner) }.await };
    (20, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(19, $inner) }.await };

    (19, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(18, $inner) }.await };
    (18, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(17, $inner) }.await };
    (17, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(16, $inner) }.await };
    (16, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(15, $inner) }.await };
    (15, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(14, $inner) }.await };
    (14, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(13, $inner) }.await };
    (13, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(12, $inner) }.await };
    (12, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(11, $inner) }.await };
    (11, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(10, $inner) }.await };
    (10, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(9, $inner) }.await };

    (9, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(8, $inner) }.await };
    (8, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(7, $inner) }.await };
    (7, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(6, $inner) }.await };
    (6, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(5, $inner) }.await };
    (5, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(4, $inner) }.await };
    (4, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(3, $inner) }.await };
    (3, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(2, $inner) }.await };
    (2, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(1, $inner) }.await };
    (1, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(0, $inner) }.await };
    (0, $inner:expr) => { async { h19(&String::from("owo"), &0).await; $inner }.await };
}

async fn f() {
    async_recursive!(14, println!("hello"));
}

fn main() {
    let _ = f();
}
```
r? `@eddyb` requires a perf run.
2020-09-22 22:52:07 +00:00
bors
b01326ab03 Auto merge of #76680 - Julian-Wollersberger:nongeneric_ensure_sufficient_stack, r=jyn514
Make `ensure_sufficient_stack()` non-generic, using cargo-llvm-lines

Inspired by [this blog post](https://blog.mozilla.org/nnethercote/2020/08/05/how-to-speed-up-the-rust-compiler-some-more-in-2020/) from `@nnethercote,` I used [cargo-llvm-lines](https://github.com/dtolnay/cargo-llvm-lines/) on the rust compiler itself, to improve it's compile time. This PR contains only one low-hanging fruit, but I also want to share some measurements.

The function `ensure_sufficient_stack()` was monomorphized 1500 times, and with it the `stacker` and `psm` crates, for a total of 1.5% of all llvm IR lines. With some trickery I convert the generic closure into a dynamic one, and thus all that code is only monomorphized once.

# Measurements
Getting these numbers took some fiddling with CLI flags and I [modified](https://github.com/Julian-Wollersberger/cargo-llvm-lines/blob/master/src/main.rs#L115) cargo-llvm-lines to read from a folder instead of invoking cargo. Commands I used:
```
./x.py clean
RUSTFLAGS="--emit=llvm-ir -C link-args=-fuse-ld=lld -Z self-profile=profile" CARGOFLAGS_BOOTSTRAP="-Ztimings" RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1 ./x.py build -i --stage 1 library/std

# Then manually copy all .ll files into a folder I hardcoded in cargo-llvm-lines in main.rs#L115
cd ../cargo-llvm-lines
cargo run llvm-lines
```

The result is this list (see [first 500 lines](https://github.com/Julian-Wollersberger/cargo-llvm-lines/blob/master/llvm-lines-rustc-before.txt) ), before the change:
```
  Lines            Copies        Function name
  -----            ------        -------------
  16894211 (100%)  58417 (100%)  (TOTAL)
   2223855 (13.2%)   502 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::get_query_impl::{{closure}}
   1331918 (7.9%)   1287 (2.2%)  hashbrown::raw::RawTable<T>::reserve_rehash
    774434 (4.6%)  12043 (20.6%) core::ptr::drop_in_place
    294170 (1.7%)    499 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::dep_graph::graph::DepGraph<K>::with_task_impl
    245410 (1.5%)   1552 (2.7%)  psm::on_stack::with_on_stack
    210311 (1.2%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_target::spec::load_specific
    200962 (1.2%)    513 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::get_query_impl
    190704 (1.1%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::query::<impl rustc_middle::ty::context::TyCtxt>::alloc_self_profile_query_strings
    180272 (1.1%)    468 (0.8%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::load_from_disk_and_cache_in_memory
    177396 (1.1%)    114 (0.2%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::force_query_impl
    161134 (1.0%)    445 (0.8%)  rustc_query_system::dep_graph::graph::DepGraph<K>::with_anon_task
    141551 (0.8%)    186 (0.3%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::incremental_verify_ich
    110191 (0.7%)      7 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::context::_DERIVE_rustc_serialize_Decodable_D_FOR_TypeckResults::<impl rustc_serialize::serialize::Decodable<__D> for rustc_middle::ty::context::TypeckResults>::decode::{{closure}}
    108590 (0.6%)    420 (0.7%)  core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
     88488 (0.5%)     21 (0.0%)  rustc_query_system::dep_graph::graph::DepGraph<K>::try_mark_previous_green
     86368 (0.5%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::query::stats::query_stats
     85654 (0.5%)   3973 (6.8%)  <&T as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
     84475 (0.5%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::query::Queries::try_collect_active_jobs
     81220 (0.5%)    862 (1.5%)  <hashbrown::raw::RawIterHash<T> as core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator>::next
     77636 (0.5%)     54 (0.1%)  core::slice::sort::recurse
     66484 (0.4%)    461 (0.8%)  <hashbrown::raw::RawIter<T> as core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator>::next
```

All `.ll` files together had 4.4GB. After my change they had 4.2GB. So a few percent less code LLVM has to process. Hurray!
Sadly, I couldn't measure an actual wall-time improvement. Watching YouTube while compiling added to much noise...

Here is the top of the list after the change:
```
  16460866 (100%)  58341 (100%)  (TOTAL)
   1903085 (11.6%)   504 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::get_query_impl::{{closure}}
   1331918 (8.1%)   1287 (2.2%)  hashbrown::raw::RawTable<T>::reserve_rehash
    777796 (4.7%)  12031 (20.6%) core::ptr::drop_in_place
    551462 (3.4%)   1519 (2.6%)  rustc_data_structures::stack::ensure_sufficient_stack::{{closure}}
```
Note that the total was reduced by 430 000 lines and `psm::on_stack::with_on_stack` has disappeared. Instead `rustc_data_structures::stack::ensure_sufficient_stack::{{closure}}` appeared. I'm confused about that one, but it seems to consist of inlined calls to `rustc_query_system::*` stuff.

Further note the other two big culprits in this list: `rustc_query_system` and `hashbrown`. These two are monomorphized many times, the query system summing to more than 20% of all lines, not even counting code that's probably inlined elsewhere.
Assuming compile times scale linearly with llvm-lines, that means a possible 20% compile time reduction.

Reducing eg. `get_query_impl` would probably need a major refactoring of the qery system though. _Everything_ in there is generic over multiple types, has associated types and passes generic Self arguments by value. Which means you can't simply make things `dyn`.

---------------------------------------
This PR is a small step to make rustc compile faster and thus make contributing to rustc less painful. Nonetheless I love Rust and I find the work around rustc fascinating :)
2020-09-21 17:32:57 +00:00
Ralf Jung
e177757a04
Rollup merge of #76963 - est31:remove_static_assert, r=oli-obk
Remove unused static_assert macro
2020-09-21 10:40:47 +02:00
Ralf Jung
048866bd6b
Rollup merge of #76958 - est31:ns, r=oli-obk
Replace manual as_nanos and as_secs_f64 reimplementations
2020-09-21 10:40:39 +02:00
Julian Wollersberger
53aaa1e532 To avoid monomorphizing psm::on_stack::with_on_stack 1500 times, I made a change in stacker to wrap the callback in dyn. 2020-09-20 19:07:52 +02:00
Ralf Jung
50d56bc774
Rollup merge of #76825 - lcnr:array-windows-apply, r=varkor
use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler

I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.
2020-09-20 12:08:26 +02:00
Ralf Jung
4322e1b92d
Rollup merge of #76821 - est31:remove_redundant_nightly_features, r=oli-obk,Mark-Simulacrum
Remove redundant nightly features

Removes a bunch of redundant/outdated nightly features. The first commit removes a `core_intrinsics` use for which a stable wrapper has been provided since. The second commit replaces the `const_generics` feature with `min_const_generics` which might get stabilized this year. The third commit is the result of a trial/error run of removing every single feature and then adding it back if compile failed. A bunch of unused features are the result that the third commit removes.
2020-09-20 12:08:22 +02:00
est31
c2dad1c6b9 Remove unused static_assert macro 2020-09-20 11:40:51 +02:00
est31
43193dcb88 Use as_secs_f64 in profiling.rs 2020-09-20 10:27:14 +02:00
Bastian Kauschke
3435683fd5 use array_windows instead of windows in the compiler 2020-09-20 08:11:05 +02:00
Bastian Kauschke
1146c39da7 cache types during normalization 2020-09-19 17:27:13 +02:00
Mara Bos
1e2dba1e7c Use T::BITS instead of size_of::<T> * 8. 2020-09-19 06:54:42 +02:00
est31
ebdea01143 Remove redundant #![feature(...)] 's from compiler/ 2020-09-17 07:58:45 +02:00
est31
4fe6ca3789 Replace const_generics feature gate with min_const_generics
The latter is on the path to stabilization.
2020-09-17 07:08:53 +02:00
Andreas Jonson
b8752fff19 update the version of itertools and parking_lot
this is to avoid compiling multiple version of the crates in rustc
2020-09-12 08:26:53 +02:00
Flying-Toast
2799aec6ab Capitalize safety comments 2020-09-08 22:37:18 -04:00
Scott McMurray
59e37332b0 Add BREAK too, and improve the comments 2020-09-04 16:28:23 -07:00
Scott McMurray
fac272688e Use ops::ControlFlow in graph::iterate 2020-09-04 01:45:10 -07:00
bors
51f79b618d Auto merge of #76233 - cuviper:unhasher, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Avoid rehashing Fingerprint as a map key

This introduces a no-op `Unhasher` for map keys that are already hash-
like, for example `Fingerprint` and its wrapper `DefPathHash`. For these
we can directly produce the `u64` hash for maps. The first use of this
is `def_path_hash_to_def_id: Option<UnhashMap<DefPathHash, DefId>>`.

cc #56308
r? @eddyb
2020-09-02 22:16:22 +00:00
Josh Stone
469ca379d6 Avoid rehashing Fingerprint as a map key
This introduces a no-op `Unhasher` for map keys that are already hash-
like, for example `Fingerprint` and its wrapper `DefPathHash`. For these
we can directly produce the `u64` hash for maps. The first use of this
is `def_path_hash_to_def_id: Option<UnhashMap<DefPathHash, DefId>>`.
2020-09-01 18:27:02 -07:00
marmeladema
1b650d0fea datastructures: replace lazy_static by SyncLazy from std 2020-09-01 22:06:47 +01:00
marmeladema
68500ffacb datastructures: replace once_cell crate with an impl from std 2020-08-30 20:06:14 +01:00
mark
9e5f7d5631 mv compiler to compiler/ 2020-08-30 18:45:07 +03:00