test on windows-gnu target
The windows-gnu target for an open-source windows toolchain is slightly different in some low-level aspects of the standard library, such as TLS handling. So let's separately ensure that this works. (Also tests a 64bit windows target on a windows host, which we didn't have so far.)
Improve miri_print_borrow_stacks
Per post-merge review on https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/2322
* `miri_print_stacks` renamed to `miri_print_borrow_stacks`
* A bit more details in docs, clarified how unstable these functions are meant to be
* Print an `unknown_bottom` if one exists
Open question: Currently `miri_get_alloc_id` gets the expected `AllocId` for `Wildcard` pointers, but for pointers with no provenance, the function reports UB and halts the interpreter. That's definitely wrong. But what _should_ we do? Is it reasonable to check if the pointer has `None` provenance and try to get an `AllocId` for its address? That still leaves us with a failure path, which in this case might be best-handled as an ICE? I'm just not sure that changing the return type of `miri_get_alloc_id` to `Option` is a win because it complicates all normal uses of this.
update Miri
I had to use a hacked version of josh to create this, so let's be careful with merging this and maybe wait a bit to see if the josh issue becomes more clear. But the history looks good to me, we are not adding duplicates of rustc commits that were previously mirrored to Miri.
Also I want to add some cross-testing of Miri in x.py.
Truncate thread names on Linux and Apple targets
These targets have system limits on the thread names, 16 and 64 bytes
respectively, and `pthread_setname_np` returns an error if the name is
longer. However, we're not in a context that can propagate errors when
we call this, and we used to implicitly truncate on Linux with `prctl`,
so now we manually truncate these names ahead of time.
r? ``````@thomcc``````
rustc: Use `unix_sigpipe` instead of `rustc_driver::set_sigpipe_handler`
This is the first (known) step towards starting to use `unix_sigpipe` in the wild. Eventually, `rustc_driver::set_sigpipe_handler` can be removed and all clients can use `unix_sigpipe` instead.
For now we just start using `unix_sigpipe` in one place: `rustc` itself.
It is easy to manually verify this change. If you remove `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]` and run `./x.py build` you will get an ICE when you do `./build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage1/bin/rustc --help | false`. Add back `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]` and the ICE disappears again.
PR that added `set_sigpipe_handler`: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/49606
Tracking issue for `unix_sigpipe`: #97889
Not sure exactly how to label this PR. Going with T-libs for now since this is a T-libs feature.
````@rustdoc```` labels +T-libs
Support raw-dylib functions being used inside inlined functions
Fixes#102714
Issue Details:
When generating the import library for `raw-dylib` symbols, we currently only use the functions and variables declared within the current crate. This works fine if all crates are static libraries or `rlib`s as the generated import library will be contained in the static library or `rlib` itself, but if a dependency is a dynamic library AND the use of a `raw-dylib` function or variable is inlined or part of a generic instantiation then the current crate won't see its dependency's import library and so linking will fail.
Fix Details:
Instead, when we generate the import library for a `dylib` or `bin` crate, we will now generate it for the symbols both for the current crate and all upstream crates. We do this in two steps so that the import library for the current crate is passed into the linker first, thus it is preferred if there are any ambiguous symbols.
`TerminatorCodegenHelper` has three methods `llblock`, `llbb`, and
`lltarget`. They're all similar, but the names given no indication of
the differences.
This commit renames `lltarget` as `llbb_with_landing_pad`, and `llblock`
as `llbb_with_cleanup`. These aren't fantastic names, but at least it's
now clear that `llbb` is the lowest-level of the three and the other two
wrap it.
Ensure:
- builders always have a `bx` suffix;
- backend basic blocks always have an `llbb` suffix,
- paired builders and basic blocks have consistent prefixes.
rustdoc: Use `unix_sigpipe` instead of `rustc_driver::set_sigpipe_handler`
Do what was already done for `rustc` in #102587, namely start using `unix_sigpipe` instead of `rustc_driver::set_sigpipe_handler`.
After this has been merged, we can completely remove `rustc_driver::set_sigpipe_handler`.
PR that added `set_sigpipe_handler`: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/49606
Tracking issue for `unix_sigpipe`: #97889
Verification of this change
---------------------------
1. Remove `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]`
1. Run `./x.py build`
1. Run `./build/aarch64-apple-darwin/stage1/bin/rustdoc --help | false`
1. Observe ICE
1. Add back `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]`
1. Run `./x.py build`
1. Run `./build/aarch64-apple-darwin/stage1/bin/rustdoc --help | false`
1. Observe ICE fixed
``@rustbot`` labels +T-rustdoc
rustdoc: remove redundant CSS `a.test-arrow:hover`
In 4b402dbe69, when this rule was added, it was overriding a rule that made all links in docblock get an underline when hovered. This became redundant when, after reordering the rules, 7585632052 changed the pro-underline rule to exclude the test-arrow link anyway.
Delay span bug when we can't map lifetimes back in `collect_trait_impl_trait_tys`
When a lifetime is late-bound in a trait signature, but early-bound in an impl signature, we already emit an error -- however, we also ICE in `collect_trait_impl_trait_tys`, so just delay a bug here.
Fixes#103407
Don't ICE when reporting borrowck errors involving regions from `anonymous_lifetime_in_impl_trait`
The issue here is that when we have:
```
trait Trait<'a> { .. }
fn foo(arg: impl Trait) { .. }
```
The anonymous lifetime `'_` that we generate for `arg: impl Trait` doesn't end up in the argument type (which is a param) but in a where-clause of the function, in a predicate whose self type is that param ty.
Fixes#101660
r? ``@cjgillot``
Start using `unix_sigpipe` instead of
`rustc_driver::set_sigpipe_handler`.
After this has been merged, we can completely remove
`rustc_driver::set_sigpipe_handler`.
Verification of this change
---------------------------
1. Remove `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]`
1. Run `./x.py build`
1. Run `./build/aarch64-apple-darwin/stage1/bin/rustdoc --help | false`
1. Observe ICE
1. Add back `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]`
1. Run `./x.py build`
1. Run `./build/aarch64-apple-darwin/stage1/bin/rustdoc --help | false`
1. Observe ICE fixed
In 4b402dbe69, when this rule was added, it
was overriding a rule that made all links in docblock get an underline when
hovered. This became redundant when, after reordering the rules,
7585632052 changed the pro-underline rule to
exclude the test-arrow link anyway.
Only apply `ProceduralMasquerade` hack to older versions of `rental`
The latest version of `rental` (v0.5.6) contains a fix that allows it to
compile without relying on the pretty-print back-compat hack.
Hopefully, there are no longer any crates relying on the affected
versions of the (much less popular) `procedural-masquerade` crate. This
should allow us to target the pretty-print back-compat hack specifically
to older versions of `rental`, and specifically mention upgrading to
`rental` v0.5.6 in the lint message.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #99578 (Remove redundant lifetime bound from `impl Borrow for Cow`)
- #99939 (Sort tests at compile time, not at startup)
- #102271 (Stabilize `duration_checked_float`)
- #102766 (Don't link to `libresolv` in libstd on Darwin)
- #103277 (Update libstd's libc to 0.2.135 (to make `libstd` no longer pull in `libiconv.dylib` on Darwin))
- #103437 (Sync rustc_codegen_cranelift)
- #103466 (Fix grammar in docs for std::io::Read)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup