`#[inline(never)]` is used.
Closes#8958.
This can break some code that relied on the addresses of statics
being distinct; add `#[inline(never)]` to the affected statics.
[breaking-change]
r? @brson
`#[inline(never)]` is used.
Closes#8958.
This can break some code that relied on the addresses of statics
being distinct; add `#[inline(never)]` to the affected statics.
[breaking-change]
This commit disables rustc's emission of rpath attributes into dynamic libraries
and executables by default. The functionality is still preserved, but it must
now be manually enabled via a `-C rpath` flag.
This involved a few changes to the local build system:
* --disable-rpath is now the default configure option
* Makefiles now prefer our own LD_LIBRARY_PATH over the user's LD_LIBRARY_PATH
in order to support building rust with rust already installed.
* The compiletest program was taught to correctly pass through the aux dir as a
component of LD_LIBRARY_PATH in more situations.
The major impact of this change is that neither rustdoc nor rustc will work
out-of-the-box in all situations because they are dynamically linked. It must be
arranged to ensure that the libraries of a rust installation are part of the
LD_LIBRARY_PATH. The default installation paths for all platforms ensure this,
but if an installation is in a nonstandard location, then configuration may be
necessary.
Additionally, for all developers of rustc, it will no longer be possible to run
$target/stageN/bin/rustc out-of-the-box. The old behavior can be regained
through the `--enable-rpath` option to the configure script.
This change brings linux/mac installations in line with windows installations
where rpath is not possible.
Closes#11747
[breaking-change]
Closes#14888 (Allow disabling jemalloc as the memory allocator)
Closes#14905 (rustc: Improve span for error about using a method as a field.)
Closes#14920 (Fix#14915)
Closes#14924 (Add a Syntastic plugin for Rust.)
Closes#14935 (debuginfo: Correctly handle indirectly recursive types)
Closes#14938 (Reexport `num_cpus` in `std::os`. Closes#14707)
Closes#14941 (std: Don't fail the task when a Future is dropped)
Closes#14942 (rustc: Don't mark type parameters as exported)
Closes#14943 (doc: Fix a link in the FAQ)
Closes#14944 (Update "use" to "uses" on ln186)
Closes#14949 (Update repo location)
Closes#14950 (fix typo in the libc crate)
Closes#14951 (Update Sublime Rust github link)
Closes#14953 (Fix --disable-rpath and tests)
This involved a few changes to the local build system:
* Makefiles now prefer our own LD_LIBRARY_PATH over the user's LD_LIBRARY_PATH
in order to support building rust with rust already installed.
* The compiletest program was taught to correctly pass through the aux dir as a
component of LD_LIBRARY_PATH in more situations.
This change was spliced out of #14832 to consist of just the fixes to running
tests without an rpath setting embedded in executables.
So far handling some indirectly recursive types, such as pointer types, has relied on LLVM metadata uniquing in a very implicit way. This could cause some inconsistencies in the debuginfo, and sometimes to hard to trace LLVM assertions.
With this commit unique type IDs and the TypeMap are used to explicitly make sure that no inconsistencies exist, and, if in the future some regression re-introduces one, give a better error message instead of the hard-to-interpret LLVM error.
The last remaining use of each_in_scope_restriction in
check_for_assignment_to_restricted_or_frozen_location is using the
pattern captured by each_in_scope_loan_affecting_path, so it can be
removed.
Currently, check_for_assignment_to_restricted_or_frozen_location bails
out early when looking for loaned base paths when it hits an McDeclared
or McImmutable extension. With the current type system, this is actually
irrelevant, since mutation can only occur given a unique mutable access
path, forcing the same requirement on each base path.
The only caller of check_for_assignment_to_restricted_or_frozen_location
isn't checking its return value, so we can remove it and simplify the
internal logic of the function.
Now that RestrictionSet is no longer being used for anything meaningful,
it can be removed, along with any other associated functions and
RestrictionSet fields of other types.
Switch to checking BorrowKind values of loans instead of their
RestrictionSet values. This was the last code that made a decision
based on a RestrictionSet.