1686 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
50df6b9dc5 Auto merge of #31319 - alexcrichton:msvc-backtraces, r=michaelwoerister
This mirrors the behavior of `clang-cl.exe` by adding a `CodeView` global
variable when emitting debug information. This should in turn help stack traces
that are generated when code is compiled with debuginfo enabled.

Closes #28133
2016-02-03 03:06:52 +00:00
bors
2dc132e4d2 Auto merge of #31312 - alexcrichton:no-le-in-powerpc64le, r=alexcrichton
Currently the `mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu` target doesn't actually set the
`target_arch` value to `mipsel` but it rather uses `mips`. Alternatively the
`powerpc64le` target does indeed set the `target_arch` as `powerpc64le`,
causing a bit of inconsistency between theset two.

As these are just the same instance of one instruction set, let's use
`target_endian` to switch between them and only set the `target_arch` as one
value. This should cut down on the number of `#[cfg]` annotations necessary and
all around be a little more ergonomic.
2016-02-02 17:11:48 +00:00
Alex Crichton
8f803c2026 Remove "powerpc64le" and "mipsel" target_arch
Currently the `mipsel-unknown-linux-gnu` target doesn't actually set the
`target_arch` value to `mipsel` but it rather uses `mips`. Alternatively the
`powerpc64le` target does indeed set the `target_arch` as `powerpc64le`,
causing a bit of inconsistency between theset two.

As these are just the same instance of one instruction set, let's use
`target_endian` to switch between them and only set the `target_arch` as one
value. This should cut down on the number of `#[cfg]` annotations necessary and
all around be a little more ergonomic.
2016-02-01 20:39:07 -08:00
bors
a4a249fcab Auto merge of #31279 - DanielJCampbell:MacroReferencing, r=nrc
r? @nrc
2016-02-02 01:35:39 +00:00
Daniel Campbell
1d326419a1 Implemented macro referencing for save analysis 2016-02-01 19:09:18 +13:00
Nick Cameron
4f97338a3a Some changes to save-analysis to cope with errors 2016-02-01 08:42:27 +13:00
Alex Crichton
8b7d0c04c4 trans: Inform LLVM we want CodeView on MSVC
This mirrors the behavior of `clang-cl.exe` by adding a `CodeView` global
variable when emitting debug information. This should in turn help stack traces
that are generated when code is compiled with debuginfo enabled.

Closes #28133
2016-01-30 23:52:40 -08:00
bors
303892ee15 Auto merge of #30448 - alexcrichton:llvmup, r=nikomatsakis
These commits perform a few high-level changes with the goal of enabling i686 MSVC unwinding:

* LLVM is upgraded to pick up the new exception handling instructions and intrinsics for MSVC. This puts us somewhere along the 3.8 branch, but we should still be compatible with LLVM 3.7 for non-MSVC targets.
* All unwinding for MSVC targets (both 32 and 64-bit) are implemented in terms of this new LLVM support. I would like to also extend this to Windows GNU targets to drop the runtime dependencies we have on MinGW, but I'd like to land this first.
* Some tests were fixed up for i686 MSVC here and there where necessary. The full test suite should be passing now for that target.

In terms of landing this I plan to have this go through first, then verify that i686 MSVC works, then I'll enable `make check` on the bots for that target instead of just `make` as-is today.

Closes #25869
2016-01-30 00:25:44 +00:00
Alex Crichton
3e9589c0f4 trans: Reimplement unwinding on MSVC
This commit transitions the compiler to using the new exception handling
instructions in LLVM for implementing unwinding for MSVC. This affects both 32
and 64-bit MSVC as they're both now using SEH-based strategies. In terms of
standard library support, lots more details about how SEH unwinding is
implemented can be found in the commits.

In terms of trans, this change necessitated a few modifications:

* Branches were added to detect when the old landingpad instruction is used or
  the new cleanuppad instruction is used to `trans::cleanup`.
* The return value from `cleanuppad` is not stored in an `alloca` (because it
  cannot be).
* Each block in trans now has an `Option<LandingPad>` instead of `is_lpad: bool`
  for indicating whether it's in a landing pad or not. The new exception
  handling intrinsics require that on MSVC each `call` inside of a landing pad
  is annotated with which landing pad that it's in. This change to the basic
  block means that whenever a `call` or `invoke` instruction is generated we
  know whether to annotate it as part of a cleanuppad or not.
* Lots of modifications were made to the instruction builders to construct the
  new instructions as well as pass the tagging information for the call/invoke
  instructions.
* The translation of the `try` intrinsics for MSVC has been overhauled to use
  the new `catchpad` instruction. The filter function is now also a
  rustc-generated function instead of a purely libstd-defined function. The
  libstd definition still exists, it just has a stable ABI across architectures
  and leaves some of the really weird implementation details to the compiler
  (e.g. the `localescape` and `localrecover` intrinsics).
2016-01-29 16:25:20 -08:00
Alex Crichton
d1cace17af trans: Upgrade LLVM
This brings some routine upgrades to the bundled LLVM that we're using, the most
notable of which is a bug fix to the way we handle range asserts when loading
the discriminant of an enum. This fix ended up being very similar to f9d4149c
where we basically can't have a range assert when loading a discriminant due to
filling drop, and appropriate flags were added to communicate this to
`trans::adt`.
2016-01-29 16:25:20 -08:00
Björn Steinbrink
fdf65e719c Fix truncated drop pattern on 32bit -> 64bit cross compilation
When cross compiling for a target that has a larger usize type than the
host system, we use a truncated value to mark data as dropped,
eventually leading to drop calls on already dropped data. To properly
handle this, the drop pattern needs to be of type u64.

Since C_integral truncates its given value to the requested size anyway,
we can also drop the function that chose between the u32 and u64 values,
and always use the u64 constant.

Fixes #31139
2016-01-29 14:19:55 +01:00
bors
53c2933d44 Auto merge of #30900 - michaelwoerister:trans_item_collect, r=nikomatsakis
The purpose of the translation item collector is to find all monomorphic instances of functions, methods and statics that need to be translated into LLVM IR in order to compile the current crate.

So far these instances have been discovered lazily during the trans path. For incremental compilation we want to know the set of these instances in advance, and that is what the trans::collect module provides.
In the future, incremental and regular translation will be driven by the collector implemented here.

r? @nikomatsakis
cc @rust-lang/compiler

Translation Item Collection
===========================

This module is responsible for discovering all items that will contribute to
to code generation of the crate. The important part here is that it not only
needs to find syntax-level items (functions, structs, etc) but also all
their monomorphized instantiations. Every non-generic, non-const function
maps to one LLVM artifact. Every generic function can produce
from zero to N artifacts, depending on the sets of type arguments it
is instantiated with.
This also applies to generic items from other crates: A generic definition
in crate X might produce monomorphizations that are compiled into crate Y.
We also have to collect these here.

The following kinds of "translation items" are handled here:

 - Functions
 - Methods
 - Closures
 - Statics
 - Drop glue

The following things also result in LLVM artifacts, but are not collected
here, since we instantiate them locally on demand when needed in a given
codegen unit:

 - Constants
 - Vtables
 - Object Shims

General Algorithm
-----------------
Let's define some terms first:

 - A "translation item" is something that results in a function or global in
   the LLVM IR of a codegen unit. Translation items do not stand on their
   own, they can reference other translation items. For example, if function
   `foo()` calls function `bar()` then the translation item for `foo()`
   references the translation item for function `bar()`. In general, the
   definition for translation item A referencing a translation item B is that
   the LLVM artifact produced for A references the LLVM artifact produced
   for B.

 - Translation items and the references between them for a directed graph,
   where the translation items are the nodes and references form the edges.
   Let's call this graph the "translation item graph".

 - The translation item graph for a program contains all translation items
   that are needed in order to produce the complete LLVM IR of the program.

The purpose of the algorithm implemented in this module is to build the
translation item graph for the current crate. It runs in two phases:

 1. Discover the roots of the graph by traversing the HIR of the crate.
 2. Starting from the roots, find neighboring nodes by inspecting the MIR
    representation of the item corresponding to a given node, until no more
    new nodes are found.

The roots of the translation item graph correspond to the non-generic
syntactic items in the source code. We find them by walking the HIR of the
crate, and whenever we hit upon a function, method, or static item, we
create a translation item consisting of the items DefId and, since we only
consider non-generic items, an empty type-substitution set.

Given a translation item node, we can discover neighbors by inspecting its
MIR. We walk the MIR and any time we hit upon something that signifies a
reference to another translation item, we have found a neighbor. Since the
translation item we are currently at is always monomorphic, we also know the
concrete type arguments of its neighbors, and so all neighbors again will be
monomorphic. The specific forms a reference to a neighboring node can take
in MIR are quite diverse. Here is an overview:

The most obvious form of one translation item referencing another is a
function or method call (represented by a CALL terminator in MIR). But
calls are not the only thing that might introduce a reference between two
function translation items, and as we will see below, they are just a
specialized of the form described next, and consequently will don't get any
special treatment in the algorithm.

A function does not need to actually be called in order to be a neighbor of
another function. It suffices to just take a reference in order to introduce
an edge. Consider the following example:

```rust
fn print_val<T: Display>(x: T) {
    println!("{}", x);
}

fn call_fn(f: &Fn(i32), x: i32) {
    f(x);
}

fn main() {
    let print_i32 = print_val::<i32>;
    call_fn(&print_i32, 0);
}
```
The MIR of none of these functions will contain an explicit call to
`print_val::<i32>`. Nonetheless, in order to translate this program, we need
an instance of this function. Thus, whenever we encounter a function or
method in operand position, we treat it as a neighbor of the current
translation item. Calls are just a special case of that.

In a way, closures are a simple case. Since every closure object needs to be
constructed somewhere, we can reliably discover them by observing
`RValue::Aggregate` expressions with `AggregateKind::Closure`. This is also
true for closures inlined from other crates.

Drop glue translation items are introduced by MIR drop-statements. The
generated translation item will again have drop-glue item neighbors if the
type to be dropped contains nested values that also need to be dropped. It
might also have a function item neighbor for the explicit `Drop::drop`
implementation of its type.

A subtle way of introducing neighbor edges is by casting to a trait object.
Since the resulting fat-pointer contains a reference to a vtable, we need to
instantiate all object-save methods of the trait, as we need to store
pointers to these functions even if they never get called anywhere. This can
be seen as a special case of taking a function reference.

Since `Box` expression have special compiler support, no explicit calls to
`exchange_malloc()` and `exchange_free()` may show up in MIR, even if the
compiler will generate them. We have to observe `Rvalue::Box` expressions
and Box-typed drop-statements for that purpose.

Interaction with Cross-Crate Inlining
-------------------------------------
The binary of a crate will not only contain machine code for the items
defined in the source code of that crate. It will also contain monomorphic
instantiations of any extern generic functions and of functions marked with
The collection algorithm handles this more or less transparently. When
constructing a neighbor node for an item, the algorithm will always call
`inline::get_local_instance()` before proceeding. If no local instance can
be acquired (e.g. for a function that is just linked to) no node is created;
which is exactly what we want, since no machine code should be generated in
the current crate for such an item. On the other hand, if we can
successfully inline the function, we subsequently can just treat it like a
local item, walking it's MIR et cetera.

Eager and Lazy Collection Mode
------------------------------
Translation item collection can be performed in one of two modes:

 - Lazy mode means that items will only be instantiated when actually
   referenced. The goal is to produce the least amount of machine code
   possible.

 - Eager mode is meant to be used in conjunction with incremental compilation
   where a stable set of translation items is more important than a minimal
   one. Thus, eager mode will instantiate drop-glue for every drop-able type
   in the crate, even of no drop call for that type exists (yet). It will
   also instantiate default implementations of trait methods, something that
   otherwise is only done on demand.

Open Issues
-----------
Some things are not yet fully implemented in the current version of this
module.

Since no MIR is constructed yet for initializer expressions of constants and
statics we cannot inspect these properly.

Ideally, no translation item should be generated for const fns unless there
is a call to them that cannot be evaluated at compile time. At the moment
this is not implemented however: a translation item will be produced
regardless of whether it is actually needed or not.

<!-- Reviewable:start -->
[<img src="https://reviewable.io/review_button.png" height=40 alt="Review on Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.io/reviews/rust-lang/rust/30900)
<!-- Reviewable:end -->
2016-01-29 03:41:44 +00:00
bors
142214d1f2 Auto merge of #30411 - mitaa:multispan, r=nrc
This allows to render multiple spans on one line, or to splice multiple replacements into a code suggestion.

fixes #28124
2016-01-28 22:13:25 +00:00
mitaa
727f959095 Implement MultiSpan error reporting
This allows to render multiple spans on one line,
or to splice multiple replacements into a code suggestion.
2016-01-28 20:51:06 +01:00
bors
4b615854f0 Auto merge of #31120 - alexcrichton:attribute-deny-warnings, r=brson
This commit removes the `-D warnings` flag being passed through the makefiles to
all crates to instead be a crate attribute. We want these attributes always
applied for all our standard builds, and this is more amenable to Cargo-based
builds as well.

Note that all `deny(warnings)` attributes are gated with a `cfg(stage0)`
attribute currently to match the same semantics we have today
2016-01-26 22:10:10 +00:00
Michael Woerister
4d074b8c4c Avoid redundant work for drop-glue translation items in trans::collector 2016-01-26 10:17:54 -05:00
Michael Woerister
9e969808e2 Add caching of external MIR in trans::collector 2016-01-26 10:17:54 -05:00
Michael Woerister
862911df9a Implement the translation item collector.
The purpose of the translation item collector is to find all monomorphic instances of functions, methods and statics that need to be translated into LLVM IR in order to compile the current crate.
So far these instances have been discovered lazily during the trans path. For incremental compilation we want to know the set of these instances in advance, and that is what the trans::collect module provides.
In the future, incremental and regular translation will be driven by the collector implemented here.
2016-01-26 10:17:45 -05:00
bors
eceb96b40d Auto merge of #31097 - DanielJCampbell:SaveAnalysis, r=nrc
Also altered the format_args! syntax extension, and \#[derive(debug)], to maintain compatability.
r? @ nrc
2016-01-25 20:41:44 +00:00
Michael Woerister
b279c5b068 Add dependency tracking to trait cache in translation context 2016-01-25 05:22:30 -05:00
Corey Farwell
d9426210b1 Register LLVM passes with the correct LLVM pass manager.
LLVM was upgraded to a new version in this commit:

f9d4149c29

which was part of this pull request:

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/26025

Consider the following two lines from that commit:

f9d4149c29 (diff-a3b24dbe2ea7c1981f9ac79f9745f40aL462)

f9d4149c29 (diff-a3b24dbe2ea7c1981f9ac79f9745f40aL469)

The purpose of these lines is to register LLVM passes. Prior to the that
commit, the passes being handled were assumed to be ModulePasses (a
specific type of LLVM pass) since they were being added to a ModulePass
manager. After that commit, both lines were refactored (presumably in an
attempt to DRY out the code), but the ModulePasses were changed to be
registered to a FunctionPass manager. This change resulted in
ModulePasses being run, but a Function object was being passed as a
parameter to the pass instead of a Module, which resulted in
segmentation faults.

In this commit, I changed relevant sections of the code to check the
type of the passes being added and register them to the appropriate pass
manager.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/31067
2016-01-25 00:15:39 -05:00
Alex Crichton
2273b52023 mk: Move from -D warnings to #![deny(warnings)]
This commit removes the `-D warnings` flag being passed through the makefiles to
all crates to instead be a crate attribute. We want these attributes always
applied for all our standard builds, and this is more amenable to Cargo-based
builds as well.

Note that all `deny(warnings)` attributes are gated with a `cfg(stage0)`
attribute currently to match the same semantics we have today
2016-01-24 20:35:55 -08:00
bors
c2740b6adb Auto merge of #31104 - nrc:save-fix-variant-data, r=alexcrichton 2016-01-22 22:42:33 +00:00
bors
8f36038490 Auto merge of #31087 - nikomatsakis:incr-comp-fulfillment-cache, r=arielb1
This is a fix for #30741. It simplifies dep-graph tracking for trait matching. I was experimenting with having a greater resolution here, but decided to pare back to just have one dep node for "trait resolutions on trait `Foo`", which means that adding an impl to the trait `Foo` will invalidate all fns that had to do any trait matching at all on `Foo`. This seems like a reasonable starting place.

Independently, I realized I had neglected to record a dependency from trans on typeck -- this is obviously needed, since trans consumes a bunch of data structures that typeck produces (but which are not currently individually tracked) -- and because trans assumes that typeck has been done. Eventually those are going to go away and be replaced with MIR, which will be tracked, so this edge would presumably be derived automatically then, but it's an obvious enough thing to want for now.

r? @arielb1

cc @michaelwoerister -- this might indirectly fix the problem you observed with the trans cache, though it'd be nice to try and craft an independent test case for that.
2016-01-22 17:09:37 +00:00
bors
e7ce7b6365 Auto merge of #31077 - nagisa:mir-temp-promotion, r=dotdash
Fixes #31002

r? @nikomatsakis
2016-01-22 11:36:50 +00:00
bors
b4a2579cf0 Auto merge of #31072 - arielb1:method-callee-cleanup, r=michaelwoerister
The old code was terribly ugly and was duplicated in several places.

r? @michaelwoerister
2016-01-22 07:55:13 +00:00
Daniel Campbell
616bfb6f15 Extended save-analysis to support generated code, alterned some spans in format_args! and derive to maintain compatability 2016-01-22 19:12:51 +13:00
Nick Cameron
cd2287e2bc save-analysis: emit the right kind of variant 2016-01-22 18:53:23 +13:00
bors
5c1d5fcd87 Auto merge of #31064 - retep998:msvc-host-dlls, r=alexcrichton
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/31063

r? @alexcrichton
2016-01-22 02:22:54 +00:00
Florian Hahn
d31027d3bf Introduce and use TypedConstVal for Repeat 2016-01-21 22:47:11 +01:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
0a01d0b732 add fixme 2016-01-21 22:07:15 +02:00
Niko Matsakis
56c73e58a2 Indicate that trans is always dependent on typeck 2016-01-21 14:27:29 -05:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
e74aa2bdff [MIR] Promote temps to alloca on multi-assignment
Fixes #31002
2016-01-21 19:01:43 +02:00
bors
340e7eb2a7 Auto merge of #31024 - oli-obk:move_checks_out_of_librustc, r=arielb1
-    check_const
-    check_static_recursion
-    check_loop
-    check_rvalues

r? @arielb1
2016-01-21 15:21:09 +00:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
29c296f90b clean up trans_static_method_callee and friends 2016-01-21 14:42:09 +02:00
Oliver Schneider
c124deca7b move more checks out of librustc 2016-01-21 10:52:37 +01:00
bors
34b4e66736 Auto merge of #29520 - retep998:staticlib-naming-fiasco, r=alexcrichton
I'm not sure if this was the best way to go about it, but it seems to work.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29508

r? @alexcrichton
2016-01-21 09:02:48 +00:00
Peter Atashian
a65f5acf5c Add host toolchain DLLs to PATH when executing link.exe
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/31063

Signed-off-by: Peter Atashian <retep998@gmail.com>
2016-01-20 21:01:56 -05:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
2084c2c33a Rename Def's variants and don't reexport them 2016-01-20 22:31:10 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
ceaaa1bc33 Refactor definitions of ADTs in rustc::middle::def 2016-01-20 21:50:57 +03:00
bors
41b74b11b4 Auto merge of #30845 - nagisa:mir-extern-calls, r=dotdash
Supersedes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/30517
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29575

cc @luqmana
r? @nikomatsakis
2016-01-19 13:46:18 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
99e8b4d755 [MIR] Implement extern call support 2016-01-19 15:14:04 +02:00
Oliver Schneider
c02ba1618d revert using trans::Disr in LoadRangeAssert
it makes no sense here, accidentally introduced in #30931
2016-01-18 11:30:52 +01:00
bors
bff52927f5 Auto merge of #30975 - Manishearth:rollup, r=Manishearth
- Successful merges: #30938, #30940, #30943, #30949, #30952, #30957, #30959
- Failed merges:
2016-01-17 12:23:57 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
80e21d1958 Rollup merge of #30943 - alexcrichton:stabilize-1.7, r=aturon
This commit stabilizes and deprecates the FCP (final comment period) APIs for
the upcoming 1.7 beta release. The specific APIs which changed were:

Stabilized

* `Path::strip_prefix` (renamed from `relative_from`)
* `path::StripPrefixError` (new error type returned from `strip_prefix`)
* `Ipv4Addr::is_loopback`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_private`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_link_local`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_multicast`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_broadcast`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_documentation`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_unspecified`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_loopback`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_unique_local`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_multicast`
* `Vec::as_slice`
* `Vec::as_mut_slice`
* `String::as_str`
* `String::as_mut_str`
* `<[T]>::clone_from_slice` - the `usize` return value is removed
* `<[T]>::sort_by_key`
* `i32::checked_rem` (and other signed types)
* `i32::checked_neg` (and other signed types)
* `i32::checked_shl` (and other signed types)
* `i32::checked_shr` (and other signed types)
* `i32::saturating_mul` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_add` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_sub` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_mul` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_div` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_rem` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_neg` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_shl` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_shr` (and other signed types)
* `u32::checked_rem` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::checked_shl` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::saturating_mul` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_add` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_sub` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_mul` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_div` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_rem` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_neg` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_shl` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_shr` (and other unsigned types)
* `ffi::IntoStringError`
* `CString::into_string`
* `CString::into_bytes`
* `CString::into_bytes_with_nul`
* `From<CString> for Vec<u8>`
* `From<CString> for Vec<u8>`
* `IntoStringError::into_cstring`
* `IntoStringError::utf8_error`
* `Error for IntoStringError`

Deprecated

* `Path::relative_from` - renamed to `strip_prefix`
* `Path::prefix` - use `components().next()` instead
* `os::unix::fs` constants - moved to the `libc` crate
* `fmt::{radix, Radix, RadixFmt}` - not used enough to stabilize
* `IntoCow` - conflicts with `Into` and may come back later
* `i32::{BITS, BYTES}` (and other integers) - not pulling their weight
* `DebugTuple::formatter` - will be removed
* `sync::Semaphore` - not used enough and confused with system semaphores

Closes #23284
cc #27709 (still lots more methods though)
Closes #27712
Closes #27722
Closes #27728
Closes #27735
Closes #27729
Closes #27755
Closes #27782
Closes #27798
2016-01-17 17:25:47 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar
48a7651073 Rollup merge of #30938 - dotdash:zst_void, r=eddyb
The only way to get a value for a zero-sized type is `undef`, so
there's really no point in actually having a return type other than
void for such types. Also, while the comment in return_type_is_void
mentioned something about aiding C ABI support, @eddyb correctly
pointed out on IRC that there is no such thing as a zero-sized type in
C. And even with clang, which allows empty structs, those get
translated as void return types as well.

Fixes #28766
2016-01-17 17:25:47 +05:30
bors
0b524edb04 Auto merge of #30931 - oli-obk:trans_disr_newtype, r=arielb1
This is groundwork for #30587 (typestrong constant integrals), but imo it's a change that in itself is good, too, since we don't just juggle `u64`s around anymore.

`ty::Disr` will be changed to a `ConstInt` in #30587
2016-01-17 10:31:47 +00:00
bors
077f4eeb84 Auto merge of #30567 - steffengy:master, r=alexcrichton
Add support to use functions exported using vectorcall.
This essentially only allows to pass a new LLVM calling convention
from rust to LLVM.

```rust
extern "vectorcall" fn abc(param: c_void);
```

references
----
http://llvm.org/docs/doxygen/html/CallingConv_8h_source.html
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn375768.aspx
2016-01-16 23:30:30 +00:00
Alex Crichton
9a4f43b9b6 std: Stabilize APIs for the 1.7 release
This commit stabilizes and deprecates the FCP (final comment period) APIs for
the upcoming 1.7 beta release. The specific APIs which changed were:

Stabilized

* `Path::strip_prefix` (renamed from `relative_from`)
* `path::StripPrefixError` (new error type returned from `strip_prefix`)
* `Ipv4Addr::is_loopback`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_private`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_link_local`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_multicast`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_broadcast`
* `Ipv4Addr::is_documentation`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_unspecified`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_loopback`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_unique_local`
* `Ipv6Addr::is_multicast`
* `Vec::as_slice`
* `Vec::as_mut_slice`
* `String::as_str`
* `String::as_mut_str`
* `<[T]>::clone_from_slice` - the `usize` return value is removed
* `<[T]>::sort_by_key`
* `i32::checked_rem` (and other signed types)
* `i32::checked_neg` (and other signed types)
* `i32::checked_shl` (and other signed types)
* `i32::checked_shr` (and other signed types)
* `i32::saturating_mul` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_add` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_sub` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_mul` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_div` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_rem` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_neg` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_shl` (and other signed types)
* `i32::overflowing_shr` (and other signed types)
* `u32::checked_rem` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::checked_neg` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::checked_shl` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::saturating_mul` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_add` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_sub` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_mul` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_div` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_rem` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_neg` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_shl` (and other unsigned types)
* `u32::overflowing_shr` (and other unsigned types)
* `ffi::IntoStringError`
* `CString::into_string`
* `CString::into_bytes`
* `CString::into_bytes_with_nul`
* `From<CString> for Vec<u8>`
* `From<CString> for Vec<u8>`
* `IntoStringError::into_cstring`
* `IntoStringError::utf8_error`
* `Error for IntoStringError`

Deprecated

* `Path::relative_from` - renamed to `strip_prefix`
* `Path::prefix` - use `components().next()` instead
* `os::unix::fs` constants - moved to the `libc` crate
* `fmt::{radix, Radix, RadixFmt}` - not used enough to stabilize
* `IntoCow` - conflicts with `Into` and may come back later
* `i32::{BITS, BYTES}` (and other integers) - not pulling their weight
* `DebugTuple::formatter` - will be removed
* `sync::Semaphore` - not used enough and confused with system semaphores

Closes #23284
cc #27709 (still lots more methods though)
Closes #27712
Closes #27722
Closes #27728
Closes #27735
Closes #27729
Closes #27755
Closes #27782
Closes #27798
2016-01-16 11:03:10 -08:00
Peter Atashian
06c66d6ca2 Change name when outputting staticlibs on Windows
libfoo.a -> foo.lib
In order to not cause conflicts, changes the DLL import library name
foo.lib -> foo.dll.lib

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29508

Because this changes output filenames this is a [breaking-change]

Signed-off-by: Peter Atashian <retep998@gmail.com>
2016-01-16 12:34:54 -05:00