This ensures that cg_clif can be built for targets that aren't natively
supported by Cranelift. It will not be possible to compile for the host
in this case, but cross-compilation will still be possible.
We won't distribute cg_clif as rustup component for any targets that
aren't natively supported by Cranelift, but will still build it if
codegen-backends lists "cranelift".
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #114998 (feat(docs): add cargo-pgo to PGO documentation 📝)
- #116868 (Tweak suggestion span for outer attr and point at item following invalid inner attr)
- #117240 (Fix documentation typo in std::iter::Iterator::collect_into)
- #117241 (Stash and cancel cycle errors for auto trait leakage in opaques)
- #117262 (Create a new ConstantKind variant (ZeroSized) for StableMIR)
- #117266 (replace transmute by raw pointer cast)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Create a new ConstantKind variant (ZeroSized) for StableMIR
ZeroSized constants can be represented as `mir::Const::Val` even if their layout is not yet known. In those cases, CrateItem::body() was crashing when trying to convert a `ConstValue::ZeroSized` into its stable counterpart `ConstantKind::Allocated`.
Instead, we now map `ConstValue::ZeroSized` into a new variant: `ConstantKind::ZeroSized`.
**Note:** I didn't add any new test here since we already have covering tests in our project repository which I manually confirmed that will fix the issue.
Stash and cancel cycle errors for auto trait leakage in opaques
We don't need to emit a traditional cycle error when we have a selection error that explains what's going on but in more detail.
We may want to augment this error to actually point out the cycle, now that the cycle error is not being emitted. We could do that by storing the set of opaques that was in the `CyclePlaceholder` that gets returned from `type_of_opaque`.
r? `@oli-obk` cc `@estebank` #117235
The demangler was only needed by coverage tests, but those tests were migrated
into their own custom test mode in #112300.
This avoids having to build the demangler just for run-make tests. It will
still be built as needed by run-coverage tests or for other purposes.
Refactor some `char`, `u8` ASCII functions to be branchless
Extract conditions in singular `matches!` with or-patterns to individual `matches!` statements which enables branchless code output. The following functions were changed:
- `is_ascii_alphanumeric`
- `is_ascii_hexdigit`
- `is_ascii_punctuation`
Added codegen tests
---
Continued from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103024.
Based on the comment from `@scottmcm` https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103024#pullrequestreview-1248697206.
The unmodified `is_ascii_*` functions didn't seem to benefit from extracting the conditions.
I've never written a codegen test before, but I tried to check that no branches were emitted.
ZeroSized constants can be represented as `mir::Const::Val` even if
their layout is not yet known. In those cases, CrateItem::body() was
crashing when trying to convert a `ConstValue::ZeroSized` into its
stable counterpart `ConstantKind::Allocated`.
Instead, we now map `ConstValue::ZeroSized` into a new variant:
`ConstantKind::ZeroSized`.
Allow target specs to use an LLD flavor, and self-contained linking components
This PR allows:
- target specs to use an LLD linker-flavor: this is needed to switch `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` to using LLD, and is currently not possible because the current flavor json serialization fails to roundtrip on the modern linker-flavors. This can e.g. be seen in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115622#discussion_r1321312880 which explains where an `Lld::Yes` is ultimately deserialized into an `Lld::No`.
- target specs to declare self-contained linking components: this is needed to switch `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` to using `rust-lld`
- adds an end-to-end test of a custom target json simulating `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` being switched to using `rust-lld`
- disables codegen backends from participating because they don't support `-Zgcc-ld=lld` which is the basis of mcp510.
r? `@petrochenkov:` if the approach discussed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115622#discussion_r1329403467 and on zulip would work for you: basically, see if we can emit only modern linker flavors in the json specs, but accept both old and new flavors while reading them, to fix the roundtrip issue.
The backwards compatible `LinkSelfContainedDefault` variants are still serialized and deserialized in `crt-objects-fallback`, while the spec equivalent of e.g. `-Clink-self-contained=+linker` is serialized into a different json object (with future-proofing to incorporate `crt-objects-fallback` in the future).
---
I've been test-driving this in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113382 to test actually switching `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` to `rust-lld` (and fix what needs to be fixed in CI, bootstrap, etc), and it seems to work fine.
Decompose singular `matches!` with or-patterns to individual `matches!`
statements to enable branchless code output. The following functions
were changed:
- `is_ascii_alphanumeric`
- `is_ascii_hexdigit`
- `is_ascii_punctuation`
Add codegen tests
Co-authored-by: George Bateman <george.bateman16@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: scottmcm <scottmcm@users.noreply.github.com>
Explain implementation of mem::replace
This adds a comment to explain why `mem::replace` is not implemented in terms of `mem::swap` to prevent [naïfs like me](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117189) from trying to "fix" it.
When expecting closure argument but finding block provide suggestion
Detect if there is a potential typo where the `{` meant to open the closure body was written before the body.
```
error[E0277]: expected a `FnOnce<({integer},)>` closure, found `Option<usize>`
--> $DIR/ruby_style_closure_successful_parse.rs:3:31
|
LL | let p = Some(45).and_then({|x|
| ______________________--------_^
| | |
| | required by a bound introduced by this call
LL | | 1 + 1;
LL | | Some(x * 2)
| | ----------- this tail expression is of type `Option<usize>`
LL | | });
| |_____^ expected an `FnOnce<({integer},)>` closure, found `Option<usize>`
|
= help: the trait `FnOnce<({integer},)>` is not implemented for `Option<usize>`
note: required by a bound in `Option::<T>::and_then`
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/option.rs:LL:COL
help: you might have meant to open the closure body instead of placing a closure within a block
|
LL - let p = Some(45).and_then({|x|
LL + let p = Some(45).and_then(|x| {
|
```
Detect the potential typo where the closure header is missing.
```
error[E0277]: expected a `FnOnce<(&bool,)>` closure, found `bool`
--> $DIR/block_instead_of_closure_in_arg.rs:3:23
|
LL | Some(true).filter({
| _________________------_^
| | |
| | required by a bound introduced by this call
LL | |/ if number % 2 == 0 {
LL | || number == 0
LL | || } else {
LL | || number != 0
LL | || }
| ||_________- this tail expression is of type `bool`
LL | | });
| |______^ expected an `FnOnce<(&bool,)>` closure, found `bool`
|
= help: the trait `for<'a> FnOnce<(&'a bool,)>` is not implemented for `bool`
note: required by a bound in `Option::<T>::filter`
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/option.rs:LL:COL
help: you might have meant to create the closure instead of a block
|
LL | Some(true).filter(|_| {
| +++
```
Partially address #27300. Fix#104690.
Centralize command running in boostrap (part one)
This PR tries to consolidate the various `run, try_run, run_quiet, run_quiet_delaying_failure, run_delaying_failure` etc. methods on `Builder`. This PR only touches command execution which doesn't produce output that would be later read by bootstrap, and it also only refactors spawning of commands that happens after a builder is created (commands executed during download & git submodule checkout are left as-is, for now).
The `run_cmd` method is quite meaty, but I expect that it will be changing rapidly soon, so I considered it easy to kept everything in a single method, and only after things settle down a bit, then maybe again split it up a bit.
I still kept the original shortcut methods like `run_quiet_delaying_failure`, but they now only delegate to `run_cmd`. I tried to keep the original behavior (or as close to it as possible) for all the various commands, but it is a giant mess, so there may be some deviations. Notably, `cmd.output()` is now always called, instead of just `status()`, which was called previously in some situations.
Apart from the refactored methods, there is also `Config::try_run`, `check_run`, methods that run commands that produce output, oh my… that's left for follow-up PRs :)
The driving goal of this (and following) refactors is to centralize command execution in bootstrap on a single place, to make command mocking feasible.
r? `@onur-ozkan`