Commit Graph

135 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
938099a7eb Register new snapshots
* Lots of core prelude imports removed
* Makefile support for MSVC env vars and Rust crates removed
* Makefile support for morestack removed
2015-08-11 15:11:13 -07:00
bors
23f43896ce Auto merge of #27518 - alexcrichton:msvc-builtin-llvm-ar, r=huonw
This means that we no longer need to ship the `llvm-ar.exe` binary in the MSVC
distribution, and after a snapshot we can remove a good bit of logic from the
makefiles!
2015-08-11 07:48:39 +00:00
Alex Crichton
e648c96c5f trans: Stop informing LLVM about dllexport
Rust's current compilation model makes it impossible on Windows to generate one
object file with a complete and final set of dllexport annotations. This is
because when an object is generated the compiler doesn't actually know if it
will later be included in a dynamic library or not. The compiler works around
this today by flagging *everything* as dllexport, but this has the drawback of
exposing too much.

Thankfully there are alternate methods of specifying the exported surface area
of a dll on Windows, one of which is passing a `*.def` file to the linker which
lists all public symbols of the dynamic library. This commit removes all
locations that add `dllexport` to LLVM variables and instead dynamically
generates a `*.def` file which is passed to the linker. This file will include
all the public symbols of the current object file as well as all upstream
libraries, and the crucial aspect is that it's only used when generating a
dynamic library. When generating an executable this file isn't generated, so all
the symbols aren't exported from an executable.

To ensure that statically included native libraries are reexported correctly,
the previously added support for the `#[linked_from]` attribute is used to
determine the set of FFI symbols that are exported from a dynamic library, and
this is required to get the compiler to link correctly.
2015-08-10 18:20:42 -07:00
Alex Crichton
138252cc6a trans: Specify archive_format for MSVC
This means that we no longer need to ship the `llvm-ar.exe` binary in the MSVC
distribution, and after a snapshot we can remove a good bit of logic from the
makefiles!
2015-08-10 17:45:16 -07:00
Alex Crichton
7a3fdfbf67 Remove morestack support
This commit removes all morestack support from the compiler which entails:

* Segmented stacks are no longer emitted in codegen.
* We no longer build or distribute libmorestack.a
* The `stack_exhausted` lang item is no longer required

The only current use of the segmented stack support in LLVM is to detect stack
overflow. This is no longer really required, however, because we already have
guard pages for all threads and registered signal handlers watching for a
segfault on those pages (to print out a stack overflow message). Additionally,
major platforms (aka Windows) already don't use morestack.

This means that Rust is by default less likely to catch stack overflows because
if a function takes up more than one page of stack space it won't hit the guard
page. This is what the purpose of morestack was (to catch this case), but it's
better served with stack probes which have more cross platform support and no
runtime support necessary. Until LLVM supports this for all platform it looks
like morestack isn't really buying us much.

cc #16012 (still need stack probes)
Closes #26458 (a drive-by fix to help diagnostics on stack overflow)
2015-08-10 16:35:44 -07:00
Alex Crichton
91c22b6302 msvc: Lookup linker in windows registry
This commit alters the compiler to no longer "just run link.exe" but instead
probe the system's registry to find where the linker is located. The default
library search path (normally found through LIB) is also found through the
registry. This also brings us in line with the default behavior of Clang, and
much of the logic of where to look for information is copied over from Clang as
well. Finally, this commit removes the makefile logic for updating the
environment variables for the compiler, except for stage0 where it's still
necessary.

The motivation for this change is rooted in two positions:

* Not having to set up these environment variables is much less hassle both for
  the bootstrap and for running the compiler itself. This means that the
  compiler can be run outside of VS shells and be run inside of cmd.exe or a
  MSYS shell.

* When dealing with cross compilation, there's not actually a set of environment
  variables that can be set for the compiler. This means, for example, if a
  Cargo compilation is targeting 32-bit from 64-bit you can't actually set up
  one set of environment variables. Having the compiler deal with the logic
  instead is generally much more convenient!
2015-07-01 09:35:55 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ae36d4f72a mk: Add support for i686-pc-windows-msvc
This commit modifies the configure script and our makefiles to support building
32-bit MSVC targets. The MSVC toolchain is now parameterized over whether it can
produce a 32-bit or 64-bit binary. The configure script was updated to export
more variables at configure time, and the makefiles were rejiggered to
selectively reexport the relevant environment variables for the applicable
targets they're going to run for.
2015-06-27 13:02:18 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b8c59211ed mk: Fix MSVC bootstrapping itself
Now that MSVC support has landed in the most recent nightlies we can now have
MSVC bootstrap itself without going through a GNU compiler first. Unfortunately,
however, the bootstrap currently fails due to the compiler not being able to
find the llvm-ar.exe tool during the stage0 libcore compile. The compiler cannot
find this tool because it's looking inside a directory that does not exist:

    $SYSROOT/rustlib/x86_64-pc-windows-gnu/bin

The `gnu` on this triple is because the bootstrap compiler's host architecture
is GNU. The build system, however, only arranges for the llvm-ar.exe tool to be
available in this location:

    $SYSROOT/rustlib/x86_64-pc-windows-msvc/bin

To resolve this discrepancy, the build system has been modified to understand
triples that are bootstrapped from another triple, and in this case copy the
native tools to the right location.
2015-05-27 19:36:28 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b538189ba0 mk: Generate a .def file for rustc_llvm on MSVC
Windows needs explicit exports of functions from DLLs but LLVM does not mention
any of its symbols as being export-able from a DLL. The compiler, however,
relies on being able to use LLVM symbols across DLL boundaries so we need to
force many of LLVM's symbols to be exported from `rustc_llvm.dll`. This commit
adds support for generation of a `rustc_llvm.def` file which is passed along to
the linker when generating `rustc_llvm.dll` which should keep all these symbols
exportable and usable.
2015-05-19 10:53:07 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a4ef308473 mk: Add the ability to depend on native LLVM tools
The compiler will require that `llvm-ar.exe` be available for MSVC-targeting
builds (more comments on this soon), so this commit adds support for targets to
depend on LLVM tools. The `core` library for MSVC depends on `llvm-ar.exe` which
will be copied into place for the target before the compiler starts to run.

Note that these targets all depend on `llvm-config.exe` to ensure that they're
built before they're attempted to be copied.
2015-05-19 10:53:04 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ee258c548f mk: Fix native LLVM deps for cross-host builds
We use a script called `mklldeps.py` to run `llvm-config` to generate a list
of LLVM libraries and native dependencies needed by LLVM, but all cross-compiled
LLVM builds were using the *host triple's* `llvm-config` instead of the
*target's* `llvm-config`. This commit alters this to require the right
`llvmdeps.rs` to be generated which will run the correct `llvm-config`.
2015-05-19 10:36:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
cd980b3bee mk: Add support for musl-based builds
This commit adds support to the makefiles, configuration script, and build
system to understand MUSL. This is broken up into a few parts:

* Any target of the form `*-musl` requires the `--musl-root` option to
  `./configure` which will indicate the root of the MUSL installation. It is
  also expected that there is a libunwind build inside of that installation
  built against that MUSL.

* Objects from MUSL are copied into the build tree for Rust to be statically
  linked into the appropriate Rust library.

* Objects for binary startup and shutdown are included in each Rust installation
  by default for MUSL. This requires MUSL to only be installed on the machine
  compiling rust. Only a linker will be necessary for compiling against MUSL on
  a target machine.

Eventually a MUSL and/or libunwind build may be integrated by default into the
build but for now they are just always assumed to exist externally.
2015-04-27 10:11:15 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
1accaa9f86 Fix some typos 2015-03-28 18:09:51 +03:00
Ryan Prichard
b07a1dfcd1 Fix the Linux nightly build by adding a LLVM_CONFIG_<target-triple> dep.
The RUST_TARGET_STAGE_N rule uses LLVM_LIBDIR_RUSTFLAGS_<target-triple>,
which expands to -L "$(llvm-config --libdir)" when the target-triple is
also a host-triple. Rather than expand to -L "" if llvm-config has not yet
been built, add a dependency on the target llvm-config.

When the target-triple is not a host-triple, the new LLVM_CONFIG_$(2)
dependency should expand to nothing.
2015-03-16 21:13:36 -07:00
Ryan Prichard
00211ecfda Avoid passing -L "" during cross-compilation.
LLVM_LIBDIR_<triple> is only defined for host triples, not target triples.

FWIW, the same is true for LLVM_STDCPP_RUSTFLAGS_<triple>, where we
explicitly define it as empty when --enable-llvm-static-stdcpp is not
specified, but it's still undefined for cross-compiled triples.
2015-03-13 16:46:45 -07:00
Ryan Prichard
de52403295 Avoid passing -L "" to rustc.
Currently, target.mk passes -L "" when LLVM_STDCPP_LOCATION_$(2) is empty.

This fixes #23287.
2015-03-12 04:09:12 -07:00
Felix S. Klock II
62aa899e3d Make build timestamp files robust in face of concurrent source modification.
Strategy: If the end goal is to touch e.g. `stamp.std`, then we first
touch `stamp.std.start_time` before doing anything else.  Then when
the receipe finishes, we touch `stamp.std` using the timestamp from
`stamp.std.start_time` as the reference time, and remove
`stamp.std.start_time`.

Fix #6518.
2015-03-03 15:11:01 +01:00
Alex Crichton
1d4ce37946 mk: Use host llvm linkage paths, not target ones
We only build LLVM for the host architecture, not the target architecture, so
this was just a minor typo in the parameters uses.

Closes #19383
2014-11-30 00:01:19 -08:00
Richard Diamond
80d520fcf2 Don't use the same llvmdeps.rs for every host. 2014-11-25 17:28:49 -06:00
Cody P Schafer
29cc7c2adf mk/target: fix typo so we depend on the correct directory
Without this, if we we're using a non-standard host libdir, the target
bindir would not exist (and rustc would fail to write to the
non-existent directory).
2014-11-20 16:00:12 -05:00
Alex Crichton
3036b00127 rustc: Default to static linking dylibs
If a dylib is being produced, the compiler will now first check to see if it can
be created entirely statically before falling back to dynamic dependencies. This
behavior can be overridden with `-C prefer-dynamic`.

Due to the alteration in behavior, this is a breaking change. Any previous users
relying on dylibs implicitly maximizing dynamic dependencies should start
passing `-C prefer-dynamic` to compilations.

Closes #18499
[breaking-change]
2014-11-03 15:08:20 -08:00
Birunthan Mohanathas
6511053d1c mk: Add space before line continuation backslash 2014-07-23 08:44:11 -07:00
Birunthan Mohanathas
c5433c3a0f mk: Remove extra whitespace before line continuation backslashes 2014-07-23 08:41:55 -07:00
Brian Anderson
d3096c2348 Move llvm bindings to their own crate 2014-07-14 12:27:07 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0c71e0c596 Register new snapshots
Closes #15544
2014-07-09 10:57:58 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6d4d83c94d mk: Fix bootstrapping the nightly builds
The stage0 compiler for a non-CFG_BUILD architecture needs to have the new
`-C extra-filename` argument passed.
2014-07-06 08:28:06 -07:00
Alex Crichton
df4ea9c39a rustc: Stop putting hashes in filenames by default
The compiler will no longer insert a hash or version into a filename by default.
Instead, all output is simply based off the crate name being compiled. For
example, a crate name of `foo` would produce the following outputs:

* bin => foo
* rlib => libfoo.rlib
* dylib => libfoo.{so,dylib} or foo.dll
* staticlib => libfoo.a

The old behavior has been moved behind a new codegen flag,
`-C extra-filename=<hash>`. For example, with the "extra filename" of `bar` and
a crate name of `foo`, the following outputs would be generated:

* bin => foo (same old behavior)
* rlib => libfoobar.rlib
* dylib => libfoobar.{so,dylib} or foobar.dll
* staticlib => libfoobar.a

The makefiles have been altered to pass a hash by default to invocations of
`rustc` so all installed rust libraries will have a hash in their filename. This
is done because the standard libraries are intended to be installed into
privileged directories such as /usr/local. Additionally, it involves very few
build system changes!

RFC: 0035-remove-crate-id
[breaking-change]
2014-07-05 12:45:42 -07:00
Alex Crichton
4cd932f94e alloc: Allow disabling jemalloc 2014-06-16 18:15:48 -07:00
Brian Anderson
7c8c544731 mk: Replace 'oxidize' with 'rustc'. Closes #13781 2014-05-21 11:01:59 -07:00
Alex Crichton
acdee8b904 llvm: Add an option to statically link libstdc++
The goal of the snapshot bots is to produce binaries which can run in as many
locations as possible. Currently we build on Centos 6 for this reason, but with
LLVM's update to C++11, this reduces the number of platforms that we could
possibly run on.

This adds a --enable-llvm-static-stdcpp option to the ./configure script for
Rust which will enable building a librustc with a static dependence on
libstdc++. This normally isn't necessary, but this option can be used on the
snapshot builders in order to continue to make binaries which should be able to
run in as many locations as possible.
2014-04-17 11:39:51 -07:00
Brian Anderson
d252539990 mk: Rename CFG_COMPILER to CFG_COMPILER_HOST_TRIPLE
Much clearer
2014-03-25 21:35:10 -07:00
Vadim Chugunov
b7651325eb Build compiler-rt and link it to all crates, similarly to morestack. 2014-02-11 15:59:59 -08:00
Brian Anderson
3062d0f6bb mk: Replace 'compile_and_link' with 'oxidize' 2014-02-09 02:42:28 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2611483894 Refactor the build system for easily adding crates
Before this patch, if you wanted to add a crate to the build system you had to
change about 100 lines across 8 separate makefiles. This is highly error prone
and opaque to all but a few. This refactoring is targeted at consolidating this
effort so adding a new crate adds one line in one file in a way that everyone
can understand it.
2014-01-26 00:53:41 -08:00
Alex Crichton
f2a86a2da6 Register new snapshots 2014-01-09 09:18:59 -08:00
Alex Crichton
004dae6abd Fix the snapshot and cross compilation
If we bootstrap a cross compile from a stage1 compiler, then the stage1 compiler
already knows about the rustc => rustlib change, so we need to not add the extra
flag if it's a stage0 version of a target from a stage1 of another target.
2014-01-08 08:16:48 -08:00
Jan Niklas Hasse
116773a4eb Make CFG_LIBDIR configurable. Fixes #5223 2014-01-07 17:51:15 +01:00
Alex Crichton
89f8bc2561 Fix parallel makefile builds
All the copying of files amongst one another was apparently causing something to
get corrupted. Instead of having files fly around, just update the directories
to link to.
2014-01-06 21:55:15 -08:00
Jan Niklas Hasse
6abe0ef32e Make rustc's own lib directory configurable and change the default to rustlib. Fixes #3319 2014-01-05 12:06:20 +01:00
Alex Crichton
04c446b4b6 make: Don't have libsyntax depend on librustuv
It doesn't actually and we can get better incremental build times for
modifications to librustuv if libsyntax/librustc don't need to get rebuilt
2013-12-24 19:59:54 -08:00
Alex Crichton
282f3d99a5 Test fixes and rebase problems
Note that this removes a number of run-pass tests which are exercising behavior
of the old runtime. This functionality no longer exists and is thoroughly tested
inside of libgreen and libnative. There isn't really the notion of "starting the
runtime" any more. The major notion now is "bootstrapping the initial task".
2013-12-24 19:59:53 -08:00
Alex Crichton
d830fcc6eb make: Add all the make support for lib{native,green}
This should now begin distribution of lib{green,native} in rlib/dylib format as
well as building them as part of the normal build process.
2013-12-24 19:59:52 -08:00
Alex Crichton
f04d6241cb Fix the linked targets for rustc
Right now multiple targets/hosts is broken because the libdir passed for all of
the LLVM libraries is for the wrong architecture. By using the right arch
(target, not host), everything is linked and assembled just fine.
2013-12-07 10:38:32 -08:00
Alex Crichton
e91ffb0710 Link rustllvm statically, and distribute a static snapshot
In order to keep up to date with changes to the libraries that `llvm-config`
spits out, the dependencies to the LLVM are a dynamically generated rust file.
This file is now automatically updated whenever LLVM is updated to get kept
up-to-date.

At the same time, this cleans out some old cruft which isn't necessary in the
makefiles in terms of dependencies.

Closes #10745
Closes #10744
2013-12-06 20:51:17 -08:00
Alex Crichton
e338a4154b Add generation of static libraries to rustc
This commit implements the support necessary for generating both intermediate
and result static rust libraries. This is an implementation of my thoughts in
https://mail.mozilla.org/pipermail/rust-dev/2013-November/006686.html.

When compiling a library, we still retain the "lib" option, although now there
are "rlib", "staticlib", and "dylib" as options for crate_type (and these are
stackable). The idea of "lib" is to generate the "compiler default" instead of
having too choose (although all are interchangeable). For now I have left the
"complier default" to be a dynamic library for size reasons.

Of the rust libraries, lib{std,extra,rustuv} will bootstrap with an
rlib/dylib pair, but lib{rustc,syntax,rustdoc,rustpkg} will only be built as a
dynamic object. I chose this for size reasons, but also because you're probably
not going to be embedding the rustc compiler anywhere any time soon.

Other than the options outlined above, there are a few defaults/preferences that
are now opinionated in the compiler:

* If both a .dylib and .rlib are found for a rust library, the compiler will
  prefer the .rlib variant. This is overridable via the -Z prefer-dynamic option
* If generating a "lib", the compiler will generate a dynamic library. This is
  overridable by explicitly saying what flavor you'd like (rlib, staticlib,
  dylib).
* If no options are passed to the command line, and no crate_type is found in
  the destination crate, then an executable is generated

With this change, you can successfully build a rust program with 0 dynamic
dependencies on rust libraries. There is still a dynamic dependency on
librustrt, but I plan on removing that in a subsequent commit.

This change includes no tests just yet. Our current testing
infrastructure/harnesses aren't very amenable to doing flavorful things with
linking, so I'm planning on adding a new mode of testing which I believe belongs
as a separate commit.

Closes #552
2013-11-29 18:36:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0ce1b2f04d Statically link libuv to librustuv
Similarly to the previous commit, libuv is only used by this library, so there's
no need for it to be linked into librustrt and available to all crates by
default.
2013-11-02 21:28:17 -07:00
Heather
8a593a8bdb support for GNU configure syntax 2013-10-29 16:22:08 -07:00
Alex Crichton
201cab84e8 Move rust's uv implementation to its own crate
There are a few reasons that this is a desirable move to take:

1. Proof of concept that a third party event loop is possible
2. Clear separation of responsibility between rt::io and the uv-backend
3. Enforce in the future that the event loop is "pluggable" and replacable

Here's a quick summary of the points of this pull request which make this
possible:

* Two new lang items were introduced: event_loop, and event_loop_factory.
  The idea of a "factory" is to define a function which can be called with no
  arguments and will return the new event loop as a trait object. This factory
  is emitted to the crate map when building an executable. The factory doesn't
  have to exist, and when it doesn't then an empty slot is in the crate map and
  a basic event loop with no I/O support is provided to the runtime.

* When building an executable, then the rustuv crate will be linked by default
  (providing a default implementation of the event loop) via a similar method to
  injecting a dependency on libstd. This is currently the only location where
  the rustuv crate is ever linked.

* There is a new #[no_uv] attribute (implied by #[no_std]) which denies
  implicitly linking to rustuv by default

Closes #5019
2013-10-29 08:39:22 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6969e5fb58 Allow stage0 warnings 2013-10-16 11:53:05 -07:00
Felix S. Klock II
2835df2db6 Fix for make -j race from #9531 injected by cleanup in b1a22518f0. 2013-09-26 23:56:53 +02:00