docs for copy_memory.
&mut [u8] and &[u8] really shouldn't be overlapping at all (part of the
uniqueness/aliasing guarantee of &mut), so no point in encouraging it.
If it's a trait method, this checks the stability attribute of the
method inside the trait definition. Otherwise, it checks the method
implementation itself.
This PR improves the stepping experience in GDB. It contains some fine tuning of line information and makes *rustc* produce nearly the same IR/DWARF as Clang. The focus of the changes is function prologue handling which has caused some problems in the past (https://github.com/mozilla/rust/issues/9641).
It seems that GDB does not properly handle function prologues when the function uses segmented stacks, i.e. it does not recognize that the `__morestack` check is part of the prologue. When setting a breakpoint like `break foo` it will set the break point before the arguments of `foo()` have been loaded and still contain bogus values. For function with the #[no_split_stack] attribute this problem has never occurred for me so I'm pretty sure that segmented stacks are the cause of the problem. @jdm mentioned that segmented stack won't be completely abandoned after all. I'd be grateful if you could tell me about what the future might bring in this regard (@brson, @cmr).
Anyway, this PR should alleviate this problem at least in the case when setting breakpoints using line numbers and also make it less confusing when setting them via function names because then GDB will break *before* the first statement where one could conceivably argue that arguments need not be initialized yet.
Also, a koala: 🐨
Cheers,
Michael
By performing this logic very late in the build process, it ended up leading to
bugs like those found in #10973 where certain stages of the build process
expected a particular output format which didn't end up being the case. In order
to fix this, the build output generation is moved very early in the build
process to the absolute first thing in phase 2.
Closes#10973
Understand 'pkgid' in stage0. As a bonus, the snapshot now contains now metadata
(now that those changes have landed), and the snapshot download is half as large
as it used to be!
Understand 'pkgid' in stage0. As a bonus, the snapshot now contains now metadata
(now that those changes have landed), and the snapshot download is half as large
as it used to be!