Commit Graph

2242 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
aca749eefc Auto merge of #121801 - zetanumbers:async_drop_glue, r=oli-obk
Add simple async drop glue generation

This is a prototype of the async drop glue generation for some simple types. Async drop glue is intended to behave very similar to the regular drop glue except for being asynchronous. Currently it does not execute synchronous drops but only calls user implementations of `AsyncDrop::async_drop` associative function and awaits the returned future. It is not complete as it only recurses into arrays, slices, tuples, and structs and does not have same sensible restrictions as the old `Drop` trait implementation like having the same bounds as the type definition, while code assumes their existence (requires a future work).

This current design uses a workaround as it does not create any custom async destructor state machine types for ADTs, but instead uses types defined in the std library called future combinators (deferred_async_drop, chain, ready_unit).

Also I recommend reading my [explainer](https://zetanumbers.github.io/book/async-drop-design.html).

This is a part of the [MCP: Low level components for async drop](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/727) work.

Feature completeness:

 - [x] `AsyncDrop` trait
 - [ ] `async_drop_in_place_raw`/async drop glue generation support for
   - [x] Trivially destructible types (integers, bools, floats, string slices, pointers, references, etc.)
   - [x] Arrays and slices (array pointer is unsized into slice pointer)
   - [x] ADTs (enums, structs, unions)
   - [x] tuple-like types (tuples, closures)
   - [ ] Dynamic types (`dyn Trait`, see explainer's [proposed design](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#async-drop-glue-for-dyn-trait))
   - [ ] coroutines (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123948)
 - [x] Async drop glue includes sync drop glue code
 - [x] Cleanup branch generation for `async_drop_in_place_raw`
 - [ ] Union rejects non-trivially async destructible fields
 - [ ] `AsyncDrop` implementation requires same bounds as type definition
 - [ ] Skip trivially destructible fields (optimization)
 - [ ] New [`TyKind::AdtAsyncDestructor`](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#adt-async-destructor-types) and get rid of combinators
 - [ ] [Synchronously undroppable types](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#exclusively-async-drop)
 - [ ] Automatic async drop at the end of the scope in async context
2024-04-23 02:10:23 +00:00
bors
7f2fc33da6 Auto merge of #115120 - icedrocket:ignore-strip-on-msvc, r=michaelwoerister
Ignore `-C strip` on MSVC

tl;dr - Define `-Cstrip` to only ever affect the binary; no other build artifacts.

This is necessary to improve cross-platform behavior consistency: if someone wanted debug information to be contained only in separate files on all platforms, they would set `-Cstrip=symbols` and `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`, but this would result in no PDB files on MSVC.

Resolves #114215
2024-04-22 12:05:39 +00:00
Scott McMurray
de64ff76f8 Use it in the library, and InstSimplify it away in the easy places 2024-04-21 11:08:37 -07:00
Daria Sukhonina
e239e73a77 Fix disabling the export of noop async_drop_in_place_raw 2024-04-18 15:19:05 +03:00
Daria Sukhonina
80c0b7e90f Use non-exhaustive matches for TyKind
Also no longer export noop async_drop_in_place_raw
2024-04-17 20:49:53 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
d5258af4c1
Rollup merge of #122723 - bjorn3:archive_writer_fixes, r=nnethercote
Use same file permissions for ar_archive_writer as the LLVM archive writer

This is required to switch to ar_archive_writer in the future without regressions. In addition to this PR support for reading thin archives needs to be added (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107407) to fix all known regressions.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107495
2024-04-17 18:01:38 +02:00
bjorn3
297fceb9ac Use the default file permissions when writing
static libraries with ar_archive_writer

Fixes #107495
2024-04-17 12:51:20 +00:00
beetrees
c021367de1
Make the comments for ReturnDest variants doc comments 2024-04-17 03:10:09 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
7709b7d44a
Rollup merge of #124023 - pacak:less-splody, r=jieyouxu
Allow workproducts without object files.

This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44

Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:

For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234

Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
2024-04-16 21:41:27 +02:00
zetanumbers
24a24ec6ba Add simple async drop glue generation
Explainer: https://zetanumbers.github.io/book/async-drop-design.html

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121801
2024-04-16 20:45:07 +03:00
Michael Baikov
a03aeca99a Allow workproducts without object files.
This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44

Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:

For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234

Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
2024-04-16 11:19:35 -04:00
Guillaume Gomez
1c8bdb93d9
Rollup merge of #123721 - madsmtm:fix-visionos, r=davidtwco
Various visionOS fixes

A few small mistakes was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121419, probably after the rename from `xros` to `visionos`. See the commits for details.

CC `@agg23`

Since you reviewed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121419
r? davidtwco
2024-04-16 15:19:13 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
9a7adb8d81
Rollup merge of #123687 - bjorn3:ar_archive_writer_0_2_0, r=oli-obk
Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0

This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.
2024-04-16 15:19:13 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
26b6a234a1
Rollup merge of #121694 - davidtwco:stabilize-relro-level, r=Mark-Simulacrum
sess: stabilize `-Zrelro-level` as `-Crelro-level`

Stabilise `-Zrelro-level` as `-Crelro-level`. There's no tracking issue for this flag to close.
2024-04-16 15:19:10 +02:00
bors
3a0db6c152 Auto merge of #123854 - petrochenkov:searchdirs2, r=lqd
linker: Remove laziness and caching from native search directory walks

It shouldn't be necessary for performance now.

Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123827.
2024-04-13 13:12:56 +00:00
bors
7106800e16 Auto merge of #123656 - lqd:linker-features, r=petrochenkov
Linker flavors next steps: linker features

This is my understanding of the first step towards `@petrochenkov's` vision for the future of linker flavors, described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119906#issuecomment-1895693162 and the discussion that followed.

To summarize: having `Cc` and `Lld` embedded in linker flavors creates tension about naming, and a combinatorial explosion of flavors for each new linker feature we'd want to use. Linker features are an extension mechanism that is complementary to principal flavors, with benefits described in #119906.

The most immediate use of this flag would be to turn self-contained linking on and off via features instead of flavors. For example, `-Clinker-features=+/-lld` would toggle using lld instead of selecting a precise flavor, and would be "generic" and work cross-platform (whereas linker flavors are currently more tied to targets). Under this scheme, MCP510 is expected to be `-Clink-self-contained=+linker -Zlinker-features=+lld -Zunstable-options` (though for the time being, the original flags using lld-cc flavors still work).

I purposefully didn't add or document CLI support for `+/-cc`, as it would be a noop right now. I only expect that we'd initially want to stabilize `+/-lld` to begin with.

r? `@petrochenkov`

You had requested that minimal churn would be done to the 230 target specs and this does none yet: the linker features are inferred from the flavor since they're currently isomorphic. We of course expect this to change sooner rather than later.

In the future, we can allow targets to define linker features independently from their flavor, and remove the cc and lld components from the flavors to use the features instead, this actually doesn't need to block stabilization, as we discussed.

(Best reviewed per commit)
2024-04-13 11:10:01 +00:00
bors
9782770a81 Auto merge of #121430 - madsmtm:mac-catalyst-iOSSupport, r=wesleywiser
Add `/System/iOSSupport` to the library search path on Mac Catalyst

On macOS, `/System/iOSSupport` contains iOS frameworks like UIKit, which is the whole idea of Mac Catalyst.

To link to these, we need to explicitly tell the linker about the support library stubs provided in the macOS SDK under the same path.

Concretely, when building a binary for Mac Catalyst, Xcode passes the following flags to the linker:
```
-iframework /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/System/Library/Frameworks
-L/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/usr/lib
```

This is not something that can be disabled (it's enabled as soon as you enable `SUPPORTS_MACCATALYST`), so I think it's pretty safe to say that we don't need an option to turn these off.

I've chosen to slightly deviate from what Xcode does and use `-F` instead of `-iframework`, since we don't need to change the header search path, and this way the flags nicely match on all the linkers. From what I could tell by reading Clang sources, there shouldn't be a difference when just running the linker.

CC `@BlackHoleFox,` `@shepmaster` (I accidentally let rustbot choose the reviewer).
2024-04-12 22:27:33 +00:00
bors
22a2425c10 Auto merge of #121426 - madsmtm:remove-cc-syslibroot, r=pnkfelix
Remove redundant `-Wl,-syslibroot`

Since `-isysroot` is set, [Clang already passes this when invoking the linker](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-17.0.6/clang/lib/Driver/ToolChains/Darwin.cpp#L439-L442).

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/56833 for when the `-isysroot` was originally added, but didn't remove the unnecessary linker flag.

CC `@BlackHoleFox`
r? shepmaster
2024-04-12 18:16:47 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4a0e9e0deb
Rollup merge of #123249 - goolmoos:naked_variadics, r=pnkfelix
do not add prolog for variadic naked functions

fixes #99858
2024-04-12 17:41:33 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
ed62b57c86 linker: Remove laziness and caching from native search directory walks
It shouldn't be necessary for performance now.
2024-04-12 17:28:00 +03:00
Guy Shefy
9139d7252d do not add prolog for variadic naked functions
fixes #99858
2024-04-12 15:29:39 +03:00
Rémy Rakic
11b6d40a98 make CLI linker features influence the linker flavor
While they're isomorphic, we can flip the lld component where
applicable, so that downstream doesn't have to check both the flavor and
the linker features.
2024-04-12 09:46:38 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
c39929ce18 remove some unnecessary lifetimes 2024-04-12 09:43:05 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
7f111834ad
Rollup merge of #123827 - petrochenkov:searchdirs, r=Nadrieril
linker: Avoid some allocations in search directory iteration

This is more a cleanup than actual optimization.
2024-04-12 04:38:23 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
4ded0b82ca linker: Avoid some allocations in search directory iteration 2024-04-12 00:41:08 +03:00
Scott McMurray
d0ae76848a Add load/store helpers that take PlaceValue 2024-04-11 00:10:10 -07:00
Scott McMurray
3596098823 Put PlaceValue into OperandValue::Ref, rather than 3 tuple fields 2024-04-11 00:10:10 -07:00
Scott McMurray
89502e584b Make PlaceRef hold a PlaceValue for the non-layout fields (like OperandRef does) 2024-04-11 00:10:10 -07:00
Mads Marquart
e27290e529 Add /System/iOSSupport to the library search path on Mac Catalyst 2024-04-10 16:54:49 +02:00
Mads Marquart
efbbfa24a5 visionOS: Fix logic for finding the SDK root
The `sdk_name` is `xros`/`xrsimulator`, not `visionos`/`visionossimulator`.
2024-04-10 15:04:07 +02:00
bjorn3
dacfbfccc5 Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0
This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's
archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to
Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or
may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only
applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.
2024-04-09 17:45:02 +00:00
Scott McMurray
c6dde9d8a7 Put the NONTEMPORAL case first
That's how it was in `store_with_flags` before this PR, so let's do that here too just to be sure we get the right thing.
2024-04-09 08:51:33 -07:00
Scott McMurray
b5376ba601 Remove my scalar_copy_backend_type optimization attempt
I added this back in 111999, but I no longer think it's a good idea
- It had to get scaled back to only power-of-two things to not break a bunch of targets
- LLVM seems to be getting better at memcpy removal anyway
- Introducing vector instructions has seemed to sometimes (115515) make autovectorization worse

So this removes it from the codegen crates entirely, and instead just tries to use <https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_codegen_ssa/traits/builder/trait.BuilderMethods.html#method.typed_place_copy> instead of direct `memcpy` so things will still use load/store for immediates.
2024-04-09 08:51:32 -07:00
bors
bb78dba64c Auto merge of #123272 - saethlin:reachable-mono-cleanup, r=cjgillot
Only collect mono items from reachable blocks

Fixes the wrong comment pointed out in: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121421#discussion_r1537378431
Moves the analysis to use the worklist strategy: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121421#discussion_r1501840823
Also fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85836, using the same reachability analysis
2024-04-09 07:41:34 +00:00
Oli Scherer
84acfe86de Actually create ranged int types in the type system. 2024-04-08 12:02:19 +00:00
Ben Kimock
339f4be046 Only collect mono items from reachable blocks 2024-04-07 14:36:42 -04:00
bors
fc1a4c5cc9 Auto merge of #123221 - pacak:cache_emit, r=fmease,jieyouxu
Save/restore more items in cache with incremental compilation

Right now they don't play very well together, consider a simple example:

```
$ export RUSTFLAGS="--emit asm"
$ cargo new --lib foo
     Created library `foo` package
$ cargo build -q
$ touch src/lib.rs
$ cargo build
error: could not copy
  "/path/to/foo/target/debug/deps/foo-e307cc7fa7b6d64f.4qbzn9k8mosu50a5.rcgu.s"
  to "/path/to/foo/target/debug/deps/foo-e307cc7fa7b6d64f.s":
  No such file or directory (os error 2)
```

Touch triggers the rebuild, incremental compilation detects no changes (yay) and everything explodes while trying to copy files were they should go.

This pull request fixes it by copying and restoring more files in the incremental compilation cache

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89149
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88829

Related: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/interaction-between-incremental-compilation-and-emit/20551
2024-04-07 10:46:50 +00:00
Ben Kimock
a7912cb421 Put checks that detect UB under their own flag below debug_assertions 2024-04-06 11:21:47 -04:00
Michael Baikov
691e953da6 Save/restore more items in cache with incremental compilation 2024-04-06 10:59:24 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
84569f9086
Rollup merge of #123467 - dpaoliello:archcoff, r=wesleywiser
MSVC targets should use COFF as their archive format

While adding support for Arm64EC I ran into an issue where the standard library's rlib was missing the "EC Symbol Table" which is required for the MSVC linker to find import library symbols (generated by Rust's `raw-dylib` feature) when building for EC.

The root cause of the issue is that LLVM only generated symbol tables (including the EC Symbol Table) if the `ArchiveKind` is `COFF`, but the MSVC targets didn't set their archive format, so it was defaulting to GNU.
2024-04-06 08:56:34 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
74a5bc6c9e
Rollup merge of #121419 - agg23:xrOS-pr, r=davidtwco
Add aarch64-apple-visionos and aarch64-apple-visionos-sim tier 3 targets

Introduces `aarch64-apple-visionos` and `aarch64-apple-visionos-sim` as tier 3 targets. This allows native development for the Apple Vision Pro's visionOS platform.

This work has been tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/642. There is a corresponding `libc` change https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/3568 that is not required for merge.

Ideally we would be able to incorporate [this change](https://github.com/gimli-rs/object/pull/626) to the `object` crate, but the author has stated that a release will not be cut for quite a while. Therefore, the two locations that would reference the xrOS constant from `object` are hardcoded to their MachO values of 11 and 12, accompanied by TODOs to mark the code as needing change. I am open to suggestions on what to do here to get this checked in.

# Tier 3 Target Policy

At this tier, the Rust project provides no official support for a target, so we place minimal requirements on the introduction of targets.

> A tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)

See [src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md](e88379034a/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md)

> Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.
> * Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.
> * If possible, use only letters, numbers, dashes and underscores for the name. Periods (.) are known to cause issues in Cargo.

This naming scheme matches `$ARCH-$VENDOR-$OS-$ABI` which is matches the iOS Apple Silicon simulator (`aarch64-apple-ios-sim`) and other Apple targets.

> Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not
  create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for
  Rust developers or users.
>  - The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.
>  - Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (`MIT OR Apache-2.0`).
>  - The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the `tidy` tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to besubject to any new license requirements.
>  - Compiling, linking, and emitting functional binaries, libraries, or other code for the target (whether hosted on the target itself or cross-compiling from another target) must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries. Host tools built for the target itself may depend on the ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other applications built for the target, but those libraries must not be required for code generation for the target; cross-compilation to the target must not require such libraries at all. For instance, `rustc` built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.
> - "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are *not* limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.

This contribution is fully available under the standard Rust license with no additional legal restrictions whatsoever. This PR does not introduce any new dependency less permissive than the Rust license policy.

The new targets do not depend on proprietary libraries.

> Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.

This new target mirrors the standard library for watchOS and iOS, with minor divergences.

> The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running binaries, or running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run such binaries or tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.

Documentation is provided in [src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md](e88379034a/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/apple-visionos.md)

> Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.
> * This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.

> Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via `@)` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.
> * Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.

> Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.
> * In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.

I acknowledge these requirements and intend to ensure that they are met.

This target does not touch any existing tier 2 or tier 1 targets and should not break any other targets.
2024-04-05 22:33:25 +02:00
icedrocket
e82f46ab72 Ignore -C strip on MSVC 2024-04-05 08:18:01 +09:00
Daniel Paoliello
9d7090726d MSVC targets should use COFF as their archive format 2024-04-04 14:56:30 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
80d592cc24
Rollup merge of #122964 - joboet:pointer_expose, r=Amanieu
Rename `expose_addr` to `expose_provenance`

`expose_addr` is a bad name, an address is just a number and cannot be exposed. The operation is actually about the provenance of the pointer.

This PR thus changes the name of the method to `expose_provenance` without changing its return type. There is sufficient precedence for returning a useful value from an operation that does something else without the name indicating such, e.g. [`Option::insert`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/option/enum.Option.html#method.insert) and [`MaybeUninit::write`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/mem/union.MaybeUninit.html#method.write).

Returning the address is merely convenient, not a fundamental part of the operation. This is implied by the fact that integers do not have provenance since
```rust
let addr = ptr.addr();
ptr.expose_provenance();
let new = ptr::with_exposed_provenance(addr);
```
must behave exactly like
```rust
let addr = ptr.expose_provenance();
let new = ptr::with_exposed_provenance(addr);
```
as the result of `ptr.expose_provenance()` and `ptr.addr()` is the same integer. Therefore, this PR removes the `#[must_use]` annotation on the function and updates the documentation to reflect the important part.

~~An alternative name would be `expose_provenance`. I'm not at all opposed to that, but it makes a stronger implication than we might want that the provenance of the pointer returned by `ptr::with_exposed_provenance`[^1] is the same as that what was exposed, which is not yet specified as such IIUC. IMHO `expose` does not make that connection.~~

A previous version of this PR suggested `expose` as name, libs-api [decided on](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122964#issuecomment-2033194319) `expose_provenance` to keep the symmetry with `with_exposed_provenance`.

CC `@RalfJung`
r? libs-api

[^1]: I'm using the new name for `from_exposed_addr` suggested by #122935 here.
2024-04-03 22:11:00 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
bc8415b9e6
Rollup merge of #122619 - erikdesjardins:cast, r=compiler-errors
Fix some unsoundness with PassMode::Cast ABI

Fixes #122617

Reviewable commit-by-commit. More info in each commit message.
2024-04-03 22:11:00 +02:00
joboet
989660c3e6
rename expose_addr to expose_provenance 2024-04-03 16:00:38 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
e9ef8e1efa
Rollup merge of #122935 - RalfJung:with-exposed-provenance, r=Amanieu
rename ptr::from_exposed_addr -> ptr::with_exposed_provenance

As discussed on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-opsem/topic/To.20expose.20or.20not.20to.20expose/near/427757066).

The old name, `from_exposed_addr`, makes little sense as it's not the address that is exposed, it's the provenance. (`ptr.expose_addr()` stays unchanged as we haven't found a better option yet. The intended interpretation is "expose the provenance and return the address".)

The new name nicely matches `ptr::without_provenance`.
2024-04-02 20:37:39 -04:00
bors
88c2f4f5f5 Auto merge of #123385 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-v69vjbn, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #123198 (Add fn const BuildHasherDefault::new)
 - #123226 (De-LLVM the unchecked shifts [MCP#693])
 - #123302 (Make sure to insert `Sized` bound first into clauses list)
 - #123348 (rustdoc: add a couple of regression tests)
 - #123362 (Check that nested statics in thread locals are duplicated per thread.)
 - #123368 (CFI: Support non-general coroutines)
 - #123375 (rustdoc: synthetic auto trait impls: accept unresolved region vars for now)
 - #123378 (Update sysinfo to 0.30.8)

Failed merges:

 - #123349 (Fix capture analysis for by-move closure bodies)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-04-02 21:23:53 +00:00
bors
a77322c16f Auto merge of #118310 - scottmcm:three-way-compare, r=davidtwco
Add `Ord::cmp` for primitives as a `BinOp` in MIR

Update: most of this OP was written months ago.  See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118310#issuecomment-2016940014 below for where we got to recently that made it ready for review.

---

There are dozens of reasonable ways to implement `Ord::cmp` for integers using comparison, bit-ops, and branches.  Those differences are irrelevant at the rust level, however, so we can make things better by adding `BinOp::Cmp` at the MIR level:

1. Exactly how to implement it is left up to the backends, so LLVM can use whatever pattern its optimizer best recognizes and cranelift can use whichever pattern codegens the fastest.
2. By not inlining those details for every use of `cmp`, we drastically reduce the amount of MIR generated for `derive`d `PartialOrd`, while also making it more amenable to MIR-level optimizations.

Having extremely careful `if` ordering to μoptimize resource usage on broadwell (#63767) is great, but it really feels to me like libcore is the wrong place to put that logic.  Similarly, using subtraction [tricks](https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#CopyIntegerSign) (#105840) is arguably even nicer, but depends on the optimizer understanding it (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/73417) to be practical.  Or maybe [bitor is better than add](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/representing-in-ir/67369/2?u=scottmcm)?  But maybe only on a future version that [has `or disjoint` support](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-add-or-disjoint-flag/75036?u=scottmcm)?  And just because one of those forms happens to be good for LLVM, there's no guarantee that it'd be the same form that GCC or Cranelift would rather see -- especially given their very different optimizers.  Not to mention that if LLVM gets a spaceship intrinsic -- [which it should](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Suboptimal.20inlining.20in.20std.20function.20.60binary_search.60/near/404250586) -- we'll need at least a rustc intrinsic to be able to call it.

As for simplifying it in Rust, we now regularly inline `{integer}::partial_cmp`, but it's quite a large amount of IR.  The best way to see that is with 8811efa88b (diff-d134c32d028fbe2bf835fef2df9aca9d13332dd82284ff21ee7ebf717bfa4765R113) -- I added a new pre-codegen MIR test for a simple 3-tuple struct, and this PR change it from 36 locals and 26 basic blocks down to 24 locals and 8 basic blocks.  Even better, as soon as the construct-`Some`-then-match-it-in-same-BB noise is cleaned up, this'll expose the `Cmp == 0` branches clearly in MIR, so that an InstCombine (#105808) can simplify that to just a `BinOp::Eq` and thus fix some of our generated code perf issues.  (Tracking that through today's `if a < b { Less } else if a == b { Equal } else { Greater }` would be *much* harder.)

---

r? `@ghost`
But first I should check that perf is ok with this
~~...and my true nemesis, tidy.~~
2024-04-02 19:21:44 +00:00
Scott McMurray
327aa199dd Improve the build_shift_expr_rhs comment 2024-04-02 10:17:21 -07:00