What I've done here is try to make the code match what vcvars does much more closely. It now chooses which SDK to find based on the version of MSVC that it found. It also bases the decision of whether to find all the things on whether `VCINSTALLDIR` has been set, which is more likely to have only been set by an invocation of vcvars, unlike previously where it would do some things only if `LIB` wasn't set even though there was a valid use case for libraries to add themselves to `LIB` without having invoked vcvars.
There are still some debug `println!`s so people can test the PR and make sure it works correctly on various setups.
It supports VS 2015, 2013, and 2012. People who want to use versions of VS older (or newer) than that will have to manually invoke the appropriate vcvars bat file to set the proper environment variables themselves.
Do not merge yet.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30229
This handles cases when the LLVM used isn't configured will the 'usual' targets. Also, cases where LLVM is shared are also handled (ie with `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` etc).
This PR reverts #29543 and instead implements proper support for "=*m" and "+*m" indirect output operands. This provides a framework on top of which support for plain memory operands ("m", "=m" and "+m") can be implemented.
This also fixes the liveness analysis pass not handling read/write operands correctly.
This handles cases when the LLVM used isn't configured will the 'usual'
targets. Also, cases where LLVM is shared are also handled (ie with
`LD_LIBRARY_PATH` etc).
Many of the structs in `str` that are used as part of its methods do not have links to the methods.
This is especially annoying when a Google search drops you into the documentation of the struct, when you really wanted to get to the method of the same name.
This patch adds those links.
This PR for #30299 adds the name of the type where the field is missing.
The span that's used for the error seems correct. What may be confusing is when the initializer with the missing field contains other intializers. These are then included in the span. For example, consider the following listing.
struct A {
a1: i32,
a2: B,
}
struct B {
b1: i32,
b2: i32
}
fn main() {
let x = A {
a2: B {
b1: 1,
b2: 1
},
};
}
It will display the following code snippet along with the message that field `a2` is missing:
let x = A {
a2: B {
b1: 1,
b2: 1
},
};
By adding the name of the type it's clearer where the field is missing.
r? @nrc
Since PR #30294 unintentionally fixed issue #30159, it can cause breakage for a different reason than I originally stated in the PR (see #30159, I characterized the issue precisely there).
This commit limits the scope of the breakage to what I originally stated in the PR by "unfixing" the backwards incompatible part of #30159.
I think fixing #30159 has enough potential for breakage to warrant a crater run. If you disagree, I can cancel this PR, leaving it fixed.
r? @steveklabnik
Currently neither the API docs nor the book clearly explain that out-of-bounds array indexing causes a panic. Since this is fairly important and seems to surprise a number of new Rust programmers, I think it's worth adding to both places. (But if you think it would be better to put this info in the API docs only, that's fine too.)
Some specific things I'd like feedback on:
* The new text here talks about panicking, which hasn't been formally introduced at this point in chapter 5 (though it has been mentioned in previous sections too).
* Similarly the `Vec::get` example uses `Option<T>` which hasn't been fully introduced yet. Should we leave out this example?
The landing of #30182, specifically the removal of float `from_str_radix`, allowed the refactoring in the middle commit. While I was at it, I also crossed two other nits off my TODO list.
Turns out that calling `resolve_type_variables_if_possible` in a O(n^2)
loop is a bad idea. Now we just resolve each copy of the region variable
to its lowest name each time (we resolve the region variable to its lowest
name, rather than to its unify-table name to avoid the risk of
the unify-table name changing infinitely many times. That may be
not a problem in practice, but I am not sure of it).
This commit changes our distribution and in-tree sources to pass the `-C rpath`
flag by default during compiles. This means that from-source builds, including
our release channels, will have this option enabled as well. Motivated
by #29941, this change means that the compiler should be usable as-is on all
platforms just after extraction or installation. This experience is already true
on Windows but on Unixes you still need to set up LD_LIBRARY_PATH or the
equivalent, which can often be unfortunate.
This option was originally turned off by default for Linux distributions who
tend to take care of these sorts of details themselves, so it is expected that
all those builds of Rust will want to pass `--disable-rpath` to the configure
script to preserve that behavior.
Closes#29941