Add rustbuild command `bench`
Add command bench to rustbuild, so that `./x.py bench <path>` can compile and run benchmarks.
`./x.py bench --stage 1 src/libcollections` and `./x.py bench --stage 1 src/libstd` should both compile well. Just `./x.py bench` runs all benchmarks for the libstd crates.
Fixes#37897
with this feature disabled, you can (Cargo) compile std with
"panic=abort"
rustbuild will build std with this feature enabled, to maintain the
status quo
fixes#37252
A few changes are included here:
* The `winapi` and `url` dependencies were dropped. The source code for these
projects is pretty weighty, and we're about to vendor them, so let's not
commit to that intake just yet. If necessary we can vendor them later but for
now it shouldn't be necessary.
* The `--frozen` flag is now always passed to Cargo, obviating the need for
tidy's `cargo_lock` check.
* Tidy was updated to not check the vendor directory
Closes#34687
This commit is a rewrite of the user-facing interface to the rustbuild build
system. The intention here is to make it much easier to compile/test the project
without having to remember weird rule names and such. An overall view of the new
interface is:
# build everything
./x.py build
# document everyting
./x.py doc
# test everything
./x.py test
# test libstd
./x.py test src/libstd
# build libcore stage0
./x.py build src/libcore --stage 0
# run stage1 run-pass tests
./x.py test src/test/run-pass --stage 1
The `src/bootstrap/bootstrap.py` script is now aliased as a top-level `x.py`
script. This `x` was chosen to be both short and easily tab-completable (no
collisions in that namespace!). The build system now accepts a "subcommand" of
what to do next, the main ones being build/doc/test.
Each subcommand then receives an optional list of arguments. These arguments are
paths in the source repo of what to work with. That is, if you want to test a
directory, you just pass that directory as an argument.
The purpose of this rewrite is to do away with all of the arcane renames like
"rpass" is the "run-pass" suite, "cfail" is the "compile-fail" suite, etc. By
simply working with directories and files it's much more intuitive of how to run
a test (just pass it as an argument).
The rustbuild step/dependency management was also rewritten along the way to
make this easy to work with and define, but that's largely just a refactoring of
what was there before.
The *intention* is that this support is extended for arbitrary files (e.g.
`src/test/run-pass/my-test-case.rs`), but that isn't quite implemented just yet.
Instead directories work for now but we can follow up with stricter path
filtering logic to plumb through all the arguments.
Enable line number debuginfo in releases
This commit enables by default passing the `-C debuginfo=1` argument to the
compiler for the stable, beta, and nightly release channels. A new configure
option was also added, `--enable-debuginfo-lines`, to enable this behavior in
developer builds as well.
Closes#36452
This commit enables by default passing the `-C debuginfo=1` argument to the
compiler for the stable, beta, and nightly release channels. A new configure
option was also added, `--enable-debuginfo-lines`, to enable this behavior in
developer builds as well.
Closes#36452
A new point-release shouldn't change any language semantics, so a local
stage0 that matches MAJOR.MINOR version should still be considered a
local-rebuild as far as `--cfg stageN` features go.
e.g. `1.14.0` should be considered a local-rebuild for any `1.14.X`.
(Bootstrap keys used to be an issue too, until #37265.)
This will make it easier for packagers to bootstrap rustc when they happen
to have a bootstrap compiler with a slightly different version number.
It's not ok for anything other than the build system to set this environment variable.
As the entry point for building the Rust compiler, a good user experience hinges
on this compiling quickly to get to the meat of the problem. To that end use
`#[cfg]`-specific dependencies to avoid building Windows crates on Unix and drop
the `regex` crate for now which was easily replacable with some string
searching.
rustbuild: Use current_dir instead of -C
Apparently some versions of git don't support the `-C` flag, so let's use the
guaranteed-to-work `current_dir` function.
rustbuild: Print out all build steps when --verbose
These helped me debug some problems with the asmjs target. It's just vomiting debug representations, so not the prettiest stuff.
r? @alexcrichton
rustbuild: Nicer error for host builds of targets
If a triple is configured only as a target, not a host, then trying to build
that triple with host artifacts would cause a panic. Fail a little nicer
instead.
Closes#36268
rustbuild: Fix dependency tracking with new Cargo
The recent Cargo update changed filenames, which broke a lot of incremental
rustbuild builds. What it thought were the output files were indeed no longer
the output files! (wreaking havoc).
This commit updates this to stop guessing filenames of Cargo and just manage
stamp files instead.
If a triple is configured only as a target, not a host, then trying to build
that triple with host artifacts would cause a panic. Fail a little nicer
instead.
Closes#36268
The recent Cargo update changed filenames, which broke a lot of incremental
rustbuild builds. What it thought were the output files were indeed no longer
the output files! (wreaking havoc).
This commit updates this to stop guessing filenames of Cargo and just manage
stamp files instead.
libcompiler-rt.a is dead, long live libcompiler-builtins.rlib
This commit moves the logic that used to build libcompiler-rt.a into a
compiler-builtins crate on top of the core crate and below the std crate.
This new crate still compiles the compiler-rt instrinsics using gcc-rs
but produces an .rlib instead of a static library.
Also, with this commit rustc no longer passes -lcompiler-rt to the
linker. This effectively makes the "no-compiler-rt" field of target
specifications a no-op. Users of `no_std` will have to explicitly add
the compiler-builtins crate to their crate dependency graph *if* they
need the compiler-rt intrinsics. Users of the `std` have to do nothing
extra as the std crate depends on compiler-builtins.
Finally, this a step towards lazy compilation of std with Cargo as the
compiler-rt intrinsics can now be built by Cargo instead of having to
be supplied by the user by some other method.
closes#34400
rustbuild: smarter `git submodule`-ing
With this commit, if one bootstraps rust against system llvm then the
src/llvm submodule is not updated/checked-out. This saves considerable
network bandwith when starting from a fresh clone of rust-lang/rust as
the llvm submodule is never cloned.
cc #30107
r? @alexcrichton
cc @petevine
~~We could also avoid updating the jemalloc submodule if --disable-jemalloc is used. It just hasn't been implemented.~~ Done
This probably doesn't handle "recursive" submodules correctly but I think we don't have any of those right now.
I'm still testing a bootstrap but already confirmed that the llvm submodule doesn't get updated when `--llvm-root` is passed to `configure`.
With this commit, if one bootstraps rust against system llvm then the
src/llvm submodule is not updated/checked-out. This saves considerable
network bandwith when starting from a fresh clone of rust-lang/rust as
the llvm submodule is never cloned.
cc #30107
add -mrelax-relocations=no to i686-musl and i586-gnu
I've been experiencing #34978 with these two targets. This applies the
hack in #35178 to these targets as well.
r? @alexcrichton
Point llvm @bitshifter branch until PR accepted
Use today's date for LLVM auto clean trigger
Update LLVM submodule to point at rust-lang fork.
Handle case when target is set