Use `target_vendor = "apple"` instead of `target_os = "..."`
Use `target_vendor = "apple"` instead of `all(target_os = "macos", target_os = "ios", target_os = "tvos", target_os = "watchos", target_os = "visionos")`.
The apple targets are quite close to being identical, with iOS, tvOS, watchOS and visionOS being even closer, so using `target_vendor` when possible makes it clearer when something is actually OS-specific, or just Apple-specific.
Note that `target_vendor` will [be deprecated in the future](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100343), but not before an alternative (like `target_family = "apple"`) is available.
While doing this, I found various inconsistencies and small mistakes in the standard library, see the commits for details. Will follow-up with an extra PR for a similar issue that need a bit more discussion. EDIT: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124494
Since you've talked about using `target_vendor = "apple"` in the past:
r? workingjubilee
CC `@simlay,` `@thomcc`
`@rustbot` label O-macos O-ios O-tvos O-watchos O-visionos
Cleanup: Replace item names referencing GitHub issues or error codes with something more meaningful
**lcnr** in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117164#pullrequestreview-1969935387:
> […] while I know that there's precendent to name things `Issue69420`, I really dislike this as it requires looking up the issue to figure out the purpose of such a variant. Actually referring to the underlying issue, e.g. `AliasMayNormToUncovered` or whatever and then linking to the issue in a doc comment feels a lot more desirable to me. We should ideally rename all the functions and enums which currently use issue numbers.
I've grepped through `compiler/` like crazy and think that I've found all instances of this pattern.
However, I haven't renamed `compute_2229_migrations_*`. Should I?
The first commit introduces an abhorrent and super long name for an item because naming is hard but also scary looking / unwelcoming names are good for things related to temporary-ish backcompat hacks. I'll let you discover it by yourself.
Contains a bit of drive-by cleanup and a diag migration bc that was the simplest option.
r? lcnr or compiler
Because this now always takes place at the start of the function, we can just
use the normal `alloca` method and then initialize each bitmap immediately.
This patch also moves bitmap setup out of the `mcdc_parameters` method, because
there is no longer any particular reason for it to be there.
Lazily normalize inside trait ref during orphan check & consider ty params in rigid alias types to be uncovered
Fixes#99554, fixesrust-lang/types-team#104.
Fixes#114061.
Supersedes #100555.
Tracking issue for the future compatibility lint: #124559.
r? lcnr
Add `normalize()` in run-make `Diff` type
I need it to do the same as:
```
//@ normalize-stdout-test "finished in \d+\.\d+s" -> "finished in $$TIME"
```
in doctests.
I need it in particular for the https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123974 PR (which contains this commit until this PR current PR is merged).
cc `@Urgau`
r? `@jieyouxu`
Write `git-commit-{sha,info}` for Cargo in source tarballs
Right now Cargo doesn't populate the commit hash or date in its version output when it's built from the plain source tarball. That's because we don't include the git information for it, and Cargo's build script doesn't pick it up.
This PR *partially* solves the problem by storing the git information for Cargo in `src/tools/cargo` in the plain source tarball. We store separate information because even when built in CI Cargo uses its own git information rather than Rust's.
This PR will also require a change in the Cargo repository to consume this information (https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/13832), but it doesn't have to be blocked on the Cargo PR being merged.
Add test for issue 106269
Closes#106269
Made this an assembly test as the LLVM codegen is still quite verbose and doesn't really indicate the behaviour we want
Port repr128-dwarf run-make test to rmake
This PR ports the repr128-dwarf run-make test to rmake, using the `gimli` crate instead of the `llvm-dwarfdump` command.
Note that this PR changes `rmake.rs` files to be compiled with the 2021 edition (previously no edition was passed to `rustc`, meaning they were compiled with the 2015 edition). This means that `panic!("{variable}")` will now work as expected in `rmake.rs` files (there's already a usage in the [wasm-symbols-not-exported test](aca749eefc/tests/run-make/wasm-symbols-not-exported/rmake.rs (L34)) that this will fix).
Tracking issue: #121876
Remove many `#[macro_use] extern crate foo` items
This requires the addition of more `use` items, which often make the code more verbose. But they also make the code easier to read, because `#[macro_use]` obscures where macros are defined.
r? `@fee1-dead`
Mention Both HRTB and Generic Lifetime Param in `E0637` documentation
The compiler (rustc 1.77.0) error for `and_without_explicit_lifetime()` in the erroneous code example suggests using a HRTB. But, the corrected example uses an explicit lifetime parameter.
This PR fixes it so that the documentation and the compiler suggestion for error code `E0637` are consistent with each other.
Modify lint pass note for consistency with the book
This PR:
- removes the note which appears when an early lint pass is created using `cargo dev new_lint`.
- adds a note that encourages contributors to use an early pass unless type information is needed if a late lint pass is created using `cargo dev new_lint`.
Late pass remains the default value if no pass is specified as most lints use late pass.
Closes#12595
changelog: none
coverage: Split off `mappings.rs` from `spans.rs` and `from_mir.rs`
Originally, `spans.rs` was mainly concerned with extracting and post-processing spans from MIR, so that they could be used for block coverage instrumentation.
Over time it has organically expanded to include more responsibilities, especially relating to branch coverage and MC/DC coverage, that don't really fit its current name.
This PR therefore takes all the extra code that is *not* part of the old span-refinement engine, and moves it out into a new `mappings.rs` file.
---
No functional changes. I have deliberately avoided doing any follow-up (such as renaming types or functions), because this particular change is very rot-prone, and I want it to be as simple and self-contained as possible.
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
because we are already marking unions `NoPropagation` in
`CanConstProp::check()`. That is enough to prevent any attempts
at const propagating unions and this second check is not needed.
Also improve a comment in `CanConstProp::check()`
Split mcdc code to a sub module of coverageinfo
A further work from #124217 . I have made relatively large changes when working on #124278 so that it would better split them from `coverageinfo.rs` to avoid potential troubling merge work with improved branch coverage by `@Zalathar` .
Besides `BlockMarkerGenerator` is added to avoid ownership problems (mostly needed for following change of #124278 )
All code changes are done in [a37d737a](a3d737a086) while the second commit just renames the file.
cc `@RenjiSann` `@Zalathar`
This will impact your current work.
Yes it looks weird, but this is how Arm write it now.
I left ARM64 alone, because it's a Microsoft/Apple term but not an Arm term (they have Armv8-A and Armv9-A architectures, which say that A64 instructions are executed when in the Aarch64 state), and I don't want to get into that, especially for a Tier 1 target.
Explicitly document that the jobserver may be used by `rustc` and show
the warning to increase the chances that this document is found when
searching for solutions online.
In particular, add a section about the interaction with build systems,
which is intended to contain recommendations on how to integrate `rustc`
with different built systems.
For GNU Make, recommend using the `+` indicator. In addition, add a
note about the issue with GNU Make 4.3 since it is important that users
realize they should do this even if they do not expect parallelism from
`rustc`. Finally, show how to workaround the issue of `$(shell ...)`
calls in recursive Make (which e.g. was needed for the Linux kernel).
The GNU Make 4.4 case under `--jobserver-style=pipe` is not added since
it got fixed after Rust 1.76.0 already (i.e. `rustc` will not warn if
it finds the negative file descriptors).
For CMake, recommend using `JOB_SERVER_AWARE` and show a workaround using
`$(MAKE)` for earlier versions (when using the Makefile generator).
From: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120515
Cc: @petrochenkov @belovdv @weihanglo @bjorn3
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
and replace it with a simple note suggesting
returning a value.
The type mismatch error was never due to
how many times the loop iterates. It is more
because of the peculiar structure of what the for
loop desugars to. So the note talking about
iteration count didn't make sense
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #124519 (adapt a codegen test for llvm 19)
- #124524 (Add StaticForeignItem and use it on ForeignItemKind)
- #124540 (Give proof tree visitors the ability to instantiate nested goals directly)
- #124543 (codegen tests: Tolerate `range()` qualifications in enum tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
codegen tests: Tolerate `range()` qualifications in enum tests
Current LLVM can infer range bounds on the i8s involved with these tests, and annotates it. Accept these bounds if present.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
cc `@durin42`
Give proof tree visitors the ability to instantiate nested goals directly
Useful when we want to look at the nested goals but not necessarily visit them (e.g. in select).
r? lcnr
Add StaticForeignItem and use it on ForeignItemKind
This is in preparation for unsafe extern blocks that adds a safe variant for functions inside extern blocks.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@compiler-errors`
Add StaticForeignItem and use it on ForeignItemKind
This is in preparation for unsafe extern blocks that adds a safe variant for functions inside extern blocks.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@compiler-errors`