The `--disable-jemalloc` configure option has a failure mode where it will
create a distribution that is not compatible with other compilers. For example
the nightly for Linux will assume that it will link to jemalloc by default as
an allocator for executable crates. If, however, a standard library is used
which was built via `./configure --disable-jemalloc` then this will fail
because the jemalloc crate wasn't built.
While this seems somewhat reasonable as a niche situation, the same mechanism is
used for disabling jemalloc for platforms that just don't support it. For
example if the rumprun target is compiled then the sibiling Linux target *also*
doesn't have jemalloc. This is currently a problem for our cross-build nightlies
which build many targets. If rumprun is also built, it will disable jemalloc for
all targets, which isn't desired.
This commit moves the platform-specific disabling of jemalloc as hardcoded logic
into the makefiles that is scoped per-platform. This way when configuring
multiple targets **without the `--disable-jemalloc` option specified** all
targets will get jemalloc as they should.
This fixes a bug (#31845) introduced in #31105 in which lexical scopes contain items from all anonymous module ancestors, even if the path to the anonymous module includes a normal module:
```rust
fn f() {
fn g() {}
mod foo {
fn h() {
g(); // This erroneously resolves on nightly
}
}
}
```
This is a [breaking-change] on nightly but not on stable or beta.
r? @nikomatsakis
Previously, if an error was returned from the formatter that did not
originate in an underlying writer error, Write::write_fmt would return
successfully even if the formatting did not complete (was interrupted by
an `fmt::Error` return).
Now we choose to emit an io::Error with kind Other for formatter errors.
Since this may reveal error returns from `write!()` and similar that
previously passed silently, it's a kind of a [breaking-change].
You can now group tests into directories like `run-pass/borrowck` or `compile-fail/borrowck`. By default, all `.rs` files within any directory are considered tests: to ignore some directory, create a placeholder file called `compiletest-ignore-dir` (I had to do this for several existing directories).
r? @alexcrichton
cc @brson
Change import a trait suggestion from:
help: candidate #1: use `std::io::Write`
to
help: candidate #1: `use std::io::Write`
so that the code can be copied directly.
This will correctly add the thread_local attribute to the external static variable ```errno```:
```rust
extern {
#[thread_local]
static errno: c_int;
}
```
Before this commit, the thread_local attribute is ignored. Fixes#30795.
Thanks @alexcrichton for pointing out the solution.
Right now the compiler's we're using actually default to armv7/thumb2 I believe,
so this should help push them back to what the arm-unknown-linux-* targets are
for. This at least matches that clang does for the `arm-unknown-linux-gnueabihf`
target which is to map it to an armv6 architecture.
Closes#31787
This commit adds support for *truly* unstable options in the compiler, as well
as adding warnings for the start of the deprecation path of
unstable-but-not-really options. Specifically, the following behavior is now in
place for handling unstable options:
* As before, an unconditional error is emitted if an unstable option is passed
and the `-Z unstable-options` flag is not present. Note that passing another
`-Z` flag does not require passing `-Z unstable-options` as well.
* New flags added to the compiler will be in the `Unstable` category as opposed
to the `UnstableButNotReally` category which means they will unconditionally
emit an error when used on stable.
* All current flags are in a category where they will emit warnings when used
that the option will soon be a hard error.
Also as before, it is intended that `-Z` is akin to `#![feature]` in a crate
where it is required to unlock unstable functionality. A nightly compiler which
is used without any `-Z` flags should only be exercising stable behavior.
This PR changes the visibility of extern crate declarations to match that of items (fixes#26775).
To avoid breakage, the PR makes it a `public_in_private` lint to reexport a private extern crate, and it adds the lint `inaccessible_extern_crate` for uses of an inaccessible extern crate.
The lints can be avoided by making the appropriate `extern crate` declaration public.
CryptGenRandom takes a DWORD (u32) for the length so it only supports
writing u32::MAX bytes at a time.
Casting the length from a usize caused truncation meaning the whole
buffer was not always filled.
around a set of paths called `TestPaths`
This commit is not quite standalone; it basically contains all the
borrowing plumbing bits, the interesting stuff comes in the next commit.
As a Rust newbie, I found the book's explanation for why the `filter` closure gets a reference very confusing, and tried to figure out why `filter` is somehow less consumptive than `map` -- but it isn't; that's controlled by `iter`/`into_iter`. I flailed around for a while until @habnabit explained it to me, and in retrospect it is quite obvious :-)
Reference implied that use declarations may appear *only* at the top of blocks and modules, but it is not the case, and the following is valid:
```Rust
fn foo() {
let x = 92;
use baz::bar;
}
```
r? @steveklabnik