Update cargo
3 commits in efd4ca3dc0b89929dc8c5f5c023d25978d76cb61..9809f8ff33c2b998919fd0432c626f0f7323697a
2022-08-12 01:28:28 +0000 to 2022-08-16 22:10:06 +0000
- Improve error message for an array value in the manifest (rust-lang/cargo#10944)
- Fix file locking being not supported on Android raising an error (rust-lang/cargo#10975)
- Bump to 0.66.0, update changelog (rust-lang/cargo#10983)
Migrate emoji identifier diagnostics to `SessionDiagnostic` in rustc_interface
* Migrate emoji identifier diagnostics to `interface_ferris_identifier` and `interface_emoji_identifier`.
This is my first PR! I'm learning how to migrate these diagnostics. Thanks in advance.
r? rust-lang/diagnostics
Now that we require at least LLVM 13, that codegen backend is always
using its intrinsic `fptosi.sat` and `fptoui.sat` conversions, so it
doesn't need the manual implementation. However, the GCC backend still
needs it, so we can move all of that code down there.
Update cargo
8 commits in ce40690a5e4e315d3dab0aae1eae69d0252c52ac..efd4ca3dc0b89929dc8c5f5c023d25978d76cb61
2022-08-09 22:32:17 +0000 to 2022-08-12 01:28:28 +0000
- Use `std:🧵:scope` to replace crossbeam (rust-lang/cargo#10977)
- [docs] Remove extra "in" from `cargo-test.md` (rust-lang/cargo#10978)
- Enable two windows tests (rust-lang/cargo#10930)
- Improve error msg for get target runner (rust-lang/cargo#10968)
- Ensure rustc-echo-wrapper works with an overridden build.target-dir (rust-lang/cargo#10962)
- Switch back to `available_parallelism` (rust-lang/cargo#10969)
- Only override published resolver when the workspace is different (rust-lang/cargo#10961)
- Add `CARGO_LOG` to "Environment variables Cargo reads" (rust-lang/cargo#10967)
compiletest: use target cfg instead of hard-coded tables
This changes compiletest to use `rustc --print=cfg` to dynamically determine the properties of a target when matching `ignore` and `only` rules instead of using hard-coded tables or target-triple parsing (which don't always follow the `<arch><sub>-<vendor>-<sys>-<abi>` pattern). The benefit here is that it will more accurately match the target properties, and not require maintaining these extra tables.
This also adds matching the `target_family` in ignore rules. The primary benefit here is so that `ignore-wasm` works as expected (matching all wasm-like targets). There were already several tests that had `ignore-wasm` in them (which previously had no effect), so it is evident that some people expected that to work. This also adds `ignore-unix/only-unix`.
There is some risk that this changes the behavior from before since the tables aren't quite the same as the target properties. However, I did fairly extensive comparisons to see what would be different. https://gist.github.com/ehuss/5bf7ab347605160cefb6f84ba5ea5f6b contains a full list of differences for all targets for all tests. I do not think any of the affected target/test combinations are things that are actually tested in CI. I tested several of the more unusual test images (test-various, dist-various-1, wasm32), and they seem fine.
A summary of most of the reasons behind the differences:
- wasm64-unknown-unknown wasm32-wasi now match "wasm"
- Targets now match "gnu" because they have target_env=gnu
- aarch64-wrs-vxworks
- armv7-wrs-vxworks-eabihf
- i686-wrs-vxworks
- powerpc-wrs-vxworks
- powerpc64-wrs-vxworks
- x86_64-wrs-vxworks
- wasm64-unknown-unknown now matches wasm64
- x86_64-unknown-none-linuxkernel no longer matches "linux", but will match "gnu" and "none"
- Various arm targets now match "aarch64" or "arm":
- arm64_32-apple-watchos
- armebv7r-none-eabi
- armv6-unknown-freebsd
- armv6-unknown-netbsd-eabihf
- armv6k-nintendo-3ds
- armv7-wrs-vxworks-eabihf
- armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabi
- armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabihf
- armv7a-none-eabi
- armv7a-none-eabihf
- armv7k-apple-watchos
- armv7r-none-eabi
- armv7r-none-eabihf
- Now matches "thumb" and "arm"
- thumbv4t-none-eabi
- thumbv6m-none-eabi
- thumbv7a-pc-windows-msvc
- thumbv7a-uwp-windows-msvc
- thumbv7em-none-eabi
- thumbv7em-none-eabihf
- thumbv7m-none-eabi
- thumbv7neon-linux-androideabi
- thumbv7neon-unknown-linux-gnueabihf
- thumbv7neon-unknown-linux-musleabihf
- thumbv8m.base-none-eabi
- thumbv8m.main-none-eabi
- asmjs-unknown-emscripten now matches "wasm32" because that it is its defined arch
- avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328 now matches "none" (because target_os="none")
- now matches 64bit:
- bpfeb-unknown-none
- bpfel-unknown-none
- sparcv9-sun-solaris
- now matches endian-big:
- m68k-unknown-linux-gnu
- now matches 16bit:
- msp430-none-elf
- now matches 32bit:
- arm64_32-apple-watchos
- now matches riscv32 (and needs-asm-support):
- riscv32gc-unknown-linux-gnu
- riscv32gc-unknown-linux-musl
- riscv32i-unknown-none-elf
- riscv32im-unknown-none-elf
- riscv32imac-unknown-none-elf
- riscv32imac-unknown-xous-elf
- riscv32imc-esp-espidf
- riscv32imc-unknown-none-elf
- riscv64imac-unknown-none-elf
Implement `#[rustc_default_body_unstable]`
This PR implements a new stability attribute — `#[rustc_default_body_unstable]`.
`#[rustc_default_body_unstable]` controls the stability of default bodies in traits.
For example:
```rust
pub trait Trait {
#[rustc_default_body_unstable(feature = "feat", isssue = "none")]
fn item() {}
}
```
In order to implement `Trait` user needs to either
- implement `item` (even though it has a default implementation)
- enable `#![feature(feat)]`
This is useful in conjunction with [`#[rustc_must_implement_one_of]`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92164), we may want to relax requirements for a trait, for example allowing implementing either of `PartialEq::{eq, ne}`, but do so in a safe way — making implementation of only `PartialEq::ne` unstable.
r? `@Aaron1011`
cc `@nrc` (iirc you were interested in this wrt `read_buf`), `@danielhenrymantilla` (you were interested in the related `#[rustc_must_implement_one_of]`)
P.S. This is my first time working with stability attributes, so I'm not sure if I did everything right 😅
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #100071 (deps: dedupe `annotate-snippets` crate versions)
- #100127 (Remove Windows function preloading)
- #100130 (Avoid pointing out `return` span if it has nothing to do with type error)
- #100169 (Optimize `pointer::as_aligned_to`)
- #100175 (ascii -> ASCII in code comment)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Bump cc version in bootstrap
Among other changes, the newer cc release pulls in this fix:
b2792e33ff
This fixes errors when building compiler_builtins for UEFI targets.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #99933 (parallelize HTML checking tool)
- #99958 (Improve position named arguments lint underline and formatting names)
- #100008 (Update all pre-cloned submodules on startup)
- #100049 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
- #100070 (Clarify Cargo.toml comments)
- #100074 (rustc-docs: Be less specific about the representation of `+bundle`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
parallelize HTML checking tool
there's a lot of IO, so timings on my laptop are far from stable, but it seems to be considerably faster.
this step often appears to take 5+ minutes in CI, so hopefully this offers a speedup
This is done by having the crossbeam dependency inserted into the
proc_macro server code from the server side, to avoid adding a
dependency to proc_macro.
In addition, this introduces a -Z command-line option which will switch
rustc to run proc-macros using this cross-thread executor. With the
changes to the bridge in #98186, #98187, #98188 and #98189, the
performance of the executor should be much closer to same-thread
execution.
In local testing, the crossbeam executor was substantially more
performant than either of the two existing CrossThread strategies, so
they have been removed to keep things simple.
This initial implementation handles transmutations between types with specified layouts, except when references are involved.
Co-authored-by: Igor null <m1el.2027@gmail.com>
Upgrade indexmap and thorin-dwp to use hashbrown 0.12
This removes the last dependencies on hashbrown 0.11.
This also upgrades to hashbrown 0.12.3 to fix a double-free (#99372).
Add fine-grained LLVM CFI support to the Rust compiler
This PR improves the LLVM Control Flow Integrity (CFI) support in the Rust compiler by providing forward-edge control flow protection for Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and parameter types.
Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89653).
LLVM CFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=cfi and requires LTO (i.e., -Clto).
Thank you again, `@eddyb,` `@nagisa,` `@pcc,` and `@tmiasko` for all the help!
This commit improves the LLVM Control Flow Integrity (CFI) support in
the Rust compiler by providing forward-edge control flow protection for
Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups
identified by their return and parameter types.
Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled
code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code
share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as
part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the
time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the
tracking issue #89653).
LLVM CFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=cfi and requires LTO (i.e.,
-Clto).
Use constant eval to do strict mem::uninit/zeroed validity checks
I'm not sure about the code organisation here, I just dumped the check in rustc_const_eval at the root. Not hard to move it elsewhere, in any case.
Also, this means cranelift codegen intrinsics lose the strict checks, since they don't seem to depend on rustc_const_eval, and I didn't see a point in keeping around two copies.
I also left comments in the is_zero_valid methods about "uhhh help how do i do this", those apply to both methods equally.
Also rustc_codegen_ssa now depends on rustc_const_eval... is this okay?
Pinging `@RalfJung` since you were the one who mentioned this to me, so I'm assuming you're interested.
Haven't had a chance to run full tests on this since it's really warm, and it's 1AM, I'll check out any failures/comments in the morning :)
Stop keeping metadata in memory before writing it to disk
Fixes#96358
I created this PR according with the instruction given in the issue except for the following points:
- While the issue says "Write metadata into the temporary file in `encode_and_write_metadata` even if `!need_metadata_file`", I could not do that. That is because though I tried to do that and run `x.py test`, I got a lot of test failures as follows.
<details>
<summary>List of failed tests</summary>
<pre>
<code>
failures:
[ui] src/test/ui/json-multiple.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/json-options.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/rmeta/rmeta-rpass.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/save-analysis/emit-notifications.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/changing-crates.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/svh-change-lit.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/svh-change-significant-cfg.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/svh-change-trait-bound.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/svh-change-type-arg.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/svh-change-type-ret.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/svh-change-type-static.rs
[ui] src/test/ui/svh/svh-use-trait.rs
test result: FAILED. 12915 passed; 12 failed; 100 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out; finished in 71.41s
Some tests failed in compiletest suite=ui mode=ui host=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
Build completed unsuccessfully in 0:01:58
</code>
</pre>
</details>
- I could not resolve the extra tasks about `create_rmeta_file` and `create_compressed_metadata_file` for my lack of ability.
macros: `LintDiagnostic` derive
- Move `LintDiagnosticBuilder` into `rustc_errors` so that a diagnostic derive can refer to it.
- Introduce a `DecorateLint` trait, which is equivalent to `SessionDiagnostic` or `AddToDiagnostic` but for lints. Necessary without making more changes to the lint infrastructure as `DecorateLint` takes a `LintDiagnosticBuilder` and re-uses all of the existing logic for determining what type of diagnostic a lint should be emitted as (e.g. error/warning).
- Various refactorings of the diagnostic derive machinery (extracting `build_field_mapping` helper and moving `sess` field out of the `DiagnosticDeriveBuilder`).
- Introduce a `LintDiagnostic` derive macro that works almost exactly like the `SessionDiagnostic` derive macro except that it derives a `DecorateLint` implementation instead. A new derive is necessary for this because `SessionDiagnostic` is intended for when the generated code creates the diagnostic. `AddToDiagnostic` could have been used but it would have required more changes to the lint machinery.
~~At time of opening this pull request, ignore all of the commits from #98624, it's just the last few commits that are new.~~
r? `@oli-obk`
`SessionDiagnostic` isn't suitable for use on lints as whether or not it
creates an error or a warning is decided at compile-time by the macro,
whereas lints decide this at runtime based on the location of the lint
being reported (as it will depend on the user's `allow`/`deny`
attributes, etc). Re-using most of the machinery for
`SessionDiagnostic`, this macro introduces a `LintDiagnostic` derive
which implements a `DecorateLint` trait, taking a
`LintDiagnosticBuilder` and adding to the lint according to the
diagnostic struct.
Bump RLS to latest master on rust-lang/rls
Of primary interest, this merges
rust-lang/rls@ece09b88c0 into rust-lang/rust,
which brings in the changes that fix RLS tests broken by #97853. #97853 already
introduced that commit's changes (under
rust-lang/rls@27f4044df0) but without putting those changes on
rust-lang/rls as a branch, so we ended up with an orphan commit that caused
trouble when updating submodules in rust-lang/rust.
This commit, once merged into rust-lang/rust, should continue to let RLS tests
to pass on rust-lang/rust's side and move us back into a healthy state where tip
of the submodule points to a valid master commit in the rust-lang/rls
repository.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98451, but not marking as fixed as I believe we need to add verification to prevent future oversights.
Fully remove submodule handling from bootstrap.py
These submodules were previously updated in python because Cargo gives a hard error if toml files
are missing from the workspace:
```
error: failed to load manifest for workspace member `/home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/src/tools/rls`
Caused by:
failed to read `/home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/src/tools/rls/Cargo.toml`
Caused by:
No such file or directory (os error 2)
failed to run: /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0/bin/cargo build --manifest-path /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/src/bootstrap/Cargo.toml
```
However, bootstrap doesn't actually need to be part of the workspace.
Remove it so we can move submodule handling fully to Rust, avoiding duplicate code between Rust and Python.
Note that this does break `cargo run`; it has to be `cd src/bootstrap && cargo run` now.
Given that we're planning to make the main entrypoint a shell script (or rust binary),
I think this is a good tradeoff for reduced complexity in bootstrap.py.
To get this working, I also had to remove support for vendoring when using the git sources, because `cargo vendor` requires all submodules to be checked out. I think this is ok; people who care about this are likely already using the pre-vendored `rustc-src` tarball.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90764. Helps with #94829
Of primary interest, this merges
rust-lang/rls@ece09b88c0 into rust-lang/rust,
which brings in the changes that fix RLS tests broken by #97853. #97853 already
introduced that commit's changes (under
27f4044df03d15c7c38a483c3e4635cf4f51807d) but without putting those changes on
rust-lang/rls as a branch, so we ended up with an orphan commit that caused
trouble when updating submodules in rust-lang/rust.
This commit, once merged into rust-lang/rust, should continue to let RLS tests
to pass on rust-lang/rust's side and move us back into a healthy state where tip
of the submodule points to a valid master commit in the rust-lang/rls
repository.
Migrate two diagnostics from the `rustc_builtin_macros` crate
Migrate two diagnostics to use the struct derive and be translatable.
r? ```@davidtwco```
These submodules were previously updated in python because Cargo gives a hard error if toml files
are missing from the workspace:
```
error: failed to load manifest for workspace member `/home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/src/tools/rls`
Caused by:
failed to read `/home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/src/tools/rls/Cargo.toml`
Caused by:
No such file or directory (os error 2)
failed to run: /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0/bin/cargo build --manifest-path /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/src/bootstrap/Cargo.toml
```
However, bootstrap doesn't actually need to be part of the workspace.
Remove it so we can move submodule handling fully to Rust, avoiding duplicate code between Rust and Python.
Note that this does break `cargo run`; it has to be `cd src/bootstrap && cargo run` now.
Given that we're planning to make the main entrypoint a shell script (or rust binary),
I think this is a good tradeoff for reduced complexity in bootstrap.py.