This commit moves the actual code generation in the compiler behind a query
keyed by a codegen unit's name. This ended up entailing quite a few internal
refactorings to enable this, along with a few cut corners:
* The `OutputFilenames` structure is now tracked in the `TyCtxt` as it affects a
whole bunch of trans and such. This is now behind a query and threaded into
the construction of the `TyCtxt`.
* The `TyCtxt` now has a channel "out the back" intended to send data to worker
threads in rustc_trans. This is used as a sort of side effect of the codegen
query but morally what's happening here is the return value of the query
(currently unit but morally a path) is only valid once the background threads
have all finished.
* Dispatching work items to the codegen threads was refactored to only rely on
data in `TyCtxt`, which mostly just involved refactoring where data was
stored, moving it from the translation thread to the controller thread's
`CodegenContext` or the like.
* A new thread locals was introduced in trans to work around the query
system. This is used in the implementation of `assert_module_sources` which
looks like an artifact of the old query system and will presumably go away
once red/green is up and running.
This commit removes the `dep_graph` field from the `Session` type according to
issue #44390. Most of the fallout here was relatively straightforward and the
`prepare_session_directory` function was rejiggered a bit to reuse the results
in the later-called `load_dep_graph` function.
Closes#44390
Compact display of static lib dependencies
Fixes#33173
Instead of displaying one dependency per line, I've changed the format to display them all in one line.
As a bonus they're in format of linker flags (`-lfoo`), so the output can be copy&pasted if one is actually going to link as suggested.
Fixed mutable vars being marked used when they weren't
#### NB : bootstrapping is slow on my machine, even with `keep-stage` - fixes for occurances in the current codebase are <s>in the pipeline</s> done. This PR is being put up for review of the fix of the issue.
Fixes#43526, Fixes#30280, Fixes#25049
### Issue
Whenever the compiler detected a mutable deref being used mutably, it marked an associated value as being used mutably as well. In the case of derefencing local variables which were mutable references, this incorrectly marked the reference itself being used mutably, instead of its contents - with the consequence of making the following code emit no warnings
```
fn do_thing<T>(mut arg : &mut T) {
... // don't touch arg - just deref it to access the T
}
```
### Fix
Make dereferences not be counted as a mutable use, but only when they're on borrows on local variables.
#### Why not on things other than local variables?
* Whenever you capture a variable in a closure, it gets turned into a hidden reference - when you use it in the closure, it gets dereferenced. If the closure uses the variable mutably, that is actually a mutable use of the thing being dereffed to, so it has to be counted.
* If you deref a mutable `Box` to access the contents mutably, you are using the `Box` mutably - so it has to be counted.
rustc: Implement the #[global_allocator] attribute
This PR is an implementation of [RFC 1974] which specifies a new method of
defining a global allocator for a program. This obsoletes the old
`#![allocator]` attribute and also removes support for it.
[RFC 1974]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1974
The new `#[global_allocator]` attribute solves many issues encountered with the
`#![allocator]` attribute such as composition and restrictions on the crate
graph itself. The compiler now has much more control over the ABI of the
allocator and how it's implemented, allowing much more freedom in terms of how
this feature is implemented.
cc #27389
This PR is an implementation of [RFC 1974] which specifies a new method of
defining a global allocator for a program. This obsoletes the old
`#![allocator]` attribute and also removes support for it.
[RFC 1974]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/197
The new `#[global_allocator]` attribute solves many issues encountered with the
`#![allocator]` attribute such as composition and restrictions on the crate
graph itself. The compiler now has much more control over the ABI of the
allocator and how it's implemented, allowing much more freedom in terms of how
this feature is implemented.
cc #27389
Prior to this PR, when we aborted because a "critical pass" failed, we
displayed the number of errors from that critical pass. While that's the
number of errors that caused compilation to abort in *that place*,
that's not what people really want to know. Instead, always report the
total number of errors, and don't bother to track the number of errors
from the last pass that failed.
This changes the compiler driver API to handle errors more smoothly,
and therefore is a compiler-api-[breaking-change].
Fixes#42793.
This commit deletes the in-tree `getopts` crate in favor of the crates.io-based
`getopts` crate. The main difference here is with a new builder-style API, but
otherwise everything else remains relatively standard.
save-analysis: remove a lot of stuff
This commits us to the JSON format and the more general def/ref style of output, rather than also supporting different data formats for different data structures. This does not affect the RLS at all, but will break any clients of the CSV form - AFAIK there are none (beyond a few of my own toy projects) - DXR stopped working long ago.
r? @eddyb
Instead of suppressing only trait errors that are "exact duplicates",
display only the "most high-level" error when there are multiple trait
errors with the same span that imply each-other.
e.g. when there are both `[closure]: Fn` and `[closure]: FnOnce`, omit
displaying the `[closure]: FnOnce` bound.
Previously, any non-Unicode argument would panic rustc:
```
$ rustc $'foo\x80bar'
error: internal compiler error: unexpected panic
note: the compiler unexpectedly panicked. this is a bug.
note: we would appreciate a bug report:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#bug-reports
thread 'rustc' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value:
"foo�bar"', /checkout/src/libcore/result.rs:859 note: Run with
`RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.
```
Now it gives a clean error:
```
$ rustc $'foo\x80bar'
error: Argument 1 is not valid Unicode: "foo�bar"
```
Maybe fixes#15890, although we still can't *compile* arbitrary file names.
This does not actually improve build times, since it still depends
on rustc_trans, but is better layering and fits the multi-backend
future slightly better.