Most tests involving save-analysis were removed, but I kept a few where
the `-Zsave-analysis` was an add-on to the main thing being tested,
rather than the main thing being tested.
For `x.py install`, the `rust-analysis` target has been removed.
For `x.py dist`, the `rust-analysis` target has been kept in a
degenerate form: it just produces a single file `reduced.json`
indicating that save-analysis has been removed. This is necessary for
rustup to keep working.
Closes#43606.
Update the minimum external LLVM to 14
With this change, we'll have stable support for LLVM 14 through 16 (pending release).
For reference, the previous increase to LLVM 13 was #100460.
Resolve documentation links in rustc and store the results in metadata
This PR implements MCP https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/584.
Doc links are now resolved in rustc and stored into metadata, so rustdoc simply retrieves them through a query (local or extern),
Code that is no longer used is removed, and some code that no longer needs to be public is privatized.
The removed code includes resolver cloning, so this PR fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83761.
Update strip-ansi-escapes and vte
This updates strip-ansi-escapes from 0.1.0 to 0.1.1 (and consequently vte).
Changes: https://github.com/luser/strip-ansi-escapes/compare/0.1.0...0.1.1
The only change really is updating vte which fixes some parsing issues (and drops the vendored source size by several megabytes).
Closes#107708
Move format_args!() into AST (and expand it during AST lowering)
Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/541
This moves FormatArgs from rustc_builtin_macros to rustc_ast_lowering. For now, the end result is the same. But this allows for future changes to do smarter things with format_args!(). It also allows Clippy to directly access the ast::FormatArgs, making things a lot easier.
This change turns the format args types into lang items. The builtin macro used to refer to them by their path. After this change, the path is no longer relevant, making it easier to make changes in `core`.
This updates clippy to use the new language items, but this doesn't yet make clippy use the ast::FormatArgs structure that's now available. That should be done after this is merged.
Update cargo
11 commits in 985d561f0bb9b76ec043a2b12511790ec7a2b954..3c5af6bed9a1a243a693e8e22ee2486bd5b82a6c 2023-01-20 14:39:28 +0000 to 2023-01-24 15:48:15 +0000
- Add a note about verifying your email address on crates.io (rust-lang/cargo#11620)
- Improve CI caching by skipping mtime checks for paths in $CARGO_HOME (rust-lang/cargo#11613)
- test: Update for clap 4.1.3 (rust-lang/cargo#11619)
- Fix unused attribute on Windows. (rust-lang/cargo#11614)
- [Doc]: Added links to the `Target` section of the glossary for occurences of `target triple` (rust-lang/cargo#11603)
- feat: stabilize auto fix note (rust-lang/cargo#11558)
- Clarify the difference between CARGO_CRATE_NAME and CARGO_PKG_NAME (rust-lang/cargo#11576)
- Temporarily pin libgit2-sys. (rust-lang/cargo#11609)
- Disable network SSH tests on windows. (rust-lang/cargo#11610)
- fix(toml): Add `default-features` to `TomlWorkspaceDependency` (rust-lang/cargo#11409)
- doc(contrib): remove rls in release process (rust-lang/cargo#11601)
r? `@ghost`
11 commits in 985d561f0bb9b76ec043a2b12511790ec7a2b954..3c5af6bed9a1a243a693e8e22ee2486bd5b82a6c
2023-01-20 14:39:28 +0000 to 2023-01-24 15:48:15 +0000
- Add a note about verifying your email address on crates.io (rust-lang/cargo#11620)
- Improve CI caching by skipping mtime checks for paths in $CARGO_HOME (rust-lang/cargo#11613)
- test: Update for clap 4.1.3 (rust-lang/cargo#11619)
- Fix unused attribute on Windows. (rust-lang/cargo#11614)
- [Doc]: Added links to the `Target` section of the glossary for occurences of `target triple` (rust-lang/cargo#11603)
- feat: stabilize auto fix note (rust-lang/cargo#11558)
- Clarify the difference between CARGO_CRATE_NAME and CARGO_PKG_NAME (rust-lang/cargo#11576)
- Temporarily pin libgit2-sys. (rust-lang/cargo#11609)
- Disable network SSH tests on windows. (rust-lang/cargo#11610)
- fix(toml): Add `default-features` to `TomlWorkspaceDependency` (rust-lang/cargo#11409)
- doc(contrib): remove rls in release process (rust-lang/cargo#11601)
rustc_metadata: Encode `doc(hidden)` flag to metadata
To retrieve these flags rustdoc currently has to mass decode full attributes for items in the whole crate tree, so it's better to pre-compute it in advance.
This is especially important for short-term performance of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107054 because resolver cannot use memoization of query results yet.
To retrieve these flags rustdoc currently has to mass decode full attributes for items in the whole crate tree, so it's better to pre-compute it in advance.
This is especially for short-term performance of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107054 because resolver cannot use memoization of query results yet.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104154 (Change `bindings_with_variant_name` to deny-by-default)
- #104347 (diagnostics: suggest changing `s@self::{macro}`@::macro`` for exported)
- #104672 (Unify stable and unstable sort implementations in same core module)
- #107048 (check for x version updates)
- #107061 (Implement some more new solver candidates and fix some bugs)
- #107095 (rustdoc: remove redundant CSS selector `.sidebar .current`)
- #107112 (Fix typo in opaque_types.rs)
- #107124 (fix check macro expansion)
- #107131 (rustdoc: use CSS inline layout for radio line instead of flexbox)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
check for x version updates
This PR adds a check to tidy to assert that the installed version of `x` is equal to the version in `src/tools/x/Cargo.toml`. It checks the installed version of `x` by parsing the output of `cargo install --list` (as an option proposed in this [issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106469)).
It does not warn if `x` has not yet been installed, on the assumption that the user isn't interested in using it.
9 commits in 1cd6d3803dfb0b342272862a8590f5dfc9f72573..a5d47a72595dd6fbe7d4e4f6ec20dc5fe724edd1
2023-01-12 18:40:36 +0000 to 2023-01-16 18:51:50 +0000
- Add network container tests (rust-lang/cargo#11583)
- Show progress of crates.io index update even `net.git-fetch-with-cli` option enabled (rust-lang/cargo#11579)
- `cargo metadata` supports artifact dependencies (rust-lang/cargo#11550)
- fix(docs): add required "inherits" option to example profile (rust-lang/cargo#11504)
- add documentation that SSH markers aren't supported (rust-lang/cargo#11586)
- Fix typo (rust-lang/cargo#11585)
- Enable source_config_env test on Windows (rust-lang/cargo#11582)
- Support `codegen-backend` and `rustflags` in profiles in config file (rust-lang/cargo#11562)
- ci: reflect to clap updates (rust-lang/cargo#11578)
tidy: Don't include wasm32 in compiler dependency check
This changes the tidy compiler dependency check so that it does not include wasm32-unknown-unknown dependencies in the PERMITTED_RUSTC_DEPENDENCIES. This just helps keep the list cleaner under the assumption that the compiler will never work on wasm32-unknown-unknown.
This also fixes a bug in the check to verify there are no unused dependencies in the PERMITTED_RUSTC_DEPENDENCIES. Previously the check was verifying that the dependency was used *anywhere* in the workspace, when it should have been checking if it was used for the compiler.
There's also just a little general cleanup here. For example, the old `normal_deps_of_r` function was changed a while ago to return *all* dependencies, but the function name and description wasn't updated to remove `normal_`.
Fix aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32 target
This was broken because the synthetic object files produced by rustc were for 64-bit AArch64, which caused link failures when combined with 32-bit ILP32 object files.
This PR updates the object crate to 0.30.1 which adds support for generating ILP32 AArch64 object files.
Update mdbook
This updates mdbook from 0.4.21 to 0.4.25. The list of changes is [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#mdbook-0425). The only user-visible changes are some changes around the theme picker, and change to the copy-to-clipboard ignoring hidden lines.
Internally there were some dependency updates and small fixes.
This also updates `clap` from 4.0.15 to 4.0.32 whose changelog is [here](https://github.com/clap-rs/clap/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#4032---2022-12-22). This impacts tools like cargo. I don't see anything particularly noteworthy there, though there are some small user-visible changes.
Unfortunately this required adding a hack for building `rustix` with a bootstrap tool. The comment explains why. I am unable to think of some other workaround (or even a cleaner way to set the rustflag). Ideas are welcome if you can think of alternatives. I'm struggling to even think of a long-term solution, other than asking projects not to do auto-nightly feature detection.
One medium-term solution is to avoid the clap dependency for the mdbook library (which is how rustix gets pulled in). That is one of my goals for the 0.5 release of mdbook, but that probably won't happen until later this year. It would also require dropping clap from `rustbook` and using some other means to parse arguments (there's only two options, so it can probably be done manually).
Remove duplicate sha-1 dependency
[`sha-1`](https://crates.io/crates/sha-1) is more or less a duplicate of [`sha1`](https://crates.io/crates/sha1). The `sha-1` is deprecated and no longer updated. This updates the dependencies to use the new name.
Some other dependencies that got updated as a consequence:
* The updated pest dependencies are currently only used by mdbook, and shouldn't have any issues.
* ucd-trie 0.1.3 to 0.1.5: No changelog, but looks like some tables were updated for new unicode versions: https://github.com/BurntSushi/ucd-generate/commits/master/ucd-trie. This is only used by pest (and thus mdbook).
* thiserror 1.33 to 1.38: Nothing significant in the notes at https://github.com/dtolnay/thiserror/releases.
Add log-backtrace option to show backtraces along with logging
according to #90698, I added a compiler option, `-Zlog-backtrace=filter`, where `filter` is a module name, to show backtraces for logging without rebuilding.
resolve#90698
This was broken because the synthetic object files produced by rustc
were for 64-bit AArch64, which caused link failures when combined with
32-bit ILP32 object files.
This PR updates the object crate to 0.30.1 which adds support for
generating ILP32 AArch64 object files.
Update `rand` in the stdlib tests, and remove the `getrandom` feature from it.
The main goal is actually removing `getrandom`, so that eventually we can allow running the stdlib test suite on tier3 targets which don't have `getrandom` support. Currently those targets can only run the subset of stdlib tests that exist in uitests, and (generally speaking), we prefer not to test libstd functionality in uitests, which came up recently in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104095 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104185. Additionally, the fact that we can't update `rand`/`getrandom` means we're stuck with the old set of tier3 targets, so can't test new ones.
~~Anyway, I haven't checked that this actually does allow use on tier3 targets (I think it does not, as some work is needed in stdlib submodules) but it moves us slightly closer to this, and seems to allow at least finally updating our `rand` dep, which definitely improves the status quo.~~ Checked and works now.
For the most part, our tests and benchmarks are fine using hard-coded seeds. A couple tests seem to fail with this (stuff manipulating the environment expecting no collisions, for example), or become pointless (all inputs to a function become equivalent). In these cases I've done a (gross) dance (ab)using `RandomState` and `Location::caller()` for some extra "entropy".
Trying to share that code seems *way* more painful than it's worth given that the duplication is a 7-line function, even if the lines are quite gross. (Keeping in mind that sharing it would require adding `rand` as a non-dev dep to std, and exposing a type from it publicly, all of which sounds truly awful, even if done behind a perma-unstable feature).
See also some previous attempts:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86963 (in particular https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86963#issuecomment-885438936 which explains why this is non-trivial)
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89131
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96626#issuecomment-1114562857 (I tried in that PR at the same time, but settled for just removing the usage of `thread_rng()` from the benchmarks, since that was the main goal).
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104185
- Probably more. It's very tempting of a thing to "just update".
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Migrate `codegen_ssa` to diagnostics structs - [Part 3]
Completes migrating `codegen_ssa` module except 2 outstanding errors that depend on other crates:
1. [`rustc_middle::mir::interpret::InterpError`](b6097f2e1b/compiler/rustc_middle/src/mir/interpret/error.rs (L475)): I saw `rustc_middle` is unassigned, I am open to take this work.
2. `codegen_llvm`'s use of `fn span_invalid_monomorphization_error`, which I started to replace in the [last commit](9a31b3cdda) of this PR, but would like to know the team's preference on how we should keep replacing the other macros:
2.1. Update macros to expect a `Diagnostic`
2.2. Remove macros and expand the code on each use.
See [some examples of the different options in this experimental commit](64aee83e80)
_Part 2 - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103792_
r? ``@davidtwco``
Cc ``@compiler-errors``
Handle non-existent upstream master branches in `x fmt`
People who do have a remote for `rust-lang/rust` but don't have the master branch checked out there used to get this error when running `x fmt`:
> fatal: ambiguous argument 'rust/master': unknown revision or path not in the working tree.
> Use '--' to separate paths from revisions, like this:
> 'git <command> [<revision>...] -- [<file>...]'
> rust/master
Which is not exactly helpful.
Now, we fall back to `origin/master` (hoping that at least that remote exists) for that case. If there is still some error, we just fall back to `x fmt .` and print a warning.
r? `@jyn514`
8 commits in 2381cbdb4e9b07090f552d34a44a529b6e620e44..8c460b2237a6359a7e3335890db8da049bdd62fc
2022-12-23 12:19:27 +0000 to 2023-01-04 14:30:01 +0000
- test: revive nightly plugin tests to work (rust-lang/cargo#11534)
- Add note to release notes about rejecting multiple registries. (rust-lang/cargo#11531)
- Fix a typo `fresheness` -> `freshness` (rust-lang/cargo#11529)
- Reasons for rebuilding (rust-lang/cargo#11407)
- Asymmetric tokens (rust-lang/cargo#10771)
- Use proper git URL for GitHub repos (rust-lang/cargo#11517)
- Add `registry.default` example (rust-lang/cargo#11516)
- Support vendoring with different revs from same git repo (rust-lang/cargo#10690)
Also update license exceptions and permitted dependencies
for new cargo dependency "pasetors".
A new dependency `getrandom` is added into `rustc-workspace-hacks`,
since it requires feature `js`.
Jsondoclint: Add `--verbose` and `--json-output` options
There quite helpful for manually using jsondoclint as a debugging tool, especially on large files (these were written to look into core.json).
r? rustdoc
This allows analyzing the output programatically; for example, finding
the item with the highest `total_estimate`.
I also took the liberty of adding `untracked` tests to `rustc_session` and documentation to the unstable book for `dump-mono-items`.
Remove old version of `cfg-if` by bumping `packed_simd_2` and `getrandom v0.2` versions
```console
> cargo update --package packed_simd_2 --package getrandom@0.2.0
Updating crates.io index
Removing cfg-if v0.1.10
Updating getrandom v0.2.0 -> v0.2.8
Updating packed_simd_2 v0.3.4 -> v0.3.8
```
`packed_simd_2` is only used as a dependency of `bytecount` which in turn is only used by `rustfmt`. I can't see any issue with the minor version bump.
The bigger jump is `getrandom@0.2.0` which is used by a number of things, but 0.2.8 is still semver compatible and there doesn't seem to be any worrying changes (see the [changelog](https://github.com/rust-random/getrandom/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md)). The only breaking change are the removal of XP, stdweb and CloudAbi support but these are not host targets and rustc lacks support for them in any case (stdweb development was [abandonded](https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2020-0056.html), XP is [tier 3 and `no_std`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/beta/rustc/platform-support.html#tier-3) and CloubAbi is [no longer supported](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78439)).
Note that this doesn't affect `getrandom@0.1.16` which is what std depends on and which is already using the latest version of `cfg-if` (besides, there are already plans to remove that entirely).
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #105978 (Mark `proc_macro_decls_static` as always used)
- #106051 (Allow building std with cranelift)
- #106056 (Make `sess.bug` much less noisy)
- #106057 (Give a more helpful error for "trimmed_def_paths constructed")
- #106058 (Fix the issue number in comment for as_local_call_operand)
- #106059 (Avoid running the `Profile` step twice on `x setup`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove old versions of `cfg-if` by bumping `packed_simd_2` and `getrandom v0.2` versions
```console
> cargo update --package packed_simd_2 --package getrandom@0.2.0
Updating crates.io index
Removing cfg-if v0.1.10
Updating getrandom v0.2.0 -> v0.2.8
Updating packed_simd_2 v0.3.4 -> v0.3.8
```
`packed_simd_2` is only used as a dependency `bytecount`. The bigger jump is `getrandom@0.2.0`, but it's still semver compatible and there doesn't seem to be any worrying changes (see the [changelog](https://github.com/rust-random/getrandom/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md)). Note that this doesn't affect `getrandom@0.1.16`, which is already using the latest version of `cfg-if` (besides, there are already plans to remove that entirely).
Migrate rustc_mir_build diagnostics
Rebases https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100854
~~The remaining issue is how to better resolve 72bea68af4~~
~~The diagnostic macros seems to generate a broken diagnostic, and I couldn't figure out how to manually format the fluent message, so I hardcoded the format string for now. I'd like pointers to a better fix for this.~~
Also, I'm not 100% sure I didn't mess up a rebase somewhere 🙂
r? `@davidtwco`
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #98391 (Reimplement std's thread parker on top of events on SGX)
- #104019 (Compute generator sizes with `-Zprint_type_sizes`)
- #104512 (Set `download-ci-llvm = "if-available"` by default when `channel = dev`)
- #104901 (Implement masking in FileType comparison on Unix)
- #105082 (Fix Async Generator ABI)
- #105109 (Add LLVM KCFI support to the Rust compiler)
- #105505 (Don't warn about unused parens when they are used by yeet expr)
- #105514 (Introduce `Span::is_visible`)
- #105516 (Update cargo)
- #105522 (Remove wrong note for short circuiting operators)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add LLVM KCFI support to the Rust compiler
This PR adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)
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 KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Thank you again, `@bjorn3,` `@eddyb,` `@nagisa,` and `@ojeda,` for all the help!
Shrink `rustc_parse_format::Piece`
This makes both variants closer together in size (previously they were different by 208 bytes -- 16 vs 224). This may make things worse, but it's worth a try.
r? `@nnethercote`
This commit adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to
the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow
protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by
aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and
parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)
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 KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <17426603+bjorn3@users.noreply.github.com>
Detect long types in E0308 and write them to disk
On type error with long types, print an abridged type and write the full type to disk.
Print the widest possible short type while still fitting in the terminal.
Add prototype to generate `COPYRIGHT` from REUSE metadata
This PR adds a prototype to generate the `COPYRIGHT` file from the metadata gathered with REUSE. There are two new tools:
* `src/tools/collect-license-metadata` invokes REUSE, parses its output and stores a concise JSON representation of the metadata in `src/etc/license-metadata.json`.
* `src/tools/generate-copyright` parses the metadata generated above, (in the future will) gather crate dependencies metadata, and renders the `COPYRIGHT.md` file.
Note that since the contents of those files are currently incorrect, rather than outputting in the paths above, the files will be stored in `build/` and not committed. This will be changed once we're confident about the metadata.
Eventually, `src/etc/license-metadata.json` will be committed into the repository and verified to be up to date by CI (similar to our GitHub Actions configuration), to avoid having people install REUSE on their local machine in most cases.
You can see the (incorrect) generated files in https://gist.github.com/pietroalbini/3f3f22b6f9cc8533abf7494b6a50cf97.
r? `@pnkfelix`
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104199 (Keep track of the start of the argument block of a closure)
- #105050 (Remove useless borrows and derefs)
- #105153 (Create a hacky fail-fast mode that stops tests at the first failure)
- #105164 (Restore `use` suggestion for `dyn` method call requiring `Sized`)
- #105193 (Disable coverage instrumentation for naked functions)
- #105200 (Remove useless filter in unused extern crate check.)
- #105201 (Do not call fn_sig on non-functions.)
- #105208 (Add AmbiguityError for inconsistent resolution for an import)
- #105214 (update Miri)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
On type error with long types, print an abridged type and write the full
type to disk.
Print the widest possible short type while still fitting in the
terminal.
- Accept `impl Into`
- Implement `From<>` for `ConstKind`
Note: this adds a dependency on `derive_more` (MIT license). It allows
to derive a lot of traits (like `From` here) that would be otherwise
tedious to implement.
Update Clippy
r? `@Manishearth`
Sorry for taking so long. There were so many blockers and so little time. This situation should be mitigated with #104007 in the future.
Use clang for the UEFI targets
This fixes an issue where the C and asm sources built by compiler_builtins were being compiled as ELF objects instead of PE objects. This wasn't noticed before because it doesn't cause compiler_builtins or rustc to fail to build. You only see a failure when a program is built that references one of the symbols in an ELF object.
Compiling with clang fixes this because the cc crate converts the UEFI targets into Windows targets that clang understands, causing it to produce PE objects.
Also update compiler_builtins to 0.1.84 to pull in some necessary fixes for compiling the UEFI targets with clang.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104326
Update cargo
3 commits in 16b097879b6f117c8ae698aab054c87f26ff325e..eb5d35917b2395194593c9ca70c3778f60c1573b
2022-11-14 23:28:16 +0000 to 2022-11-17 22:08:43 +0000
- Fix several tests that are waiting 60 seconds for publishing to time out (rust-lang/cargo#11388)
- Implement RFC 3139: alternative registry authentication support (rust-lang/cargo#10592)
- Fix cargo install --index when used with registry.default (rust-lang/cargo#11302)
r? `@ghost`
Use `IsTerminal` in place of `atty`
In any crate that can use nightly features, use `IsTerminal` rather than
`atty`:
- Use `IsTerminal` in `rustc_errors`
- Use `IsTerminal` in `rustc_driver`
- Use `IsTerminal` in `rustc_log`
- Use `IsTerminal` in `librustdoc`
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #102977 (remove HRTB from `[T]::is_sorted_by{,_key}`)
- #103378 (Fix mod_inv termination for the last iteration)
- #103456 (`unchecked_{shl|shr}` should use `u32` as the RHS)
- #103701 (Simplify some pointer method implementations)
- #104047 (Diagnostics `icu4x` based list formatting.)
- #104338 (Enforce that `dyn*` coercions are actually pointer-sized)
- #104498 (Edit docs for `rustc_errors::Handler::stash_diagnostic`)
- #104556 (rustdoc: use `code-header` class to format enum variants)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
3 commits in 16b097879b6f117c8ae698aab054c87f26ff325e..eb5d35917b2395194593c9ca70c3778f60c1573b
2022-11-14 23:28:16 +0000 to 2022-11-17 22:08:43 +0000
- Fix several tests that are waiting 60 seconds for publishing to time out (rust-lang/cargo#11388)
- Implement RFC 3139: alternative registry authentication support (rust-lang/cargo#10592)
- Fix cargo install --index when used with registry.default (rust-lang/cargo#11302)
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #101162 (Migrate rustc_resolve to use SessionDiagnostic, part # 1)
- #103386 (Don't allow `CoerceUnsized` into `dyn*` (except for trait upcasting))
- #103405 (Detect incorrect chaining of if and if let conditions and recover)
- #103594 (Fix non-associativity of `Instant` math on `aarch64-apple-darwin` targets)
- #104006 (Add variant_name function to `LangItem`)
- #104494 (Migrate GUI test to use functions)
- #104516 (rustdoc: clean up sidebar width CSS)
- #104550 (fix a typo)
Failed merges:
- #104554 (Use `ErrorGuaranteed::unchecked_claim_error_was_emitted` less)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
implement binding_shadows
migrate till self-in-generic-param-default
use braces in fluent message as suggested by @compiler-errors.
to fix lock file issue reported by CI
migrate 'unreachable label' error
run formatter
name the variables correctly in fluent file
SessionDiagnostic -> Diagnostic
test "pattern/pat-tuple-field-count-cross.rs" passed
test "resolve/bad-env-capture2.rs" passed
test "enum/enum-in-scope.rs" and other depended on "resolve_binding_shadows_something_unacceptable" should be passed now.
fix crash errors while running test-suite. there might be more.
then_some(..) suits better here.
all tests passed
convert TraitImpl and InvalidAsm. TraitImpl is buggy yet. will fix after receiving help from Zulip
migrate "Ralative-2018"
migrate "ancestor only"
migrate "expected found"
migrate "Indeterminate"
migrate "module only"
revert to the older implementation for now. since this is failing at the moment.
follow the convension for fluent variable
order the diag attribute as suggested in review comment
fix merge error. migrate trait-impl-duplicate
make the changes compatible with "Flatten diagnostic slug modules #103345"
fix merge
remove commented code
merge issues
fix review comments
fix tests
9 commits in 9286a1beba5b28b115bad67de2ae91fb1c61eb0b..a3dfea71ca0c888a88111086898aa833c291d497
2022-11-04 06:41:49 +0000 to 2022-11-11 03:50:47 +0000
- fix: return non UTF-8 error message (rust-lang/cargo#11321)
- Extract `two_kinds_of_msg_format_err` message to de-duplicate it (rust-lang/cargo#11358)
- Propagate change of artifact bin dep to its parent fingerprint (rust-lang/cargo#11353)
- Fix not a hyperlink warnings (rust-lang/cargo#11357)
- Fix wait-for-publish with sparse registry (rust-lang/cargo#11356)
- Add `rm` alias to configuration docs (rust-lang/cargo#11351)
- Add `registries.crates-io.protocol` docs (rust-lang/cargo#11350)
- test(features2): test to prevent regressing of optional host deps of dep (rust-lang/cargo#11342)
- Bump to 0.68.0, update changelog (rust-lang/cargo#11340)
improve `filesearch::get_or_default_sysroot`
`fn get_or_default_sysroot` is now improved and used in `miri` and `clippy`, and tests are still passing as they should. So we no longer need to implement custom workarounds/hacks to find sysroot in tools like miri/clippy.
Resolves https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98832
re-opened from #103581
After rust-lang/rust#101946 this completes the move to cfg-if 1.0 by:
* Updating getrandom 0.1.14->0.1.16
* Updating panic_abort, panic_unwind, and unwind to cfg-if 1.0
update Miri
I had to use a hacked version of josh to create this, so let's be careful with merging this and maybe wait a bit to see if the josh issue becomes more clear. But the history looks good to me, we are not adding duplicates of rustc commits that were previously mirrored to Miri.
Also I want to add some cross-testing of Miri in x.py.
Update libstd's libc to 0.2.135 (to make `libstd` no longer pull in `libiconv.dylib` on Darwin)
This is to pull in https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2944.
It's related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102766, in that they both remove unused dylibs from libstd on Darwin platforms. As a result, I'm marking this as relnotes since everybody agreed it was good to add it to the other as well. (The note should be about no longer linking against libiconv -- the libc update is irrelevant).
Might as well have the same reviewer too.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
5 commits in 3ff044334f0567ce1481c78603aeee7211b91623..071eeaf210708219a5a1b2c4728ca2f97df7f2ae
2022-10-17 20:25:00 +0000 to 2022-10-22 01:17:55 +0000
- fix: Remove leading newline in vendor output (rust-lang/cargo#11273)
- Fix publishing with a dependency on a sparse registry (rust-lang/cargo#11268)
- Add missing edition (rust-lang/cargo#11265)
- fix(publish): Check remote git registry more than once post-publish (rust-lang/cargo#11255)
- Fix typo (rust-lang/cargo#11258)
Update pkg-config
I'd like to be able to cross-compile rustc in a scenario where it'd be really helpful to have cd3ccca7c3. I've done some test builds of the compiler on x86_64 linux, targeting x86_64 linux and aarch64 linux.
12 commits in b8f30cb23c4e5f20854a4f683325782b7cff9837..b332991a57c9d055f1864de1eed93e2178d49440
2022-10-10 19:16:06 +0000 to 2022-10-13 22:05:28 +0000
- Differentiate the warning when an alias (built-in or user-defined) shadows an external subcommand (rust-lang/cargo#11170)
- chore: Update tests for latest clap (rust-lang/cargo#11235)
- feat(publish): Support 'publish.timeout' config behind '-Zpublish-timeout' (rust-lang/cargo#11230)
- Add missing edition (rust-lang/cargo#11231)
- doc(profiles): add module level doc (rust-lang/cargo#11219)
- refactor(publish): Clarify which SourceId is being used (rust-lang/cargo#11216)
- Add new SourceKind::SparseRegistry to differentiate sparse registries (rust-lang/cargo#11209)
- Fix deadlock when build scripts are waiting for input on stdin (rust-lang/cargo#11205)
- refactor: New variant `FeaturesFor::ArtifactDep` (rust-lang/cargo#11184)
- Fix rustdoc warning about unclosed HTML tag (rust-lang/cargo#11221)
- refactor(tests): Prepare for wait-for-publish test changes (rust-lang/cargo#11210)
- Add configuration option for controlling crates.io protocol (rust-lang/cargo#11215)
Miri sync
This is a Miri sync created with my experimental fork of josh. We should probably not merge this yet, but we can use this to check if the sync looks the way it should.
r? `@oli-obk`
resolve error when attempting to link a universal library on macOS
Previously attempting to link universal libraries into libraries (but not binaries) would produce an error that "File too small to be an archive". This works around this by invoking `lipo -thin` to extract a library for the target platform when passed a univeral library.
Fixes#55235
It's worth acknowledging that this implementation is kind of a horrible hack. Unfortunately I don't know how to do anything better, hopefully this PR will be a jumping off point.
Previously attempting to link universal libraries into libraries (but not binaries) would produce an error that "File too small to be an archive". This works around this by using `object` to extract a library for the target platform when passed a univeral library.
Fixes#55235
Migrate more of rustc_parse to SessionDiagnostic
Still far from complete, but I thought I'd add a checkpoint here because rebasing was starting to get annoying.
Remove support for legacy PM
This removes support for optimizing with LLVM's legacy pass manager, as well as the unstable `-Znew-llvm-pass-manager` option. We have been defaulting to the new PM since LLVM 13 (except for s390x that waited for 14), and LLVM 15 removed support altogether. The only place we still use the legacy PM is for writing the output file, just like `llc` does.
cc #74705
r? ``@nikic``
Update stdarch
This pulls in the following changes:
- [Use simd_bitmask intrinsic in a couple of places](9f0928782b)
- [Remove simd_shuffle<n> usage in favor of simd_shuffle](3fd17e4607)
- [Remove late specifiers in __cpuid_count](f1db941633)
- Helps with #101346
- [Use mov and xchg instead of movl(q) and xchgl(q)](3049a31937)
- [Bump cfg-if dependency to 1.0](f305cc83e7)
- [Fix documentation of __m256bh and __m512bh structs](699c093a42)
r? ``@Amanieu``
A lot of the types in this crate implemented HashStable directly to
avoid circular dependencies. One way around that is to use
HashStable_Generic. We adopt that here to avoid a lot of boilerplate.
This doesn't update all the types, because some would require
`I: Interner + HashStable`.
safe transmute: use `Assume` struct to provide analysis options
This task was left as a TODO in #92268; resolving it brings [`BikeshedIntrinsicFrom`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/core/mem/trait.BikeshedIntrinsicFrom.html) more in line with the API defined in [MCP411](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/411).
**Before:**
```rust
pub unsafe trait BikeshedIntrinsicFrom<
Src,
Context,
const ASSUME_ALIGNMENT: bool,
const ASSUME_LIFETIMES: bool,
const ASSUME_VALIDITY: bool,
const ASSUME_VISIBILITY: bool,
> where
Src: ?Sized,
{}
```
**After:**
```rust
pub unsafe trait BikeshedIntrinsicFrom<Src, Context, const ASSUME: Assume = { Assume::NOTHING }>
where
Src: ?Sized,
{}
```
`Assume::visibility` has also been renamed to `Assume::safety`, as library safety invariants are what's actually being assumed; visibility is just the mechanism by which it is currently checked (and that may change).
r? `@oli-obk`
---
Related:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/411
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99571
Generate error index with mdbook instead of raw HTML pages
This is a follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100922.
This comes from a remark from ````@estebank```` who said that the search was a nice thing on the previous version and that it wasn't possible anymore. An easy way to come around this limitation was to use `mdbook`, which is what I did here.
Now some explanations on the code. I'll explain how I developed this and why I reached this solution. First I did it very basically by simply setting the source directory and the output directory, generated a `SUMMARY.md` manually which listed all error codes and that was it. Two problems arose from this:
1. A lot of new HTML files were generated at the top level
2. An `index.html` file was generated at the top-level (the summary in short).
So for `1.`, it's not great to have too many files at the top-level as it could create file conflicts more easily. And for `2.`, this is actually a huge issue because <doc.rust-lang.org> generates an `index.html` file with a links to a few different resources, so it should never be overwritten. <s>Unfortunately, `mdbook` **always** generates an `index.html` file so the only solution I could see (except for sending them a contribution, I'll maybe do that later) was to temporaly move a potentially existing `index.html` file and then puts it back once done. For this last part, to ensure that we don't return *before* it has been put back, I wrapped the `mdbook` generation code inside `render_html_inner` which is called from `render_html` which in turn handle the "save" of `index.html`.</s>
EDIT: `mdbook` completely deletes ALL the content in the target directory so I instead generate into a sub directory and then I move the files to the real target directory.
To keep compatibility with the old version, I also put the `<script>` ````@notriddle```` nicely provided in the previous PR only into the `error-index.html` file to prevent unneeded repetition. I didn't use `mdbook` `additional-js` option because the JS is included at the end of all HTML files, which we don't want for two reasons:
1. It's slow.
2. We only want it to be run in `error-index.html` (even if we also ensure in the JS itself too!).
<s>Now the last part: why we generate the summary twice. We actually generate it once to tell `mdbook` what the book will look like and a second time because a create a new chapter content which will actually list all the error codes (with the updated paths).</s>
EDIT: I removed the need for two summaries.
You can test it [here](https://rustdoc.crud.net/imperio/error-index-mdbook/error-index.html).
r? ````@notriddle````
Replace `rustc_data_structures::thin_vec::ThinVec` with `thin_vec::ThinVec`
`rustc_data_structures::thin_vec::ThinVec` looks like this:
```
pub struct ThinVec<T>(Option<Box<Vec<T>>>);
```
It's just a zero word if the vector is empty, but requires two
allocations if it is non-empty. So it's only usable in cases where the
vector is empty most of the time.
This commit removes it in favour of `thin_vec::ThinVec`, which is also
word-sized, but stores the length and capacity in the same allocation as
the elements. It's good in a wider variety of situation, e.g. in enum
variants where the vector is usually/always non-empty.
The commit also:
- Sorts some `Cargo.toml` dependency lists, to make additions easier.
- Sorts some `use` item lists, to make additions easier.
- Changes `clean_trait_ref_with_bindings` to take a
`ThinVec<TypeBinding>` rather than a `&[TypeBinding]`, because this
avoid some unnecessary allocations.
r? `@spastorino`
- ... when creating diagnostics in rustc_metadata
- use the error_code! macro
- pass macro output to diag.code()
- use fluent from within manual implementation of SessionDiagnostic
- emit the untested errors in case they occur in the wild
- stop panicking in the probably-not-dead code, add fixme to write test
Migrate rustc_monomorphize to use SessionDiagnostic
### Description
- Migrates diagnostics in `rustc_monomorphize` to use `SessionDiagnostic`
- Adds an `impl IntoDiagnosticArg for PathBuf`
### TODO / Help!
- [x] I'm having trouble figuring out how to apply an optional note. 😕 Help!?
- Resolved. It was bad docs. Fixed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/1437/files
- [x] `errors:RecursionLimit` should be `#[fatal ...]`, but that doesn't exist so it's `#[error ...]` at the moment.
- Maybe I can switch after this is merged in? --> https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100694
- Or maybe I need to manually implement `SessionDiagnostic` instead of deriving it?
- [x] How does one go about converting an error inside of [a call to struct_span_lint_hir](8064a49508/compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/collector.rs (L917-L927))?
- [x] ~What placeholder do you use in the fluent template to refer to the value in a vector? It seems like [this code](0b79f758c9/compiler/rustc_macros/src/diagnostics/diagnostic_builder.rs (L83-L114)) ought to have the answer (or something near it)...but I can't figure it out.~ You can't. Punted.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #99517 (Display raw pointer as *{mut,const} T instead of *-ptr in errors)
- #99928 (Do not leak type variables from opaque type relation)
- #100473 (Attempt to normalize `FnDef` signature in `InferCtxt::cmp`)
- #100653 (Move the cast_float_to_int fallback code to GCC)
- #100941 (Point at the string inside literal and mention if we need string inte…)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Move the cast_float_to_int fallback code to GCC
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.
Use object instead of LLVM for reading bitcode from rlibs
Together with changes I plan to make as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97485 this will allow entirely removing usage of LLVM's archive reader and thus allow removing `archive_ro.rs` and `ArchiveWrapper.cpp`.
5 commits in 6da726708a4406f31f996d813790818dce837161..4ed54cecce3ce9ab6ff058781f4c8a500ee6b8b5
2022-08-23 21:39:56 +0000 to 2022-08-27 18:41:39 +0000
- doc: pause, for readability (rust-lang/cargo#11027)
- Bump git2 to 0.15 and libgit2-sys to 0.14 (rust-lang/cargo#11004)
- Fix typo (rust-lang/cargo#11025)
- Update cargo-toml-vs-cargo-lock.md (rust-lang/cargo#11021)
- Apply GitHub fast path even for partial hashes (rust-lang/cargo#10807)
`rustc_data_structures::thin_vec::ThinVec` looks like this:
```
pub struct ThinVec<T>(Option<Box<Vec<T>>>);
```
It's just a zero word if the vector is empty, but requires two
allocations if it is non-empty. So it's only usable in cases where the
vector is empty most of the time.
This commit removes it in favour of `thin_vec::ThinVec`, which is also
word-sized, but stores the length and capacity in the same allocation as
the elements. It's good in a wider variety of situation, e.g. in enum
variants where the vector is usually/always non-empty.
The commit also:
- Sorts some `Cargo.toml` dependency lists, to make additions easier.
- Sorts some `use` item lists, to make additions easier.
- Changes `clean_trait_ref_with_bindings` to take a
`ThinVec<TypeBinding>` rather than a `&[TypeBinding]`, because this
avoid some unnecessary allocations.
Migrate rustc_driver to SessionDiagnostic
First timer noob here 👋🏽 I'm having a problem understanding how I can retrieve the span, and how to properly construct the error structs to avoid the current compilation errors.
Any help pointing me in the right direction would be much appreciated 🙌🏽
Migrate `rustc_ty_utils` to `SessionDiagnostic`
I have migrated the `rustc_ty_utils` crate to use `SessionDiagnostic`, motivated by the [recent blog post about the diagnostic translation effort](https://blog.rust-lang.org/inside-rust/2022/08/16/diagnostic-effort.html).
This is my first PR to the Rust repository, so if I have missed anything, or anything needs to be changed, please let me know! 😄
`@rustbot` label +A-translation
Migrate ast lowering to session diagnostic
I migrated the whole rustc_ast_lowering crate to session diagnostic *except* the for the use of `span_fatal` at /compiler/rustc_ast_lowering/src/expr.rs#L1268 because `#[fatal(...)]` is not yet supported (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100694).
Migrate `rustc_plugin_impl` to `SessionDiagnostic`
Migration of the `rustc_plugin_impl` crate.
~Draft PR because it is blocked on #100694 for `#[fatal(...)]` support~ (this has been merged, and I've changed over to `#[diag(...)]` now too), but I would also like to know if what I did with `LoadPluginError` is okay, because all it does is display the error message from `libloading` ([See conversation on zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/147480-t-compiler.2Fwg-diagnostics/topic/.23100717.20diagnostic.20translation/near/294327843)). This crate is apparently for a deprecated feature which is used by servo, so I don't know how much this matters anyway.
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.