Commit Graph

329 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
93a0dec202 Move more of the exportation burden into privacy
I added a test case which does not compile today, and required changes on
privacy's side of things to get right. Additionally, this moves a good bit of
logic which did not belong in reachability into privacy.

All of reachability should solely be responsible for determining what the
reachable surface area of a crate is given the exported surface area (where the
exported surface area is that which is usable by external crates).

Privacy will now correctly figure out what's exported by deeply looking
through reexports. Previously if a module were reexported under another name,
nothing in the module would actually get exported in the executable. I also
consolidated the phases of privacy to be clearer about what's an input to what.
The privacy checking pass no longer uses the notion of an "all public" path, and
the embargo visitor is no longer an input to the checking pass.

Currently the embargo visitor is built as a saturating analysis because it's
unknown what portions of the AST are going to get re-exported.
2013-11-22 10:02:10 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7755ffd013 Remove #[fixed_stack_segment] and #[rust_stack]
These two attributes are no longer useful now that Rust has decided to leave
segmented stacks behind. It is assumed that the rust task's stack is always
large enough to make an FFI call (due to the stack being very large).

There's always the case of stack overflow, however, to consider. This does not
change the behavior of stack overflow in Rust. This is still normally triggered
by the __morestack function and aborts the whole process.

C stack overflow will continue to corrupt the stack, however (as it did before
this commit as well). The future improvement of a guard page at the end of every
rust stack is still unimplemented and is intended to be the mechanism through
which we attempt to detect C stack overflow.

Closes #8822
Closes #10155
2013-11-11 10:40:34 -08:00
Andrei Formiga
23387b062d Added tests for default generation of package_id meta attribute 2013-11-08 17:42:46 -03:00
bors
4b04395c11 auto merge of #10182 : alexcrichton/rust/typeid-intrinsic, r=nikomatsakis
This isn't quite as fancy as the struct in #9913, but I'm not sure we should be exposing crate names/hashes of the types. That being said, it'd be pretty easy to extend this (the deterministic hashing regardless of what crate you're in was the hard part).
2013-11-04 19:21:50 -08:00
bors
4910b7ac28 auto merge of #10242 : thestinger/rust/inline_dtor, r=alexcrichton
Closes #7793
2013-11-02 23:26:00 -07:00
Daniel Micay
e58270219f fix cross-crate destructor inlining
Closes #7793
2013-11-02 23:55:23 -04:00
Alex Crichton
61637439dc Add a type_id intrinsic
Closes #9913
2013-11-01 10:31:33 -07:00
Alex Crichton
681fda0169 Reduce the aggressiveness of reachability
Previously, all functions called by a reachable function were considered
reachable, but this is only the case if the original function was possibly
inlineable (if it's type generic or #[inline]-flagged).
2013-10-31 20:47:23 -07:00
Daniel Micay
142672dca4 register snapshots 2013-10-23 18:06:12 -04:00
Alex Crichton
daf5f5a4d1 Drop the '2' suffix from logging macros
Who doesn't like a massive renaming?
2013-10-22 08:09:56 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a25bbcc27f Propagate reachability through reexported impls
When re-exporting a trait/structure/enum, then we need to propagate the
reachability of the type through the methods that are defined on it.

Closes #9906
Closes #9968
2013-10-21 10:37:36 -07:00
Alex Crichton
6d8330afb6 Use __morestack to detect stack overflow
This commit resumes management of the stack boundaries and limits when switching
between tasks. This additionally leverages the __morestack function to run code
on "stack overflow". The current behavior is to abort the process, but this is
probably not the best behavior in the long term (for deails, see the comment I
wrote up in the stack exhaustion routine).
2013-10-19 09:43:31 -07:00
Daniel Micay
f766acad62 drop the linenoise library
Closes #5038
2013-10-16 22:57:51 -04:00
Steve Klabnik
309ab958e6 Removing ccdecl
as per https://github.com/mozilla/rust/pull/9606#discussion_r6930872
2013-10-14 14:33:05 +02:00
Steve Klabnik
16fc6a694c Remove unused abi attributes.
They've been replaced by putting the name on the extern block.

  #[abi = "foo"]

goes to

  extern "foo" { }

Closes #9483.
2013-10-14 13:10:36 +02:00
Alex Crichton
478c9b701e Add tests and un-xfail a few issues
Closes #4545
Closes #5791
Closes #6470
Closes #8044
2013-10-10 18:48:52 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b0f6c29b4f Use the result of privacy for reachability
This fixes a bug in which the visibility rules were approximated by
reachability, but forgot to cover the case where a 'pub use' reexports a private
item. This fixes the commit by instead using the results of the privacy pass of
the compiler to create the initial working set of the reachability pass.

This may have the side effect of increasing the size of metadata, but it's
difficult to avoid for correctness purposes sadly.

Closes #9790
2013-10-10 03:31:59 -07:00
bors
2e64a718ea auto merge of #9664 : alexcrichton/rust/logging, r=huonw
This makes some headway on #3309, see commits for details.
2013-10-09 07:31:36 -07:00
Alex Crichton
3396365cab Add appropriate #[feature] directives to tests 2013-10-06 14:39:25 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a1ffb06ac8 Use the correct logging crate while monomorphing
This makes sure that the top-level crate name is correct when emitting log
statements for a monomorphized function in another crate. This happens by
tracing the monomorphized ID back to the external source and then using that
crate index to get the name of the crate.

Closes #3046
2013-10-03 09:16:31 -07:00
Steven Fackler
435ca16f4f Close out #9155
Add a test to make sure it works and switch a private struct over to a
newtype.

Closes #9155
2013-10-03 00:15:54 -07:00
Daniel Micay
c9d4ad07c4 remove the float type
It is simply defined as `f64` across every platform right now.

A use case hasn't been presented for a `float` type defined as the
highest precision floating point type implemented in hardware on the
platform. Performance-wise, using the smallest precision correct for the
use case greatly saves on cache space and allows for fitting more
numbers into SSE/AVX registers.

If there was a use case, this could be implemented as simply a type
alias or a struct thanks to `#[cfg(...)]`.

Closes #6592

The mailing list thread, for reference:

https://mail.mozilla.org/pipermail/rust-dev/2013-July/004632.html
2013-10-01 14:54:10 -04:00
Alex Crichton
630082ca89 rpass: Remove usage of fmt! 2013-09-30 23:21:19 -07:00
Alex Crichton
daee1b4d5c Ensure that skipped items aren't encoded
If an item is skipped due to it being unreachable or for some optimization, then
it shouldn't be encoded into the metadata (because it wasn't present in the
first place).
2013-09-26 13:54:50 -07:00
bors
4531184614 auto merge of #9432 : alexcrichton/rust/correct-item-visibility, r=pcwalton
This fixes private statics and functions from being usable cross-crates, along
with some bad privacy error messages. This is a reopening of #8365 with all the
privacy checks in privacy.rs instead of resolve.rs (where they should be
anyway).

These maps of exported items will hopefully get used for generating
documentation by rustdoc

Closes #8592
2013-09-25 00:55:53 -07:00
bors
a7d68adbdd auto merge of #9336 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-7981, r=catamorphism
Progress on #7981

This doesn't completely close the issue because `struct A;` is still allowed, and it's a much larger change to disallow that. I'm also not entirely sure that we want to disallow that. Regardless, punting that discussion to the issue instead.
2013-09-24 15:45:57 -07:00
Alex Crichton
4b266f1c0d Stop accepting 'impl ...;', require {} instead
Progress on #7981
2013-09-24 14:12:02 -07:00
Alex Crichton
10a583ce1a Correctly encode item visibility in metadata
This fixes private statics and functions from being usable cross-crates, along
with some bad privacy error messages. This is a reopening of #8365 with all the
privacy checks in privacy.rs instead of resolve.rs (where they should be
anyway).

These maps of exported items will hopefully get used for generating
documentation by rustdoc

Closes #8592
2013-09-24 09:57:25 -07:00
Patrick Walton
90d3da9711 test: Fix rustdoc and tests. 2013-09-23 18:23:22 -07:00
Alex Crichton
9adcbac30d Prevent a rare linkage issue with an xcrate static
If a static is flagged as address_insignificant, then for LLVM to actually
perform the relevant optimization it must have an internal linkage type. What
this means, though, is that the static will not be available to other crates.
Hence, if you have a generic function with an inner static, it will fail to link
when built as a library because other crates will attempt to use the inner
static externally.

This gets around the issue by inlining the static into the metadata. The same
relevant optimization is then applied separately in the external crate. What
this ends up meaning is that all statics tagged with #[address_insignificant]
will appear at most once per crate (by value), but they could appear in multiple
crates.

This should be the last blocker for using format! ...
2013-09-17 11:24:05 -07:00
bors
29cdf58861 auto merge of #9244 : thestinger/rust/drop, r=catamorphism
This doesn't close any bugs as the goal is to convert the parameter to by-value, but this is a step towards being able to make guarantees about `&T` pointers (where T is Freeze) to LLVM.
2013-09-17 07:15:42 -07:00
bors
d1c05504ba auto merge of #9130 : alexcrichton/rust/inline-globals, r=thestinger
In #8185 cross-crate condition handlers were fixed by ensuring that globals
didn't start appearing in different crates with different addressed. An
unfortunate side effect of that pull request is that constants weren't inlined
across crates (uint::bits is unknown to everything but libstd).

This commit fixes this inlining by using the `available_eternally` linkage
provided by LLVM. It partially reverts #8185, and then adds support for this
linkage type. The main caveat is that not all statics could be inlined into
other crates. Before this patch, all statics were considered "inlineable items",
but an unfortunate side effect of how we deal with `&static` and `&[static]`
means that these two cases cannot be inlined across crates. The translation of
constants was modified to propogate this condition of whether a constant
should be considered inlineable into other crates.

Closes #9036
2013-09-16 23:45:49 -07:00
Daniel Micay
4e161a4d40 switch Drop to &mut self 2013-09-16 22:19:23 -04:00
Tim Chevalier
edf20ccc1b testsuite: Add test for #4208
Closes #4208
2013-09-16 12:02:27 -07:00
Alex Crichton
0107028991 Resume inlining globals across crates
In #8185 cross-crate condition handlers were fixed by ensuring that globals
didn't start appearing in different crates with different addressed. An
unfortunate side effect of that pull request is that constants weren't inlined
across crates (uint::bits is unknown to everything but libstd).

This commit fixes this inlining by using the `available_eternally` linkage
provided by LLVM. It partially reverts #8185, and then adds support for this
linkage type. The main caveat is that not all statics could be inlined into
other crates. Before this patch, all statics were considered "inlineable items",
but an unfortunate side effect of how we deal with `&static` and `&[static]`
means that these two cases cannot be inlined across crates. The translation of
constants was modified to propogate this condition of whether a constant
should be considered inlineable into other crates.

Closes #9036
2013-09-16 07:29:49 -07:00
bors
d87078be72 auto merge of #9206 : alexcrichton/rust/issue-9188, r=catamorphism
While they may have the same name within various scopes, this changes static
names to use path_pretty_name to append some hash information at the end of the
symbol. We're then guaranteed that each static has a unique NodeId, so this
NodeId is as the "hash" of the pretty name.

Closes #9188
2013-09-16 02:45:49 -07:00
blake2-ppc
8522341274 Remove {uint,int,u64,i64,...}::from_str,from_str_radix
Remove these in favor of the two traits themselves and the wrapper
function std::from_str::from_str.

Add the function std::num::from_str_radix in the corresponding role for
the FromStrRadix trait.
2013-09-15 14:29:16 +02:00
Alex Crichton
1da4488d87 Guarantee that statics have unique names
While they may have the same name within various scopes, this changes static
names to use path_pretty_name to append some hash information at the end of the
symbol. We're then guaranteed that each static has a unique NodeId, so this
NodeId is as the "hash" of the pretty name.

Closes #9188
2013-09-14 23:19:11 -07:00
Alex Crichton
62ba835573 Translate nested items in default methods
Closes #9123
2013-09-13 01:42:44 -07:00
SiegeLord
2b9d19d5b5 Fix whitespace in tests 2013-09-11 14:49:10 -04:00
SiegeLord
ba5c6c3b04 Replace dashes in the filenames of the new tests with underscores to avoid issues with Windows 2013-09-11 14:49:10 -04:00
SiegeLord
55206d5a3f Add a test for cross-crate struct variants 2013-09-11 14:49:10 -04:00
Daniel Micay
6919cf5fe1 rename std::iterator to std::iter
The trait will keep the `Iterator` naming, but a more concise module
name makes using the free functions less verbose. The module will define
iterables in addition to iterators, as it deals with iteration in
general.
2013-09-09 03:21:46 -04:00
bors
3c3ae1d0e2 auto merge of #8875 : alexcrichton/rust/fix-inner-static-library-bug, r=huonw
These commits fix bugs related to identically named statics in functions of implementations in various situations. The commit messages have most of the information about what bugs are being fixed and why.

As a bonus, while I was messing around with name mangling, I improved the backtraces we'll get in gdb by removing `__extensions__` for the trait/type being implemented and by adding the method name as well. Yay!
2013-09-04 23:55:46 -07:00
bors
383073883f auto merge of #8963 : jmgrosen/rust/issue-8881, r=alexcrichton 2013-09-03 19:46:42 -07:00
jmgrosen
4a18d46130 Fixes #8881. condition! imports parent's pub identifiers 2013-09-03 16:11:00 -07:00
Huon Wilson
506f69aed7 Implement support for indicating the stability of items.
There are 6 new compiler recognised attributes: deprecated, experimental,
unstable, stable, frozen, locked (these levels are taken directly from
Node's "stability index"[1]). These indicate the stability of the
item to which they are attached; e.g. `#[deprecated] fn foo() { .. }`
says that `foo` is deprecated.

This comes with 3 lints for the first 3 levels (with matching names) that
will detect the use of items marked with them (the `unstable` lint
includes items with no stability attribute). The attributes can be given
a short text note that will be displayed by the lint. An example:

    #[warn(unstable)]; // `allow` by default

    #[deprecated="use `bar`"]
    fn foo() { }

    #[stable]
    fn bar() { }

    fn baz() { }

    fn main() {
        foo(); // "warning: use of deprecated item: use `bar`"

        bar(); // all fine

        baz(); // "warning: use of unmarked item"
    }

The lints currently only check the "edges" of the AST: i.e. functions,
methods[2], structs and enum variants. Any stability attributes on modules,
enums, traits and impls are not checked.

[1]: http://nodejs.org/api/documentation.html
[2]: the method check is currently incorrect and doesn't work.
2013-09-04 00:12:27 +10:00
Alex Crichton
36a4af49e0 Remove __extensions__ in names for a "pretty name"
As with the previous commit, this is targeted at removing the possibility of
collisions between statics. The main use case here is when there's a
type-parametric function with an inner static that's compiled as a library.
Before this commit, any impl would generate a path item of "__extensions__".
This changes this identifier to be a "pretty name", which is either the last
element of the path of the trait implemented or the last element of the type's
path that's being implemented.  That doesn't quite cut it though, so the (trait,
type) pair is hashed and again used to append information to the symbol.

Essentially, __extensions__ was removed for something nicer for debugging, and
then some more information was added to symbol name by including a hash of the
trait being implemented and type it's being implemented for. This should prevent
colliding names for inner statics in regular functions with similar names.
2013-09-02 23:12:41 -07:00
Alex Crichton
4600212a38 Fix inner statics having the same symbol name
Before, the path name for all items defined in methods of traits and impls never
took into account the name of the method. This meant that if you had two statics
of the same name in two different methods the statics would end up having the
same symbol named (even after mangling) because the path components leading to
the symbol were exactly the same (just __extensions__ and the static name).

It turns out that if you add the symbol "A" twice to LLVM, it automatically
makes the second one "A1" instead of "A". What this meant is that in local crate
compilations we never found this bug. Even across crates, this was never a
problem. The problem arises when you have generic methods that don't get
generated at compile-time of a library. If the statics were re-added to LLVM by
a client crate of a library in a different order, you would reference different
constants (the integer suffixes wouldn't be guaranteed to be the same).

This fixes the problem by adding the method name to symbol path when building
the ast_map. In doing so, two symbols in two different methods are disambiguated
against.
2013-09-02 23:12:20 -07:00
Alex Crichton
2c1d6568f2 Fix a bug with statics inside blocks in generic fns
Whenever a generic function was encountered, only the top-level items were
recursed upon, even though the function could contain items inside blocks or
nested inside of other expressions. This fixes the existing code from traversing
just the top level items to using a Visitor to deeply recurse and find any items
which need to be translated.

This was uncovered when building code with --lib, because the encode_symbol
function would panic once it found that an item hadn't been translated.

Closes #8134
2013-08-29 18:51:29 -07:00