Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
John Renner
9b27de41d4 Introduce Custom Test Frameworks 2018-09-04 22:33:00 -07:00
Igor Gutorov
4d81fe9243 Use optimized SmallVec implementation 2018-08-23 10:45:53 +03:00
Irina Popa
04fa0e7bb3 rustc_target: move in syntax::abi and flip dependency. 2018-04-26 17:49:16 +03:00
John Kåre Alsaker
b74e97cf42 Replace Rc with Lrc for shared data 2018-03-02 10:48:52 +01:00
Tatsuyuki Ishi
611b111139 Move unused-extern-crate to late pass 2017-08-27 19:02:24 +09:00
Alex Crichton
e341d603fe Remove internal liblog
This commit deletes the internal liblog in favor of the implementation that
lives on crates.io. Similarly it's also setting a convention for adding crates
to the compiler. The main restriction right now is that we want compiler
implementation details to be unreachable from normal Rust code (e.g. requires a
feature), and by default everything in the sysroot is reachable via `extern
crate`.

The proposal here is to require that crates pulled in have these lines in their
`src/lib.rs`:

    #![cfg_attr(rustbuild, feature(staged_api, rustc_private))]
    #![cfg_attr(rustbuild, unstable(feature = "rustc_private", issue = "27812"))]

This'll mean that by default they're not using these attributes but when
compiled as part of the compiler they do a few things:

* Mark themselves as entirely unstable via the `staged_api` feature and the
  `#![unstable]` attribute.
* Allow usage of other unstable crates via `feature(rustc_private)` which is
  required if the crate relies on any other crates to compile (other than std).
2017-03-23 11:28:00 -07:00
Alex Crichton
2148bdfcc7 rustc: Rename rustc_macro to proc_macro
This commit blanket renames the `rustc_macro` infrastructure to `proc_macro`,
which reflects the general consensus of #35900. A follow up PR to Cargo will be
required to purge the `rustc-macro` name as well.
2016-10-06 11:07:23 -07:00
Alex Crichton
ecc6c39e87 rustc: Implement custom derive (macros 1.1)
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1681] which adds support to the
compiler for first-class user-define custom `#[derive]` modes with a far more
stable API than plugins have today.

[RFC 1681]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1681-macros-1.1.md

The main features added by this commit are:

* A new `rustc-macro` crate-type. This crate type represents one which will
  provide custom `derive` implementations and perhaps eventually flower into the
  implementation of macros 2.0 as well.

* A new `rustc_macro` crate in the standard distribution. This crate will
  provide the runtime interface between macro crates and the compiler. The API
  here is particularly conservative right now but has quite a bit of room to
  expand into any manner of APIs required by macro authors.

* The ability to load new derive modes through the `#[macro_use]` annotations on
  other crates.

All support added here is gated behind the `rustc_macro` feature gate, both for
the library support (the `rustc_macro` crate) as well as the language features.

There are a few minor differences from the implementation outlined in the RFC,
such as the `rustc_macro` crate being available as a dylib and all symbols are
`dlsym`'d directly instead of having a shim compiled. These should only affect
the implementation, however, not the public interface.

This commit also ended up touching a lot of code related to `#[derive]`, making
a few notable changes:

* Recognized derive attributes are no longer desugared to `derive_Foo`. Wasn't
  sure how to keep this behavior and *not* expose it to custom derive.

* Derive attributes no longer have access to unstable features by default, they
  have to opt in on a granular level.

* The `derive(Copy,Clone)` optimization is now done through another "obscure
  attribute" which is just intended to ferry along in the compiler that such an
  optimization is possible. The `derive(PartialEq,Eq)` optimization was also
  updated to do something similar.

---

One part of this PR which needs to be improved before stabilizing are the errors
and exact interfaces here. The error messages are relatively poor quality and
there are surprising spects of this such as `#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, MyTrait)]`
not working by default. The custom attributes added by the compiler end up
becoming unstable again when going through a custom impl.

Hopefully though this is enough to start allowing experimentation on crates.io!

syntax-[breaking-change]
2016-09-02 12:52:56 -07:00
Jonathan Turner
6ae3502134 Move errors from libsyntax to its own crate 2016-06-23 08:07:35 -04:00
Niko Matsakis
944dc4aa65 fix cargo.toml for new dependency 2016-03-25 14:39:24 -04:00
Alex Crichton
2581b14147 bootstrap: Add a bunch of Cargo.toml files
These describe the structure of all our crate dependencies.
2016-02-11 11:12:32 -08:00