`-s` option doesn't perfectly fit into debuginfo()'s semantics and may unexpectedly
remove metadata in shared libraries. Remove the implementation and suggest user to
use `strip` utility instead.
Add a scheme for moving away from `extern "rust-intrinsic"` entirely
All `rust-intrinsic`s can become free functions now, either with a fallback body, or with a dummy body and an attribute, requiring backends to actually implement the intrinsic.
This PR demonstrates the dummy-body scheme with the `vtable_size` intrinsic.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63585
follow-up to #120500
MCP at https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/720
Existing names for values of this type are `sess`, `parse_sess`,
`parse_session`, and `ps`. `sess` is particularly annoying because
that's also used for `Session` values, which are often co-located, and
it can be difficult to know which type a value named `sess` refers to.
(That annoyance is the main motivation for this change.) `psess` is nice
and short, which is good for a name used this much.
The commit also renames some `parse_sess_created` values as
`psess_created`.
Adds initial support for DataFlowSanitizer to the Rust compiler. It
currently supports `-Zsanitizer-dataflow-abilist`. Additional options
for it can be passed to LLVM command line argument processor via LLVM
arguments using `llvm-args` codegen option (e.g.,
`-Cllvm-args=-dfsan-combine-pointer-labels-on-load=false`).
Add profiling support to AIX
AIX ld needs special option to merge objects with profiling. Also, profiler_builtins should include builtins for AIX from compiler-rt.
Add stubs in IR and ABI for `f16` and `f128`
This is the very first step toward the changes in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114607 and the [`f16` and `f128` RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3453-f16-and-f128.html). It adds the types to `rustc_type_ir::FloatTy` and `rustc_abi::Primitive`, and just propagates those out as `unimplemented!` stubs where necessary.
These types do not parse yet so there is no feature gate, and it should be okay to use `unimplemented!`.
The next steps will probably be AST support with parsing and the feature gate.
r? `@compiler-errors`
cc `@Nilstrieb` suggested breaking the PR up in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120645#issuecomment-1925900572
rustc: Fix wasm64 metadata object files
It looks like LLD will detect object files being either 32 or 64-bit depending on any memory present. LLD will additionally reject 32-bit objects during a 64-bit link. Previously metadata objects did not have any memories in them which led LLD to conclude they were 32-bit objects which broke 64-bit targets for wasm.
This commit fixes this by ensuring that for 64-bit targets there's a memory object present to get LLD to detect it's a 64-bit target. Additionally this commit moves away from a hand-crafted wasm encoder to the `wasm-encoder` crate on crates.io as the complexity grows for the generated object file.
Closes#121460
Note the change of the `D` to `d`, to match all the other names that
have `Subdiag` in them, such as `SubdiagnosticMessage` and
`derive(Subdiagnostic)`.
Remove useless lifetime of ArchiveBuilder
`trait ArchiveBuilder<'a>` has a seemingly useless lifetime a, so I remove it. If this is intentional, please reject this PR.
```rust
pub trait ArchiveBuilder<'a> {
fn add_file(&mut self, path: &Path);
fn add_archive(
&mut self,
archive: &Path,
skip: Box<dyn FnMut(&str) -> bool + 'static>,
) -> io::Result<()>;
fn build(self: Box<Self>, output: &Path) -> bool;
}
```
It looks like LLD will detect object files being either 32 or 64-bit
depending on any memory present. LLD will additionally reject 32-bit
objects during a 64-bit link. Previously metadata objects did not have
any memories in them which led LLD to conclude they were 32-bit objects
which broke 64-bit targets for wasm.
This commit fixes this by ensuring that for 64-bit targets there's a
memory object present to get LLD to detect it's a 64-bit target.
Additionally this commit moves away from a hand-crafted wasm encoder to
the `wasm-encoder` crate on crates.io as the complexity grows for the
generated object file.
Closes#121460
Improve codegen diagnostic handling
Clarify the workings of the temporary `Diagnostic` type used to send diagnostics from codegen threads to the main thread.
r? `@estebank`
- Make it more closely match `rustc_errors::Diagnostic`, by making the
field names match, and adding `children`, which requires adding
`rustc_codegen_ssa:🔙:write::Subdiagnostic`.
- Check that we aren't missing important info when converting
diagnostics.
- Add better comments.
- Tweak `rustc_errors::Diagnostic::replace_args` so that we don't need
to do any cloning when converting diagnostics.
First, introduce a typedef `DiagnosticArgMap`.
Second, make the `args` field public, and remove the `args` getter and
`replace_args` setter. These were necessary previously because the getter
had a `#[allow(rustc::potential_query_instability)]` attribute, but that
was removed in #120931 when the args were changed from `FxHashMap` to
`FxIndexMap`. (All the other `Diagnostic` fields are public.)
Add "algebraic" fast-math intrinsics, based on fast-math ops that cannot return poison
Setting all of LLVM's fast-math flags makes our fast-math intrinsics very dangerous, because some inputs are UB. This set of flags permits common algebraic transformations, but according to the [LangRef](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#fastmath), only the flags `nnan` (no nans) and `ninf` (no infs) can produce poison.
And this uses the algebraic float ops to fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120720
cc `@orlp`