The comment touched, as originally written, only concerned itself with
the `test` steps. However, since #38468 the `arr` variable actually has
gained an indirect relationship with the `dist` steps too. The comment
failed to convey the extra meaning, contributing to the misunderstanding
which eventually lead to #38637. Fix that by moving the comment into the
right place near the relevant condition, and properly documenting
`arr`'s purpose.
Remove special case for Box<ZST> in trans
Remove extra lang item, `exchange_free`; use `box_free` instead.
Trans used to insert code equivalent to `box_free` in a wrapper around
`exchange_free`, and that code is now removed from trans.
Fixes#37710.
travis: Update the OSX image we run tests in
The current image is `xcode7.3`, Travis's current default. Unfortunately this
has a version of LLDB which doesn't support debuginfo-lldb tests (see #32520),
so we're not running LLDB tests on Travis yet.
This switches us to the newest image from Travis, `xcode8.2`, which should have
a newer version of LLDB we can run tests against.
- `--emit=asm --target=nvptx64-nvidia-cuda` can be used to turn a crate
into a PTX module (a `.s` file).
- intrinsics like `__syncthreads` and `blockIdx.x` are exposed as
`"platform-intrinsics"`.
- "cabi" has been implemented for the nvptx and nvptx64 architectures.
i.e. `extern "C"` works.
- a new ABI, `"ptx-kernel"`. That can be used to generate "global"
functions. Example: `extern "ptx-kernel" fn kernel() { .. }`. All
other functions are "device" functions.
The current image is `xcode7.3`, Travis's current default. Unfortunately this
has a version of LLDB which doesn't support debuginfo-lldb tests (see #32520),
so we're not running LLDB tests on Travis yet.
This switches us to the newest image from Travis, `xcode8.2`, which should have
a newer version of LLDB we can run tests against.
Ctrl-Z returns from Stdin.read() when reading from the console on Windows
Fixes#19914.
Fixes read(), read_to_string(), read_to_end(), etc.
r? @alexcrichton
Turns out that even though all these functions take a `size_t` they don't
actually work that well with anything larger than the maximum value of
`ssize_t`, the return value. Furthermore it looks like OSX rejects any
read/write requests larger than `INT_MAX - 1`. Handle all these cases by just
clamping the maximum size of a read/write on Unix to a platform-specific value.
Closes#38590
initial SPARC support
### UPDATE
Can now compile `no_std` executables with:
```
$ cargo new --bin app && cd $_
$ edit Cargo.toml && tail -n2 $_
[dependencies]
core = { path = "/path/to/rust/src/libcore" }
$ edit src/main.rs && cat $_
#![feature(lang_items)]
#![no_std]
#![no_main]
#[no_mangle]
pub fn _start() -> ! {
loop {}
}
#[lang = "panic_fmt"]
fn panic_fmt() -> ! {
loop {}
}
$ edit sparc-none-elf.json && cat $_
{
"arch": "sparc",
"data-layout": "E-m:e-p:32:32-i64:64-f128:64-n32-S64",
"executables": true,
"llvm-target": "sparc",
"os": "none",
"panic-strategy": "abort",
"target-endian": "big",
"target-pointer-width": "32"
}
$ cargo rustc --target sparc-none-elf -- -C linker=sparc-unknown-elf-gcc -C link-args=-nostartfiles
$ file target/sparc-none-elf/debug/app
app: ELF 32-bit MSB executable, SPARC, version 1 (SYSV), statically linked, not stripped
$ sparc-unknown-elf-readelf -h target/sparc-none-elf/debug/app
ELF Header:
Magic: 7f 45 4c 46 01 02 01 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
Class: ELF32
Data: 2's complement, big endian
Version: 1 (current)
OS/ABI: UNIX - System V
ABI Version: 0
Type: EXEC (Executable file)
Machine: Sparc
Version: 0x1
Entry point address: 0x10074
Start of program headers: 52 (bytes into file)
Start of section headers: 1188 (bytes into file)
Flags: 0x0
Size of this header: 52 (bytes)
Size of program headers: 32 (bytes)
Number of program headers: 2
Size of section headers: 40 (bytes)
Number of section headers: 14
Section header string table index: 11
$ sparc-unknown-elf-objdump -Cd target/sparc-none-elf/debug/app
target/sparc-none-elf/debug/app: file format elf32-sparc
Disassembly of section .text:
00010074 <_start>:
10074: 9d e3 bf 98 save %sp, -104, %sp
10078: 10 80 00 02 b 10080 <_start+0xc>
1007c: 01 00 00 00 nop
10080: 10 80 00 02 b 10088 <_start+0x14>
10084: 01 00 00 00 nop
10088: 10 80 00 00 b 10088 <_start+0x14>
1008c: 01 00 00 00 nop
```
---
Someone wants to attempt launching some Rust [into space](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/5h76oa/c_interop/) but their platform is based on the SPARCv8 architecture. Let's not block them by enabling LLVM's SPARC backend.
Something very important that they'll also need is the "cabi" stuff as they'll be embedding some Rust code into a bigger C application (i.e. heavy use of `extern "C"`). The question there is what name(s) should we use for "target_arch" as the "cabi" implementation [varies according to that parameter](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/1.13.0/src/librustc_trans/abi.rs#L498-L523).
AFAICT, SPARCv8 is a 32-bit architecture and SPARCv9 is a 64-bit architecture. And, LLVM uses `sparc`, `sparcv9` and `sparcel` for [the architecture triple](ac1c94226e/include/llvm/ADT/Triple.h (L67-L69)) so perhaps we should use `target_arch = "sparc"` (32-bit) and `target_arch = "sparcv9"` (64-bit) as well.
r? @alexcrichton This PR only enables this LLVM backend when rustbuild is used. Do I also need to implement this for the old Makefile-based build system? Or are all our nightlies now being generated using rustbuild?
cc @brson
There's been some flaky runs on Travis where the Android emulator is having
problems staying alive... presumably? For example:
* https://travis-ci.org/rust-lang/rust/jobs/186736745
This commit spawns the emulator in the same way as buildbot with `nohup` to hope
that it goes into the background successfully, followed by a `wait-for-device`
command. I'm not actually sure if this'll fix the problems we're seeing, but I
figure it can't hurt to test out.
I no longer remember why I needed this (or thought I did). The way
that the `BitDenotation` is passed around in all existing use cases
(and planned future ones), the thing that were in the `Ctxt` can just
be part of `Self` instead.
(I think ariel had been pushing me to do this back when I first put in
this infrastructure; it took me a while to see how much of pain the
`Ctxt` was causing.)
More systematic error reporting in path resolution
Path resolution for types, expressions and patterns used various heuristics to give more helpful messages on unresolved or incorrectly resolved paths.
This PR combines these heuristics and applies them to all non-import paths.
First a path is resolved in all namespaces, starting from its primary namespace (to give messages like "expected function, found macro, you probably forgot `!`").
If this resolution doesn't give a desired result we create a base error - either "path is not resolved" or "path is resolved, but the resolution is not acceptable in this context".
Other helps and notes are applied to this base error using heuristics.
Here's the list of heuristics for a path with a last segment `name` in order.
First we issue special messages for unresolved `Self` and `self`.
Second we try to find free items named `name` in other modules and suggest to import them.
Then we try to find fields and associated items named `name` and suggest `self.name` or `Self::name`.
After that we try several deterministic context dependent heuristics like "expected value, found struct, you probably forgot `{}`".
If nothing of the above works we try to find candidates with other names using Levenshtein distance.
---
Some alternatives/notes/unresolved questions:
- ~~I had a strong desire to migrate all affected tests to `test/ui`, diagnostics comparison becomes much more meaningful, but I did this only for few tests so far.~~ (Done)
- ~~Labels for "unresolved path" errors are mostly useless now, it may make sense to move some help/notes to these labels, help becomes closer to the error this way.~~ (Done)
- ~~Currently only the first successful heuristic results in additional message shown to the user, it may make sense to print them all, they are rarely compatible, so the diagnostics bloat is unlikely.~~ (Done)
- Now when https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/38014 landed `resolve_path` can potentially be replaced with `smart_resolve_path` in couple more places - e.g. ~~visibilities~~ (done), ~~import prefixes~~ (done), HIR paths.
---
Some additional fixes:
- Associated suggestions and typo suggestions are filtered with a context specific predicate to avoid inapplicable suggestions.
- `adjust_local_def` works properly in speculative resolution.
- I also fixed a recently introduced ICE in partially resolved UFCS paths (see test `ufcs-partially-resolved.rs`). Minimal reproduction:
```
enum E {}
fn main() {
<u8 as E>::A;
}
```
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38409, fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38504 (duplicates).
- Some bugs in resolution of visibilities are fixed - `pub(Enum)`, `pub(Trait)`, `pub(non::local::path)`.
- Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38012.
---
r? @jseyfried for technical details + @jonathandturner for diagnostics changes
How to read the patch: `smart_resolve_path(_fragment)/resolve_qpath_anywhere` are written anew and replace `resolve_trait_reference`/`resolve_type`/`resolve_pattern_path`/`resolve_struct_path`/`resolve_expr` for `ExprKind::Path`, everything else can be read as a diff.
I timed this locally and plain old `gzip` took 2m06s while `gzip -9` took a
whopping 6m23s to save a mere 4MB out of 1.2GB. Let's shave a few minutes off
the Android builder by turning down the compression level.
Use `DefId`s instead of `NodeId`s for `pub(restricted)` visibilities
This is groundwork for hygiene 2.0, specifically privacy checking hygienic intercrate name resolutions.
r? @nrc
Fix Markdown list formatting.
The Markdown engine used by the book can cope with a single leading space on the list marker:
Like this:
* List item
Rather than like this:
* List item
… but it’s not the typical convention employed in the book, and moreover the Markdown engine used for producing the error index *can’t* cope with it (its behaviour looks like a bug, as it appears to lose one of the two line breaks as well, but that’s immaterial here).
So, we shift to a single convention which doesn’t trigger bugs in the Markdown renderer.
----
See https://doc.rust-lang.org/error-index.html#E0458 and https://doc.rust-lang.org/error-index.html#E0101 for the bad current rendering in the error index.
Removes magenta build warning.
Small bug fix to remove an unused type in the magenta process code that causes build failures for magenta's rustc.
r? @alexcrichton
@tedsta @raphlinus