Commit Graph

345 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Josh Stone
ab57e36268 Update to rebased rustc-rayon 0.4 2022-05-27 20:20:41 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
5bf23f64cc libcore: Add iter::from_generator which is like iter::from_fn, but for coroutines instead of functions 2022-05-27 01:51:31 +03:00
bors
574830f573 Auto merge of #96094 - Elliot-Roberts:fix_doctests, r=compiler-errors
Begin fixing all the broken doctests in `compiler/`

Begins to fix #95994.
All of them pass now but 24 of them I've marked with `ignore HELP (<explanation>)` (asking for help) as I'm unsure how to get them to work / if we should leave them as they are.
There are also a few that I marked `ignore` that could maybe be made to work but seem less important.
Each `ignore` has a rough "reason" for ignoring after it parentheses, with

- `(pseudo-rust)` meaning "mostly rust-like but contains foreign syntax"
- `(illustrative)` a somewhat catchall for either a fragment of rust that doesn't stand on its own (like a lone type), or abbreviated rust with ellipses and undeclared types that would get too cluttered if made compile-worthy.
- `(not-rust)` stuff that isn't rust but benefits from the syntax highlighting, like MIR.
- `(internal)` uses `rustc_*` code which would be difficult to make work with the testing setup.

Those reason notes are a bit inconsistently applied and messy though. If that's important I can go through them again and try a more principled approach. When I run `rg '```ignore \(' .` on the repo, there look to be lots of different conventions other people have used for this sort of thing. I could try unifying them all if that would be helpful.

I'm not sure if there was a better existing way to do this but I wrote my own script to help me run all the doctests and wade through the output. If that would be useful to anyone else, I put it here: https://github.com/Elliot-Roberts/rust_doctest_fixing_tool
2022-05-07 06:30:29 +00:00
bors
d60b4f52c9 Auto merge of #95454 - randomicon00:fix95444, r=wesleywiser
Fixing #95444 by only displaying passes that take more than 5 millise…

As discussed in #95444, I have added the code to test and only display prints that are greater than 5 milliseconds.

r? `@jyn514`
2022-05-06 17:52:47 +00:00
bors
8c4fc9d9a4 Auto merge of #94598 - scottmcm:prefix-free-hasher-methods, r=Amanieu
Add a dedicated length-prefixing method to `Hasher`

This accomplishes two main goals:
- Make it clear who is responsible for prefix-freedom, including how they should do it
- Make it feasible for a `Hasher` that *doesn't* care about Hash-DoS resistance to get better performance by not hashing lengths

This does not change rustc-hash, since that's in an external crate, but that could potentially use it in future.

Fixes #94026

r? rust-lang/libs

---

The core of this change is the following two new methods on `Hasher`:

```rust
pub trait Hasher {
    /// Writes a length prefix into this hasher, as part of being prefix-free.
    ///
    /// If you're implementing [`Hash`] for a custom collection, call this before
    /// writing its contents to this `Hasher`.  That way
    /// `(collection![1, 2, 3], collection![4, 5])` and
    /// `(collection![1, 2], collection![3, 4, 5])` will provide different
    /// sequences of values to the `Hasher`
    ///
    /// The `impl<T> Hash for [T]` includes a call to this method, so if you're
    /// hashing a slice (or array or vector) via its `Hash::hash` method,
    /// you should **not** call this yourself.
    ///
    /// This method is only for providing domain separation.  If you want to
    /// hash a `usize` that represents part of the *data*, then it's important
    /// that you pass it to [`Hasher::write_usize`] instead of to this method.
    ///
    /// # Examples
    ///
    /// ```
    /// #![feature(hasher_prefixfree_extras)]
    /// # // Stubs to make the `impl` below pass the compiler
    /// # struct MyCollection<T>(Option<T>);
    /// # impl<T> MyCollection<T> {
    /// #     fn len(&self) -> usize { todo!() }
    /// # }
    /// # impl<'a, T> IntoIterator for &'a MyCollection<T> {
    /// #     type Item = T;
    /// #     type IntoIter = std::iter::Empty<T>;
    /// #     fn into_iter(self) -> Self::IntoIter { todo!() }
    /// # }
    ///
    /// use std:#️⃣:{Hash, Hasher};
    /// impl<T: Hash> Hash for MyCollection<T> {
    ///     fn hash<H: Hasher>(&self, state: &mut H) {
    ///         state.write_length_prefix(self.len());
    ///         for elt in self {
    ///             elt.hash(state);
    ///         }
    ///     }
    /// }
    /// ```
    ///
    /// # Note to Implementers
    ///
    /// If you've decided that your `Hasher` is willing to be susceptible to
    /// Hash-DoS attacks, then you might consider skipping hashing some or all
    /// of the `len` provided in the name of increased performance.
    #[inline]
    #[unstable(feature = "hasher_prefixfree_extras", issue = "88888888")]
    fn write_length_prefix(&mut self, len: usize) {
        self.write_usize(len);
    }

    /// Writes a single `str` into this hasher.
    ///
    /// If you're implementing [`Hash`], you generally do not need to call this,
    /// as the `impl Hash for str` does, so you can just use that.
    ///
    /// This includes the domain separator for prefix-freedom, so you should
    /// **not** call `Self::write_length_prefix` before calling this.
    ///
    /// # Note to Implementers
    ///
    /// The default implementation of this method includes a call to
    /// [`Self::write_length_prefix`], so if your implementation of `Hasher`
    /// doesn't care about prefix-freedom and you've thus overridden
    /// that method to do nothing, there's no need to override this one.
    ///
    /// This method is available to be overridden separately from the others
    /// as `str` being UTF-8 means that it never contains `0xFF` bytes, which
    /// can be used to provide prefix-freedom cheaper than hashing a length.
    ///
    /// For example, if your `Hasher` works byte-by-byte (perhaps by accumulating
    /// them into a buffer), then you can hash the bytes of the `str` followed
    /// by a single `0xFF` byte.
    ///
    /// If your `Hasher` works in chunks, you can also do this by being careful
    /// about how you pad partial chunks.  If the chunks are padded with `0x00`
    /// bytes then just hashing an extra `0xFF` byte doesn't necessarily
    /// provide prefix-freedom, as `"ab"` and `"ab\u{0}"` would likely hash
    /// the same sequence of chunks.  But if you pad with `0xFF` bytes instead,
    /// ensuring at least one padding byte, then it can often provide
    /// prefix-freedom cheaper than hashing the length would.
    #[inline]
    #[unstable(feature = "hasher_prefixfree_extras", issue = "88888888")]
    fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) {
        self.write_length_prefix(s.len());
        self.write(s.as_bytes());
    }
}
```

With updates to the `Hash` implementations for slices and containers to call `write_length_prefix` instead of `write_usize`.

`write_str` defaults to using `write_length_prefix` since, as was pointed out in the issue, the `write_u8(0xFF)` approach is insufficient for hashers that work in chunks, as those would hash `"a\u{0}"` and `"a"` to the same thing.  But since `SipHash` works byte-wise (there's an internal buffer to accumulate bytes until a full chunk is available) it overrides `write_str` to continue to use the add-non-UTF-8-byte approach.

---

Compatibility:

Because the default implementation of `write_length_prefix` calls `write_usize`, the changed hash implementation for slices will do the same thing the old one did on existing `Hasher`s.
2022-05-06 09:43:57 +00:00
Scott McMurray
98054377ee Add a dedicated length-prefixing method to Hasher
This accomplishes two main goals:
- Make it clear who is responsible for prefix-freedom, including how they should do it
- Make it feasible for a `Hasher` that *doesn't* care about Hash-DoS resistance to get better performance by not hashing lengths

This does not change rustc-hash, since that's in an external crate, but that could potentially use it in future.
2022-05-06 00:03:38 -07:00
Peh
e79ba76ec4 Fixing #95444 by only displaying passes that take more than 5 milliseconds
95444: Adding passes that include memory increase

Fix95444: Change the substraction with the abs_diff() method

Fix95444: Change the substraction with abs_diff() method
2022-05-05 23:56:40 +00:00
Josh Triplett
0fc5c524f5 Stabilize bool::then_some 2022-05-04 13:22:08 +02:00
Elliot Roberts
7907385999 fix most compiler/ doctests 2022-05-02 17:40:30 -07:00
Michael Woerister
c0be619724 incr. comp.: Don't export impl_stable_hash_via_hash!() and warn about using it. 2022-04-19 10:43:20 +02:00
bors
563ef23529 Auto merge of #95899 - petrochenkov:modchild2, r=cjgillot
rustc_metadata: Do not encode unnecessary module children

This should remove the syntax context shift and the special case for `ExternCrate` in decoder in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95880.

This PR also shifts some work from decoding to encoding, which is typically useful for performance (but probably not much in this case).
r? `@cjgillot`
2022-04-16 22:04:10 +00:00
Dylan DPC
9905774762
Rollup merge of #96058 - euclio:flock-impls, r=nagisa
separate flock implementations into separate modules

The main benefit of doing this is that rustfmt will now format each of these modules.
2022-04-16 19:42:05 +02:00
bors
febce1fc31 Auto merge of #95689 - lqd:self-profiler, r=wesleywiser
Allow self-profiler to only record potentially costly arguments when argument recording is turned on

As discussed [on zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/247081-t-compiler.2Fperformance/topic/Identifying.20proc-macro.20slowdowns/near/277304909) with `@wesleywiser,` I'd like to record proc-macro expansions in the self-profiler, with some detailed data (per-expansion spans for example, to follow #95473).

At the same time, I'd also like to avoid doing expensive things when tracking a generic activity's arguments, if they were not specifically opted into the event filter mask, to allow the self-profiler to be used in hotter contexts.

This PR tries to offer:
- a way to ensure a closure to record arguments will only be called in that situation, so that potentially costly arguments can still be recorded when needed. With the additional requirement that, if possible, it would offer a way to record non-owned data without adding many `generic_activity_with_arg_{...}`-style methods. This lead to the `generic_activity_with_arg_recorder` single entry-point, and the closure parameter would offer the new methods, able to be executed in a context where costly argument could be created without disturbing the profiled piece of code.
- some facilities/patterns allowing to record more rustc specific data in this situation, without making `rustc_data_structures`  where the self-profiler is defined, depend on other rustc crates (causing circular dependencies): in particular, spans. They are quite tricky to turn into strings (if the default `Debug` impl output does not match the context one needs them for), and since I'd also like to avoid the allocation there when arg recording is turned off today, that has turned into another flexibility requirement for the API in this PR (separating the span-specific recording into an extension trait). **edit**: I've removed this from the PR so that it's easier to review, and opened https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95739.
- allow for extensibility in the future: other ways to record arguments, or additional data attached to them could be added in the future (e.g. recording the argument's name as well as its data).

Some areas where I'd love feedback:
- the API and names: the `EventArgRecorder` and its method for example. As well as the verbosity that comes from the increased flexibility.
- if I should convert the existing `generic_activity_with_arg{s}` to just forward to `generic_activity_with_arg_recorder` + `recorder.record_arg` (or remove them altogether ? Probably not): I've used the new API in the simple case I could find of allocating for an arg that may not be recorded, and the rest don't seem costly.
- [x] whether this API should panic if no arguments were recorded by the user-provided closure (like this PR currently does: it seems like an error to use an API dedicated to record arguments but not call the methods to then do so) or if this should just record a generic activity without arguments ?
- whether the `record_arg` function should be `#[inline(always)]`, like the `generic_activity_*` functions ?

As mentioned, r? `@wesleywiser` following our recent discussion.
2022-04-16 11:43:28 +00:00
Dylan DPC
49a31cdc1d
Rollup merge of #95372 - RalfJung:unaligned_references, r=oli-obk
make unaligned_references lint deny-by-default

This lint has been warn-by-default for a year now (since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82525), so I think it is time to crank it up a bit. Code that triggers the lint causes UB (without `unsafe`) when executed, so we really don't want people to write code like this.
2022-04-16 07:12:43 +02:00
Ralf Jung
e30d6d9096 make unaligned_references lint deny-by-default 2022-04-14 21:16:42 -04:00
Andy Russell
219d81f19b
separate flock implementations into separate modules 2022-04-14 18:30:53 -04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
233fa659f4 rustc_metadata: Do not encode unnecessary module children 2022-04-13 01:35:27 +03:00
Camille GILLOT
443333dc1f Remove NodeIdHashingMode. 2022-04-12 19:59:32 +02:00
bors
e980c62955 Auto merge of #95524 - oli-obk:cached_stable_hash_cleanups, r=nnethercote
Cached stable hash cleanups

r? `@nnethercote`

Add a sanity assertion in debug mode to check that the cached hashes are actually the ones we get if we compute the hash each time.

Add a new data structure that bundles all the hash-caching work to make it easier to re-use it for different interned data structures
2022-04-09 02:31:24 +00:00
bors
f4a7ce997a Auto merge of #95519 - oli-obk:tait_ub2, r=compiler-errors
Enforce well formedness for type alias impl trait's hidden type

fixes #84657

This was not an issue with return-position-impl-trait because the generic bounds of the function are the same as those of the opaque type, and the hidden type must already be well formed within the function.

With type-alias-impl-trait the hidden type could be defined in a function that has *more* lifetime bounds than the type alias. This is fine, but the hidden type must still be well formed without those additional bounds.
2022-04-08 20:45:16 +00:00
Rémy Rakic
7585269673 add generic_activity_with_arg_recorder to the self-profiler
This allows profiling costly arguments to be recorded only when `-Zself-profile-events=args` is on: using a closure that takes an `EventArgRecorder` and call its `record_arg` or `record_args` methods.
2022-04-07 15:47:20 +02:00
Rémy Rakic
1c4ae7aa4a turn exec comment into doc comment 2022-04-07 15:47:19 +02:00
Oli Scherer
2e0ef701c2 Document and rename the new wrapper type 2022-04-07 13:01:48 +00:00
Oli Scherer
b30bcfae38 Fix some fallout around type alias impl trait in associated types 2022-04-06 12:56:22 +00:00
bors
168a020900 Auto merge of #92686 - saethlin:unsafe-debug-asserts, r=Amanieu
Add debug assertions to some unsafe functions

As suggested by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51713

~~Some similar code calls `abort()` instead of `panic!()` but aborting doesn't work in a `const fn`, and the intrinsic for doing dispatch based on whether execution is in a const is unstable.~~

This picked up some invalid uses of `get_unchecked` in the compiler, and fixes them.

I can confirm that they do in fact pick up invalid uses of `get_unchecked` in the wild, though the user experience is less-than-awesome:
```
     Running unittests (target/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/debug/deps/rle_decode_fast-04b7918da2001b50)

running 6 tests
error: test failed, to rerun pass '--lib'

Caused by:
  process didn't exit successfully: `/home/ben/rle-decode-helper/target/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/debug/deps/rle_decode_fast-04b7918da2001b50` (signal: 4, SIGILL: illegal instruction)
```

~~As best I can tell these changes produce a 6% regression in the runtime of `./x.py test` when `[rust] debug = true` is set.~~
Latest commit (6894d559bd) brings the additional overhead from this PR down to 0.5%, while also adding a few more assertions. I think this actually covers all the places in `core` that it is reasonable to check for safety requirements at runtime.

Thoughts?
2022-04-03 16:04:47 +00:00
Oli Scherer
6ffd654683 Check that the cached stable hash is the right one if debug assertions are enabled 2022-03-31 14:54:04 +00:00
Oli Scherer
00c24dd8ce Move stable hash from TyS into a datastructure that can be shared with other interned types. 2022-03-31 14:54:04 +00:00
bors
05142a7e44 Auto merge of #95466 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-g7ddr8y, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #95294 (Document Linux kernel handoff in std::io::copy and std::fs::copy)
 - #95443 (Clarify how `src/tools/x` searches for python)
 - #95452 (fix since field version for termination stabilization)
 - #95460 (Spellchecking compiler code)
 - #95461 (Spellchecking some comments)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-30 07:45:42 +00:00
Dylan DPC
03b3993ae8
Rollup merge of #95461 - nyurik:spelling, r=lcnr
Spellchecking some comments

This PR attempts to clean up some minor spelling mistakes in comments
2022-03-30 09:10:07 +02:00
Yuri Astrakhan
7e8201ae0a Spellchecking some comments
This PR attempts to clean up some minor spelling mistakes in comments
2022-03-30 01:39:38 -04:00
bors
f132bcf3bd Auto merge of #94081 - oli-obk:lazy_tait_take_two, r=nikomatsakis
Lazy type-alias-impl-trait take two

### user visible change 1: RPIT inference from recursive call sites

Lazy TAIT has an insta-stable change. The following snippet now compiles, because opaque types can now have their hidden type set from wherever the opaque type is mentioned.

```rust
fn bar(b: bool) -> impl std::fmt::Debug {
    if b {
        return 42
    }
    let x: u32 = bar(false); // this errors on stable
    99
}
```

The return type of `bar` stays opaque, you can't do `bar(false) + 42`, you need to actually mention the hidden type.

### user visible change 2: divergence between RPIT and TAIT in return statements

Note that `return` statements and the trailing return expression are special with RPIT (but not TAIT). So

```rust
#![feature(type_alias_impl_trait)]
type Foo = impl std::fmt::Debug;

fn foo(b: bool) -> Foo {
    if b {
        return vec![42];
    }
    std::iter::empty().collect() //~ ERROR `Foo` cannot be built from an iterator
}

fn bar(b: bool) -> impl std::fmt::Debug {
    if b {
        return vec![42]
    }
    std::iter::empty().collect() // Works, magic (accidentally stabilized, not intended)
}
```

But when we are working with the return value of a recursive call, the behavior of RPIT and TAIT is the same:

```rust
type Foo = impl std::fmt::Debug;

fn foo(b: bool) -> Foo {
    if b {
        return vec![];
    }
    let mut x = foo(false);
    x = std::iter::empty().collect(); //~ ERROR `Foo` cannot be built from an iterator
    vec![]
}

fn bar(b: bool) -> impl std::fmt::Debug {
    if b {
        return vec![];
    }
    let mut x = bar(false);
    x = std::iter::empty().collect(); //~ ERROR `impl Debug` cannot be built from an iterator
    vec![]
}
```

### user visible change 3: TAIT does not merge types across branches

In contrast to RPIT, TAIT does not merge types across branches, so the following does not compile.

```rust
type Foo = impl std::fmt::Debug;

fn foo(b: bool) -> Foo {
    if b {
        vec![42_i32]
    } else {
        std::iter::empty().collect()
        //~^ ERROR `Foo` cannot be built from an iterator over elements of type `_`
    }
}
```

It is easy to support, but we should make an explicit decision to include the additional complexity in the implementation (it's not much, see a721052457cf513487fb4266e3ade65c29b272d2 which needs to be reverted to enable this).

### PR formalities

previous attempt: #92007

This PR also includes #92306 and #93783, as they were reverted along with #92007 in #93893

fixes #93411
fixes #88236
fixes #89312
fixes #87340
fixes #86800
fixes #86719
fixes #84073
fixes #83919
fixes #82139
fixes #77987
fixes #74282
fixes #67830
fixes #62742
fixes #54895
2022-03-30 05:04:45 +00:00
Ben Kimock
6e6d0cbf83 Add debug assertions to some unsafe functions
These debug assertions are all implemented only at runtime using
`const_eval_select`, and in the error path they execute
`intrinsics::abort` instead of being a normal debug assertion to
minimize the impact of these assertions on code size, when enabled.

Of all these changes, the bounds checks for unchecked indexing are
expected to be most impactful (case in point, they found a problem in
rustc).
2022-03-29 11:05:24 -04:00
Oli Scherer
264cd05b16 Revert "Auto merge of #93893 - oli-obk:sad_revert, r=oli-obk"
This reverts commit 6499c5e7fc, reversing
changes made to 78450d2d60.
2022-03-28 16:27:14 +00:00
klensy
008fc79dcd Propagate parallel_compiler feature through rustc crates. Turned off feature gives change of builded crates: 238 -> 224. 2022-03-28 08:41:12 +03:00
lcnr
b8135fd5c8 add #[rustc_pass_by_value] to more types 2022-03-08 15:39:52 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4f008e06c3 Clarify Layout interning.
`Layout` is another type that is sometimes interned, sometimes not, and
we always use references to refer to it so we can't take any advantage
of the uniqueness properties for hashing or equality checks.

This commit renames `Layout` as `LayoutS`, and then introduces a new
`Layout` that is a newtype around an `Interned<LayoutS>`. It also
interns more layouts than before. Previously layouts within layouts
(via the `variants` field) were never interned, but now they are. Hence
the lifetime on the new `Layout` type.

Unlike other interned types, these ones are in `rustc_target` instead of
`rustc_middle`. This reflects the existing structure of the code, which
does layout-specific stuff in `rustc_target` while `TyAndLayout` is
generic over the `Ty`, allowing the type-specific stuff to occur in
`rustc_middle`.

The commit also adds a `HashStable` impl for `Interned`, which was
needed. It hashes the contents, unlike the `Hash` impl which hashes the
pointer.
2022-03-07 13:41:47 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4852291417 Introduce ConstAllocation.
Currently some `Allocation`s are interned, some are not, and it's very
hard to tell at a use point which is which.

This commit introduces `ConstAllocation` for the known-interned ones,
which makes the division much clearer. `ConstAllocation::inner()` is
used to get the underlying `Allocation`.

In some places it's natural to use an `Allocation`, in some it's natural
to use a `ConstAllocation`, and in some places there's no clear choice.
I've tried to make things look as nice as possible, while generally
favouring `ConstAllocation`, which is the type that embodies more
information. This does require quite a few calls to `inner()`.

The commit also tweaks how `PartialOrd` works for `Interned`. The
previous code was too clever by half, building on `T: Ord` to make the
code shorter. That caused problems with deriving `PartialOrd` and `Ord`
for `ConstAllocation`, so I changed it to build on `T: PartialOrd`,
which is slightly more verbose but much more standard and avoided the
problems.
2022-03-07 08:25:50 +11:00
bors
c38b8a8c62 Auto merge of #94579 - tmiasko:target-features, r=nagisa
Always include global target features in function attributes

This ensures that information about target features configured with
`-C target-feature=...` or detected with `-C target-cpu=native` is
retained for subsequent consumers of LLVM bitcode.

This is crucial for linker plugin LTO, since this information is not
conveyed to the plugin otherwise.

<details><summary>Additional test case demonstrating the issue</summary>

```rust
extern crate core;

#[inline]
#[target_feature(enable = "aes")]
unsafe fn f(a: u128, b: u128) -> u128 {
    use core::arch::x86_64::*;
    use core::mem::transmute;
    transmute(_mm_aesenc_si128(transmute(a), transmute(b)))
}

pub fn g(a: u128, b: u128) -> u128 {
    unsafe { f(a, b) }
}

fn main() {
    let mut args = std::env::args();
    let _ = args.next().unwrap();
    let a: u128 = args.next().unwrap().parse().unwrap();
    let b: u128 = args.next().unwrap().parse().unwrap();
    println!("{}", g(a, b));
}
```

```console
$ rustc --edition=2021 a.rs -Clinker-plugin-lto -Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=lld  -Ctarget-feature=+aes -O
...
  = note: LLVM ERROR: Cannot select: intrinsic %llvm.x86.aesni.aesenc
```

</details>

r? `@nagisa`
2022-03-06 18:07:11 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
725c11ef3c Add SmallStr 2022-03-04 16:57:34 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
ea0a31ff0c Inline SmallCStr::deref 2022-03-04 16:57:34 +01:00
Loïc BRANSTETT
08e1e67b49 Remove invalid #[cfg(tests)] in index_map 2022-03-04 11:34:50 +01:00
bors
2a280de64f Auto merge of #94514 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-pdzn82h, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #94464 (Suggest adding a new lifetime parameter when two elided lifetimes should match up for traits and impls.)
 - #94476 (7 - Make more use of `let_chains`)
 - #94478 (Fix panic when handling intra doc links generated from macro)
 - #94482 (compiler: fix some typos)
 - #94490 (Update books)
 - #94496 (tests: accept llvm intrinsic in align-checking test)
 - #94498 (9 - Make more use of `let_chains`)
 - #94503 (Provide C FFI types via core::ffi, not just in std)
 - #94513 (update Miri)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-03-02 05:32:00 +00:00
cuishuang
eb2b9441e7 compiler: fix some typos 2022-03-01 20:02:47 +08:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
df701a292c Querify global_backend_features
At the very least this serves to deduplicate the diagnostics that are
output about unknown target features provided via CLI.
2022-03-01 01:57:25 +02:00
bors
3b1fe7e7c9 Auto merge of #94084 - Mark-Simulacrum:drop-sharded, r=cjgillot
Avoid query cache sharding code in single-threaded mode

In non-parallel compilers, this is just adding needless overhead at compilation time (since there is only one shard statically anyway). This amounts to roughly ~10 seconds reduction in bootstrap time, with overall neutral (some wins, some losses) performance results.

Parallel compiler performance should be largely unaffected by this PR; sharding is kept there.
2022-02-27 14:04:07 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
648a8e314a
Rollup merge of #94306 - Mark-Simulacrum:dom-fixups, r=jackh726
Avoid exhausting stack space in dominator compression

Doesn't add a test case -- I ended up running into this while playing with the generated example from #43578, which we could do with a run-make test (to avoid checking a large code snippet into tree), but I suspect we don't want to wait for it to compile (locally it takes ~14s -- not terrible, but doesn't seem worth it to me). In practice stack space exhaustion is difficult to test for, too, since if we set the bound too low a different call structure above us (e.g., a nearer ensure_sufficient_stack call) would let the test pass even with the old impl, most likely.

Locally it seems like this manages to perform approximately equivalently to the recursion, but will run perf to confirm.
2022-02-26 07:52:44 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
22c3a71de1 Switch bootstrap cfgs 2022-02-25 08:00:52 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
ae27c4ab1f
Rollup merge of #94288 - Mark-Simulacrum:ser-opt, r=nnethercote
Cleanup a few Decoder methods

This is just some simple follow up to #93839.

r? `@nnethercote`
2022-02-24 07:48:09 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
4d89292785 Avoid exhausting stack space in dominator compression 2022-02-23 16:07:56 -05:00
bors
bafe8d06e0 Auto merge of #93984 - nnethercote:ChunkedBitSet, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Introduce `ChunkedBitSet` and use it for some dataflow analyses.

This reduces peak memory usage significantly for some programs with very
large functions.

r? `@ghost`
2022-02-23 01:26:07 +00:00