Rustc explain
Fixes#48041.
To make the review easier, I separated tests update to code update. Also, I used this script to generate new ui tests stderr:
```python
from os import listdir
from os.path import isdir, isfile, join
PATH = "src/test/ui"
def do_something(path):
files = [join(path, f) for f in listdir(path)]
for f in files:
if isdir(f):
do_something(f)
continue
if not isfile(f) or not f.endswith(".stderr"):
continue
x = open(f, "r")
content = x.read().strip()
if "error[E" not in content:
continue
errors = dict()
for y in content.splitlines():
if y.startswith("error[E"):
errors[y[6:11]] = True
errors = sorted(errors.keys())
if len(errors) < 1:
print("weird... {}".format(f))
continue
if len(errors) > 1:
content += "\n\nYou've got a few errors: {}".format(", ".join(errors))
content += "\nIf you want more information on an error, try using \"rustc --explain {}\"".format(errors[0])
else:
content += "\n\nIf you want more information on this error, try using \"rustc --explain {}\"".format(errors[0])
content += "\n"
x = open(f, "w")
x.write(content)
do_something(PATH)
```
This ensures that the entry function is never elided due to inlining, even with `inline(always)`. Fixes#47783.
There were a couple of possible ways of addressing this issue; I simply picked the one that seemed most direct. A warning could be appropriate, but considering using inlining hints in other places it doesn't apply also throws no warnings, and it seems like an edge case anyway, I haven't added one for now.
Make ".e0" not parse as 0.0
This forces floats to have either a digit before the separating point, or after. Thus `".e0"` is invalid like `"."`, when using `parse()`. Fixes#40654. As mentioned in the issue, this is technically a breaking change... but clearly incorrect behaviour at present.
test: Fix s390x-unknown-linux-gnu atomic-lock-free test not run for systemz
The s390-unknown-linux-gnu atomic-lock-free test is currently run for ```LLVM_COMPONENTS == powerpc```. I assume it was meant to be run for ```LLVM_COMPONENTS == systemz```, so let's fix this.
rustbuild: Restore Config.libdir_relative
This re-introduces a `Config.libdir_relative` field, now derived from
`libdir` and made relative to `prefix` if necessary.
This fixes a regression from #46592 when `--libdir` is given an absolute
path. `Builder::sysroot_libdir` should always use a relative path so
its callers don't clobber system locations, and `librustc` also asserts
that `CFG_LIBDIR_RELATIVE` is really relative.
Add missing pieces for sparc-linux-gnu support
I noticed that while Rust has CABI support for 32-bit SPARC, there are still some pieces missing to be able to use Rust on a 32-Bit SPARC system like Gentoo which still defaults to a 32-bit port unlike Debian's sparc64 port.
This PR is an attempt to add the missing pieces. I will send the necessary changes for libc in a separate PR.
CC @jrtc27
Add Iterator::flatten
This adds the trait method `.flatten()` on `Iterator` which flattens one level of nesting from an iterator or (into)iterators. The method `.flat_fmap(f)` is then redefined as `.map(f).flatten()`. The implementation of `Flatten` is essentially that of what it was for `FlatMap` but removing the call to `f` at various places.
Hopefully the type alias approach should be OK as was indicated / alluded to by @bluss and @eddyb in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2306#issuecomment-361391370.
cc @scottmcm
pass correct pie args to gcc linker
When linking with gcc, run gcc -v to see if --enable-default-pie is
compiled in. If it is, pass -no-pie when necessary to disable pie.
Otherwise, pass -pie when necessary to enable it.
Fixes#48032 and fixes#35061
Add Condvar APIs not susceptible to spurious wake
Provide wait_until and wait_timeout_until helper wrappers that aren't susceptible to spurious wake.
Additionally wait_timeout_until makes it possible to more easily write code that waits for a fixed amount of time in face of spurious wakes since otherwise each user would have to do math on adjusting the duration.
Implements #47960.
rustc_trans: rewrite mips64 ABI code
This PR rewrites the ABI handling code for 64-bit MIPS and should fix various FFI issues including #47290.
To accomodate the 64-bit ABI I have had to add a new `CastTarget` variant which I've called `Chunked` (though maybe this isn't the best name). This allows an ABI to cast to some arbitrary structure of `Reg` types. This is required on MIPS which might need to cast to a structure containing a mixture of `i64` and `f64` types.