Address ICEs running w/ incremental compilation and building glium
Fixes for various ICEs I encountered trying to build glium with incremental compilation enabled. Building glium now works. Of the 4 ICEs, I have test cases for 3 of them -- I didn't isolate a test for the last commit and kind of want to go do other things -- most notably, figuring out why incremental isn't saving much *effort*.
But if it seems worthwhile and I can come back and try to narrow down the problem.
r? @michaelwoerister
Fixes#34991Fixes#32015
The way we do HIR inlining introduces reads of the "Hir" into the graph,
but this Hir in fact belongs to other crates, so when we try to load
later, we ICE because the Hir nodes in question don't belond to the
crate (and we haven't done inlining yet). This pass rewrites those HIR
nodes to the metadata from which the inlined HIR was loaded.
Since LLVM reversed the order of the debug info graphs, we need to have
a compile unit that exists *before* any functions (`DISubprogram`s) are
created. This allows the LLVM debug info builder to automatically link
the functions to the compile unit.
When items are inlined from extern crates, the filename in the debug info
is taken from the FileMap that's serialized in the rlib metadata.
Currently this is just FileMap.name, which is whatever path is passed to rustc.
Since libcore and libstd are built by invoking rustc with relative paths,
they wind up with relative paths in the rlib, and when linked into a binary
the debug info uses relative paths for the names, but since the compilation
directory for the final binary, tools trying to read source filenames
will wind up with bad paths. We noticed this in Firefox with source
filenames from libcore/libstd having bad paths.
This change stores an absolute path in FileMap.abs_path, and uses that
if available for writing debug info. This is not going to magically make
debuggers able to find the source, but it will at least provide sensible
paths.
prefer `if let` to match with `None => ()` arm in some places
Casual grepping revealed some places in the codebase (some of which
antedated `if let`'s December 2014 stabilization in c200ae5a) where we
were using a match with a `None => ()` arm where (in the present
author's opinion) an `if let` conditional would be more readable. (Other
places where matching to the unit value did seem to better express the
intent were left alone.)
It's likely that we don't care about making such trivial,
non-functional, sheerly æsthetic changes.
But if we do, this is a patch.
Casual grepping revealed some places in the codebase (some of which
antedated `if let`'s December 2014 stabilization in c200ae5a) where we
were using a match with a `None => ()` arm where (in the present
author's opinion) an `if let` conditional would be more readable. (Other
places where matching to the unit value did seem to better express the
intent were left alone.)
It's likely that we don't care about making such trivial,
non-functional, sheerly æsthetic changes.
But if we do, this is a patch.
Normalize types before using them in debuginfo.
Small oversight, fixes#33096 - odd thing is that the old code doesn't look like it should've ever worked, although it wasn't using all of the type parameters, so maybe that's what changed.
Use DWARF 5 value for DW_LANG_Rust
DWARF 5 has assigned a value for `DW_LANG_Rust`. See [the relevant DWARF issue](http://www.dwarfstd.org/ShowIssue.php?issue=140129.1). Although DWARF 5 is not yet released, it seems ok to use this value as both GCC and LLVM are already using other `DW_LANG_` constants assigned in this way.