Commit Graph

549 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nikita Popov
0318883cd6 Make -Z new-llvm-pass-manager an Option<bool>
To allow it to have an LLVM version dependent default.
2021-05-08 10:58:08 +02:00
bjorn3
f5d388302b Remove cg_llvm::metadata module 2021-05-07 18:48:58 +02:00
bjorn3
267d55d44a Use the object crate for metadata reading 2021-05-07 18:48:58 +02:00
Dylan DPC
a3fbde4240
Rollup merge of #84991 - alexcrichton:target-feature-remap, r=nagisa
rustc: Support Rust-specific features in -Ctarget-feature

Since the beginning of time the `-Ctarget-feature` flag on the command
line has largely been passed unmodified to LLVM. Afterwards, though, the
`#[target_feature]` attribute was stabilized and some of the names in
this attribute do not match the corresponding LLVM name. This is because
Rust doesn't always want to stabilize the exact feature name in LLVM for
the equivalent functionality in Rust. This creates a situation, however,
where in Rust you'd write:

    #[target_feature(enable = "pclmulqdq")]
    unsafe fn foo() {
        // ...
    }

but on the command line you would write:

    RUSTFLAGS="-Ctarget-feature=+pclmul" cargo build --release

This difference is somewhat odd to deal with if you're a newcomer and
the situation may be made worse with upcoming features like [WebAssembly
SIMD](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74372) which may be more
prevalent.

This commit implements a mapping to translate requests via
`-Ctarget-feature` through the same name-mapping functionality that's
present for attributes in Rust going to LLVM. This means that
`+pclmulqdq` will work on x86 targets where as previously it did not.

I've attempted to keep this backwards-compatible where the compiler will
just opportunistically attempt to remap features found in
`-Ctarget-feature`, but if there's something it doesn't understand it
gets passed unmodified to LLVM just as it was before.
2021-05-07 16:19:22 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
b088318985
Rollup merge of #84875 - richkadel:no-coverage-dont-check-unused, r=tmandry
Removes unneeded check of `#[no_coverage]` in mapgen

There is an anticipated feature request to support a compiler flag that
only adds coverage for specific files (or perhaps mods). As I thought
about where that change would need to be supported, I realized that
checking the attribute in mapgen (for unused functions) was unnecessary.
The unused functions are only synthesized if they have MIR coverage, and
functions with the `no_coverage` attribute will not have been
instrumented with MIR coverage statements in the first place.

New tests confirm this.

Also, while adding tests, I updated resolved comments and FIXMEs in
other tests, and expanded comments and tests on one remaining issue that
is still not resolved.

r? `@tmandry`
cc: `@wesleywiser`
2021-05-07 15:20:25 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
283ef86784
Rollup merge of #84815 - richkadel:coverage-docs-update-2021-05, r=tmandry
Update coverage docs and command line help

r? `@tmandry`
cc: `@wesleywiser`
2021-05-07 15:20:24 +09:00
Rich Kadel
cd3a8c1b7f Removes unneeded check of #[no_coverage] in mapgen
And adds tests to validate it still works.

There is an anticipated feature request to support a compiler flag that
only adds coverage for specific files (or perhaps mods). As I thought
about where that change would need to be supported, I realized that
checking the attribute in mapgen (for unused functions) was unnecessary.
The unused functions are only synthesized if they have MIR coverage, and
functions with the `no_coverage` attribute will not have been
instrumented with MIR coverage statements in the first place.

New tests confirm this.

Also, while adding tests, I updated resolved comments and FIXMEs in
other tests.
2021-05-06 12:44:49 -07:00
Rich Kadel
f58a362d18 Update coverage docs and command line help 2021-05-06 12:20:31 -07:00
Alex Crichton
97658e58f0 rustc: Support Rust-specific features in -Ctarget-feature
Since the beginning of time the `-Ctarget-feature` flag on the command
line has largely been passed unmodified to LLVM. Afterwards, though, the
`#[target_feature]` attribute was stabilized and some of the names in
this attribute do not match the corresponding LLVM name. This is because
Rust doesn't always want to stabilize the exact feature name in LLVM for
the equivalent functionality in Rust. This creates a situation, however,
where in Rust you'd write:

    #[target_feature(enable = "pclmulqdq")]
    unsafe fn foo() {
        // ...
    }

but on the command line you would write:

    RUSTFLAGS="-Ctarget-feature=+pclmul" cargo build --release

This difference is somewhat odd to deal with if you're a newcomer and
the situation may be made worse with upcoming features like [WebAssembly
SIMD](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74372) which may be more
prevalent.

This commit implements a mapping to translate requests via
`-Ctarget-feature` through the same name-mapping functionality that's
present for attributes in Rust going to LLVM. This means that
`+pclmulqdq` will work on x86 targets where as previously it did not.

I've attempted to keep this backwards-compatible where the compiler will
just opportunistically attempt to remap features found in
`-Ctarget-feature`, but if there's something it doesn't understand it
gets passed unmodified to LLVM just as it was before.
2021-05-06 08:52:03 -07:00
Luqman Aden
db555e1284 Implement RFC 2951: Native link modifiers
This commit implements both the native linking modifiers infrastructure
as well as an initial attempt at the individual modifiers from the RFC.
It also introduces a feature flag for the general syntax along with
individual feature flags for each modifier.
2021-05-05 16:04:25 -07:00
Andy Wang
5417b45c26
Use local and remapped paths where appropriate 2021-05-05 15:31:28 +01:00
Andy Wang
fb4f6439f6
Revamp RealFileName public methods 2021-05-05 15:31:03 +01:00
Andy Wang
0407919083
Use RealFileName for Session::working_dir as it may also be remapped 2021-05-05 15:10:57 +01:00
Brent Kerby
6679f5ceb1 Change 'NULL' to 'null' 2021-05-02 17:46:00 -06:00
bjorn3
c47eeac612 Move wasm_import_module_map provider to cg_ssa 2021-05-02 18:00:20 +02:00
bjorn3
808090eb07 Pass target_cpu to LinkerInfo::new instead of link_binary
This is one step towards separating the linking code from codegen backends
2021-05-02 18:00:20 +02:00
Dylan DPC
2553053828
Rollup merge of #84752 - lrh2000:generator-debuginfo, r=tmandry
Fix debuginfo for generators

First, all fields except the discriminant (including `outer_fields`) should be put into structures inside the variant part, which gives an equivalent layout but offers us much better integration with debuggers.

Second, artificial flags in generator variants should be removed.
 - Literally, variants are not artificial. We have `yield` statements, upvars and inner variables in the source code.
 - Functionally, we don't want debuggers to suppress the variants. It contains the state of the generator, which is useful when debugging. So they shouldn't be marked artificial.
 - Debuggers may use artificial flags to find the active variant. In this case, marking variants artificial will make debuggers not work properly.

Fixes #62572.
Fixes #79009.

And refer https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Debuginfo.20for.20generators.
2021-05-02 17:00:23 +02:00
lrh2000
5bf989ece9 Remove artificial flag from generator variants
- Literally, variants are not artificial. We have `yield` statements,
   upvars and inner variables in the source code.
 - Functionally, we don't want debuggers to suppress the variants. It
   contains the state of the generator, which is useful when debugging.
   So they shouldn't be marked artificial.
 - Debuggers may use artificial flags to find the active variant. In
   this case, marking variants artificial will make debuggers not work
   properly.

Fixes #79009.
2021-04-30 22:36:08 +08:00
lrh2000
060deec4b1 Move outer fields of enums into variant parts in debuginfo
All fields except the discriminant (including `outer_fields`)
should be put into structures inside the variant part, which gives
an equivalent layout but offers us much better integration with
debuggers.
2021-04-30 16:30:25 +08:00
bors
bcd696d722 Auto merge of #84401 - crlf0710:impl_main_by_path, r=petrochenkov
Implement RFC 1260 with feature_name `imported_main`.

This is the second extraction part of #84062 plus additional adjustments.
This (mostly) implements RFC 1260.

However there's still one test case failure in the extern crate case. Maybe `LocalDefId` doesn't work here? I'm not sure.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/28937
r? `@petrochenkov`
2021-04-30 06:59:37 +00:00
Charles Lew
d261df4a72 Implement RFC 1260 with feature_name imported_main. 2021-04-29 08:35:08 +08:00
Adam Gemmell
3f5f54cd8b Update list of allowed aarch64 features
These features were recently added to std_detect. Features not supported
by LLVM 9, the current minimum version for Rust, are commented.
2021-04-28 17:54:44 +01:00
Rich Kadel
888d0b4c96 Derived Eq no longer shows uncovered
The Eq trait has a special hidden function. MIR `InstrumentCoverage`
would add this function to the coverage map, but it is never called, so
the `Eq` trait would always appear uncovered.

Fixes: #83601

The fix required creating a new function attribute `no_coverage` to mark
functions that should be ignored by `InstrumentCoverage` and the
coverage `mapgen` (during codegen).

While testing, I also noticed two other issues:

* spanview debug file output ICEd on a function with no body. The
workaround for this is included in this PR.
* `assert_*!()` macro coverage can appear covered if followed by another
`assert_*!()` macro. Normally they appear uncovered. I submitted a new
Issue #84561, and added a coverage test to demonstrate this issue.
2021-04-27 11:11:56 -07:00
Alex Crichton
35ae752231 Disable LLVM's new fptoint intrinsics on riscv64
Looks like this platform still isn't quite working yet due to
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50083
2021-04-23 07:45:23 -07:00
Alex Crichton
de2a4601ab rustc: Use LLVM's new saturating float-to-int intrinsics
This commit updates rustc, with an applicable LLVM version, to use
LLVM's new `llvm.fpto{u,s}i.sat.*.*` intrinsics to implement saturating
floating-point-to-int conversions. This results in a little bit tighter
codegen for x86/x86_64, but the main purpose of this is to prepare for
upcoming changes to the WebAssembly backend in LLVM where wasm's
saturating float-to-int instructions will now be implemented with these
intrinsics.

This change allows simplifying a good deal of surrounding code, namely
removing a lot of wasm-specific behavior. WebAssembly no longer has any
special-casing of saturating arithmetic instructions and the need for
`fptoint_may_trap` is gone and all handling code for that is now
removed. This means that the only wasm-specific logic is in the
`fpto{s,u}i` instructions which only get used for "out of bounds is
undefined behavior". This does mean that for the WebAssembly target
specifically the Rust compiler will no longer be 100% compatible with
pre-LLVM 12 versions, but it seems like that's unlikely to be relied on
by too many folks.

Note that this change does immediately regress the codegen of saturating
float-to-int casts on WebAssembly due to the specialization of the LLVM
intrinsic not being present in our LLVM fork just yet. I'll be following
up with an LLVM update to pull in those patches, but affects a few other
SIMD things in flight for WebAssembly so I wanted to separate this change.

Eventually the entire `cast_float_to_int` function can be removed when
LLVM 12 is the minimum version, but that will require sinking the
complexity of it into other backends such as Cranelfit.
2021-04-21 07:15:53 -07:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
487e27350a Don't set fast(-math) for certain simd ops
`fast-math` implies things like functions not being able to accept as an
argument or return as a result, say, `inf` which made these functions
confusingly named or behaving incorrectly, depending on how you
interpret it. Since the time when these intrinsics have been implemented
the intrinsics user's (stdsimd) approach has changed significantly and
so now it is required that these intrinsics operate normally rather than
in "whatever" way.

Fixes #84268
2021-04-17 23:33:10 +03:00
Jubilee Young
003b8eadd7 Add more SIMD math.h intrinsics
LLVM supports many functions from math.h in its IR. Many of these have
single-instruction variants on various platforms. So, let's add them so
std::arch can use them.

Yes, exact comparison is intentional: rounding must always return a
valid integer-equal value, except for inf/NAN.
2021-04-14 15:25:06 -07:00
bors
dae9d6ac3e Auto merge of #84004 - mattico:print-target-features-improvements, r=petrochenkov
Categorize and explain target features support

There are 3 different uses of the `-C target-feature` args passed to rustc:
1. All of the features are passed to LLVM, which uses them to configure code-generation. This is sort-of stabilized since 1.0 though LLVM does change/add/remove target features regularly.
2. Target features which are in [the compiler's allowlist](69e1d22ddb/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/target_features.rs (L12-L34)) can be used in `cfg!(target_feature)` etc. These may have different names than in LLVM and are renamed before passing them to LLVM.
3. Target features which are in the allowlist and which are stabilized or feature-gate-enabled can be used in `#[target_feature]`.

It can be confusing that `rustc --print target-features` just prints out the LLVM features without separating out the rustc features or even mentioning that the dichotomy exists.

This improves the situation by separating out the rustc and LLVM target features and adding a brief explanation about the difference.

Abbreviated Example Output:
```
$ rustc --print target-features
Features supported by rustc for this target:
    adx                         - Support ADX instructions.
    aes                         - Enable AES instructions.
...
    xsaves                      - Support xsaves instructions.
    crt-static                  - Enables libraries with C Run-time Libraries(CRT) to be statically linked.

Code-generation features supported by LLVM for this target:
    16bit-mode                  - 16-bit mode (i8086).
    32bit-mode                  - 32-bit mode (80386).
...
    x87                         - Enable X87 float instructions.
    xop                         - Enable XOP instructions.

Use +feature to enable a feature, or -feature to disable it.
For example, rustc -C target-cpu=mycpu -C target-feature=+feature1,-feature2

Code-generation features cannot be used in cfg or #[target_feature],
and may be renamed or removed in a future version of LLVM or rustc.

```

Motivated by #83975.
CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/49653
2021-04-09 21:14:50 +00:00
Matt Ickstadt
e258a5ba6e Categorize and explain target features support 2021-04-09 10:16:04 -05:00
Alex Crichton
482a3d06c3 rustc: Add a new wasm ABI
This commit implements the idea of a new ABI for the WebAssembly target,
one called `"wasm"`. This ABI is entirely of my own invention
and has no current precedent, but I think that the addition of this ABI
might help solve a number of issues with the WebAssembly targets.

When `wasm32-unknown-unknown` was first added to Rust I naively
"implemented an abi" for the target. I then went to write `wasm-bindgen`
which accidentally relied on details of this ABI. Turns out the ABI
definition didn't match C, which is causing issues for C/Rust interop.
Currently the compiler has a "wasm32 bindgen compat" ABI which is the
original implementation I added, and it's purely there for, well,
`wasm-bindgen`.

Another issue with the WebAssembly target is that it's not clear to me
when and if the default C ABI will change to account for WebAssembly's
multi-value feature (a feature that allows functions to return multiple
values). Even if this does happen, though, it seems like the C ABI will
be guided based on the performance of WebAssembly code and will likely
not match even what the current wasm-bindgen-compat ABI is today. This
leaves a hole in Rust's expressivity in binding WebAssembly where given
a particular import type, Rust may not be able to import that signature
with an updated C ABI for multi-value.

To fix these issues I had the idea of a new ABI for WebAssembly, one
called `wasm`. The definition of this ABI is "what you write
maps straight to wasm". The goal here is that whatever you write down in
the parameter list or in the return values goes straight into the
function's signature in the WebAssembly file. This special ABI is for
intentionally matching the ABI of an imported function from the
environment or exporting a function with the right signature.

With the addition of a new ABI, this enables rustc to:

* Eventually remove the "wasm-bindgen compat hack". Once this
  ABI is stable wasm-bindgen can switch to using it everywhere.
  Afterwards the wasm32-unknown-unknown target can have its default ABI
  updated to match C.

* Expose the ability to precisely match an ABI signature for a
  WebAssembly function, regardless of what the C ABI that clang chooses
  turns out to be.

* Continue to evolve the definition of the default C ABI to match what
  clang does on all targets, since the purpose of that ABI will be
  explicitly matching C rather than generating particular function
  imports/exports.

Naturally this is implemented as an unstable feature initially, but it
would be nice for this to get stabilized (if it works) in the near-ish
future to remove the wasm32-unknown-unknown incompatibility with the C
ABI. Doing this, however, requires the feature to be on stable because
wasm-bindgen works with stable Rust.
2021-04-08 08:03:18 -07:00
bors
a6e7a5aa5d Auto merge of #81234 - repnop:fn-alignment, r=lcnr
Allow specifying alignment for functions

Fixes #75072

This allows the user to specify alignment for functions, which can be useful for low level work where functions need to necessarily be aligned to a specific value.

I believe the error cases not covered in the match are caught earlier based on my testing so I had them just return `None`.
2021-04-06 04:35:26 +00:00
bors
0c7d4effd7 Auto merge of #83592 - nagisa:nagisa/dso_local, r=davidtwco
Set dso_local for hidden, private and local items

This should probably have no real effect in most cases, as e.g. `hidden`
visibility already implies `dso_local` (or at least LLVM IR does not
preserve the `dso_local` setting if the item is already `hidden`), but
it should fix `-Crelocation-model=static` and improve codegen in
executables.

Note that this PR does not exhaustively port the logic in [clang], only the
portion that is necessary to fix a regression from LLVM 12 that relates to
`-Crelocation_model=static`.

Fixes #83335

[clang]: 3001d080c8/clang/lib/CodeGen/CodeGenModule.cpp (L945-L1039)
2021-04-06 02:09:01 +00:00
Wesley Norris
448d07683a Allow specifying alignment for functions 2021-04-05 17:36:51 -04:00
Dylan DPC
e64dbb1f46
Rollup merge of #82483 - tmiasko:option-from-str, r=matthewjasper
Use FromStr trait for number option parsing

Replace `parse_uint` with generic `parse_number` based on `FromStr`.
Use it for parsing inlining threshold to avoid casting later.
2021-04-05 13:03:37 +02:00
Dylan DPC
f8709ec962
Rollup merge of #83841 - Amanieu:asm_clobber_feature, r=nagisa
Allow clobbering unsupported registers in asm!

Previously registers could only be marked as clobbered if the target feature for that register was enabled. This restriction is now removed.

cc #81092

r? ``@nagisa``
2021-04-05 00:24:34 +02:00
Dylan DPC
0d12422f2d
Rollup merge of #80525 - devsnek:wasm64, r=nagisa
wasm64 support

There is still some upstream llvm work needed before this can land.
2021-04-05 00:24:23 +02:00
Gus Caplan
da66a31572
wasm64 2021-04-04 11:29:34 -05:00
Amanieu d'Antras
ddc53f809b Allow clobbering unsupported registers in asm!
Previously registers could only be marked as clobbered if the target feature for that register was enabled. This restriction is now removed.
2021-04-04 10:42:32 +01:00
bors
836c317426 Auto merge of #83774 - richkadel:zero-based-counters, r=tmandry
Translate counters from Rust 1-based to LLVM 0-based counter ids

A colleague contacted me and asked why Rust's counters start at 1, when
Clangs appear to start at 0. There is a reason why Rust's internal
counters start at 1 (see the docs), and I tried to keep them consistent
when codegenned to LLVM's coverage mapping format. LLVM should be
tolerant of missing counters, but as my colleague pointed out,
`llvm-cov` will silently fail to generate a coverage report for a
function based on LLVM's assumption that the counters are 0-based.

See:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/llvm/lib/ProfileData/Coverage/CoverageMapping.cpp#L170

Apparently, if, for example, a function has no branches, it would have
exactly 1 counter. `CounterValues.size()` would be 1, and (with the
1-based index), the counter ID would be 1. This would fail the check
and abort reporting coverage for the function.

It turns out that by correcting for this during coverage map generation,
by subtracting 1 from the Rust Counter ID (both when generating the
counter increment intrinsic call, and when adding counters to the map),
some uncovered functions (including in tests) now appear covered! This
corrects the coverage for a few tests!

r? `@tmandry`
FYI: `@wesleywiser`
2021-04-03 06:27:03 +00:00
Rich Kadel
7ceff6835a Translate counters from Rust 1-based to LLVM 0-based counter ids
A colleague contacted me and asked why Rust's counters start at 1, when
Clangs appear to start at 0. There is a reason why Rust's internal
counters start at 1 (see the docs), and I tried to keep them consistent
when codegenned to LLVM's coverage mapping format. LLVM should be
tolerant of missing counters, but as my colleague pointed out,
`llvm-cov` will silently fail to generate a coverage report for a
function based on LLVM's assumption that the counters are 0-based.

See:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/llvm/lib/ProfileData/Coverage/CoverageMapping.cpp#L170

Apparently, if, for example, a function has no branches, it would have
exactly 1 counter. `CounterValues.size()` would be 1, and (with the
1-based index), the counter ID would be 1. This would fail the check
and abort reporting coverage for the function.

It turns out that by correcting for this during coverage map generation,
by subtracting 1 from the Rust Counter ID (both when generating the
counter increment intrinsic call, and when adding counters to the map),
some uncovered functions (including in tests) now appear covered! This
corrects the coverage for a few tests!
2021-04-02 17:16:36 -07:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
64af7eae1e Move SanitizerSet to rustc_target 2021-04-03 00:37:49 +03:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
2f000a78bf Manually set dso_local when its valid to do so
This should have no real effect in most cases, as e.g. `hidden`
visibility already implies `dso_local` (or at least LLVM IR does not
preserve the `dso_local` setting if the item is already `hidden`), but
it should fix `-Crelocation-model=static` and improve codegen in
executables.

Note that this PR does not exhaustively port the logic in [clang]. Only
the obviously correct portion and what is necessary to fix a regression
from LLVM 12 that relates to `-Crelocation_model=static`.

Fixes #83335

[clang]: 3001d080c8/clang/lib/CodeGen/CodeGenModule.cpp (L945-L1039)
2021-04-03 00:00:29 +03:00
bors
6ff482bde5 Auto merge of #83666 - Amanieu:instrprof-order, r=tmandry
Run LLVM coverage instrumentation passes before optimization passes

This matches the behavior of Clang and allows us to remove several
hacks which were needed to ensure functions weren't optimized away
before reaching the instrumentation pass.

Fixes #83429

cc `@richkadel`

r? `@tmandry`
2021-03-31 03:20:33 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
cad9b6b695 Apply review feedback 2021-03-30 07:03:41 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
26d260bfa4 Run LLVM coverage instrumentation passes before optimization passes
This matches the behavior of Clang and allows us to remove several
hacks which were needed to ensure functions weren't optimized away
before reaching the instrumentation pass.
2021-03-30 02:10:28 +01:00
Joshua Nelson
de0fda9558 Address review comments
- Add back `HirIdVec`, with a comment that it will soon be used.
- Add back `*_region` functions, with a comment they may soon be used.
- Remove `-Z borrowck_stats` completely. It didn't do anything.
- Remove `make_nop` completely.
- Add back `current_loc`, which is used by an out-of-tree tool.
- Fix style nits
- Remove `AtomicCell` with `cfg(parallel_compiler)` for consistency.
2021-03-27 22:16:34 -04:00
Joshua Nelson
441dc3640a Remove (lots of) dead code
Found with https://github.com/est31/warnalyzer.

Dubious changes:
- Is anyone else using rustc_apfloat? I feel weird completely deleting
  x87 support.
- Maybe some of the dead code in rustc_data_structures, in case someone
  wants to use it in the future?
- Don't change rustc_serialize

  I plan to scrap most of the json module in the near future (see
  https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/418) and fixing the
  tests needed more work than I expected.

TODO: check if any of the comments on the deleted code should be kept.
2021-03-27 22:16:33 -04:00
Josh Stone
72ebebe474 Use iter::zip in compiler/ 2021-03-26 09:32:31 -07:00
bors
e423058751 Auto merge of #82980 - tmiasko:import-cold-multiplier, r=michaelwoerister
Import small cold functions

The Rust code is often written under an assumption that for generic
methods inline attribute is mostly unnecessary, since for optimized
builds using ThinLTO, a method will be code generated in at least one
CGU and available for import.

For example, deref implementations for Box, Vec, MutexGuard, and
MutexGuard are not currently marked as inline, neither is identity
implementation of From trait.

In PGO builds, when functions are determined to be cold, the default
multiplier of zero will stop the import, no matter how trivial the
implementation.

Increase slightly the default multiplier from 0 to 0.1.

r? `@ghost`
2021-03-26 11:57:44 +00:00
bors
6e17a5c5fd Auto merge of #83387 - cuviper:min-llvm-10, r=nagisa
Update the minimum external LLVM to 10

r? `@nikic`
2021-03-25 13:11:18 +00:00
bors
dbc37a97dc Auto merge of #83307 - richkadel:cov-unused-functions-1.1, r=tmandry
coverage bug fixes and optimization support

Adjusted LLVM codegen for code compiled with `-Zinstrument-coverage` to
address multiple, somewhat related issues.

Fixed a significant flaw in prior coverage solution: Every counter
generated a new counter variable, but there should have only been one
counter variable per function. This appears to have bloated .profraw
files significantly. (For a small program, it increased the size by
about 40%. I have not tested large programs, but there is anecdotal
evidence that profraw files were way too large. This is a good fix,
regardless, but hopefully it also addresses related issues.

Fixes: #82144

Invalid LLVM coverage data produced when compiled with -C opt-level=1

Existing tests now work up to at least `opt-level=3`. This required a
detailed analysis of the LLVM IR, comparisons with Clang C++ LLVM IR
when compiled with coverage, and a lot of trial and error with codegen
adjustments.

The biggest hurdle was figuring out how to continue to support coverage
results for unused functions and generics. Rust's coverage results have
three advantages over Clang's coverage results:

1. Rust's coverage map does not include any overlapping code regions,
   making coverage counting unambiguous.
2. Rust generates coverage results (showing zero counts) for all unused
   functions, including generics. (Clang does not generate coverage for
   uninstantiated template functions.)
3. Rust's unused functions produce minimal stubbed functions in LLVM IR,
   sufficient for including in the coverage results; while Clang must
   generate the complete LLVM IR for each unused function, even though
   it will never be called.

This PR removes the previous hack of attempting to inject coverage into
some other existing function instance, and generates dedicated instances
for each unused function. This change, and a few other adjustments
(similar to what is required for `-C link-dead-code`, but with lower
impact), makes it possible to support LLVM optimizations.

Fixes: #79651

Coverage report: "Unexecuted instantiation:..." for a generic function
from multiple crates

Fixed by removing the aforementioned hack. Some "Unexecuted
instantiation" notices are unavoidable, as explained in the
`used_crate.rs` test, but `-Zinstrument-coverage` has new options to
back off support for either unused generics, or all unused functions,
which avoids the notice, at the cost of less coverage of unused
functions.

Fixes: #82875

Invalid LLVM coverage data produced with crate brotli_decompressor

Fixed by disabling the LLVM function attribute that forces inlining, if
`-Z instrument-coverage` is enabled. This attribute is applied to
Rust functions with `#[inline(always)], and in some cases, the forced
inlining breaks coverage instrumentation and reports.

FYI: `@wesleywiser`

r? `@tmandry`
2021-03-25 05:07:34 +00:00
Rich Kadel
0859cec652 Changes from review comments 2021-03-23 17:02:10 -07:00
Rich Kadel
94a3454b03 Change def_id filter to use requires_monomorphization()
Per @wesleywiser's comment: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83307#discussion_r599223342
2021-03-23 00:33:57 -07:00
bors
5d04957a4b Auto merge of #79278 - mark-i-m:stabilize-or-pattern, r=nikomatsakis
Stabilize or_patterns (RFC 2535, 2530, 2175)

closes #54883

This PR stabilizes the or_patterns feature in Rust 1.53.

This is blocked on the following (in order):
- [x] The crater run in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78935#issuecomment-731564021
- [x] The resolution of the unresolved questions and a second crater run (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78935#issuecomment-735412705)
    - It looks like we will need to pursue some sort of edition-based transition for `:pat`.
- [x] Nomination and discussion by T-lang
- [x] Implement new behavior for `:pat` based on consensus (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80100).
- [ ] An FCP on stabilization

EDIT: Stabilization report is in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79278#issuecomment-772815177
2021-03-22 19:48:27 +00:00
Josh Stone
7d872f538e Update the minimum external LLVM to 10 2021-03-22 11:33:43 -07:00
Dylan DPC
85f16fb4bc
Rollup merge of #83329 - camelid:debuginfo-doc-cleanup, r=davidtwco
Cleanup LLVM debuginfo module docs

- Move debuginfo docs from `doc.rs` module to `doc.md` file
- Cleanup LLVM debuginfo module docs
2021-03-22 02:20:31 +01:00
Nikita Popov
39ed64399e Enable mutable noalias by default for LLVM 12
We don't have any known noalias bugs for LLVM 12 ... yet.
2021-03-21 20:10:54 +01:00
Nikita Popov
08c5ffd4a3 Convert -Z mutable-noalias to Optional<bool>
The default value will dependend on the LLVM version in the future,
so don't specify one to start with.
2021-03-21 20:10:53 +01:00
Nikita Popov
dfc4cafe8e Move decision aboute noalias into codegen_llvm
The frontend shouldn't be deciding whether or not to use mutable
noalias attributes, as this is a pure LLVM concern. Only provide
the necessary information and do the actual decision in
codegen_llvm.
2021-03-21 20:10:53 +01:00
Camelid
dc240faed5 Cleanup LLVM debuginfo module docs
* Use Markdown list syntax and unindent a bit to prevent Markdown
  interpreting the nested lists as code blocks
* A few more small typographical cleanups
2021-03-20 14:38:49 -07:00
Camelid
a2e9374048 Move debuginfo docs from doc.rs module to doc.md file
And use `#[doc = include_str!("doc.md")]` in `mod.rs` so the docs are
rendered as if they were inline in the root module.
2021-03-20 14:38:49 -07:00
Rich Kadel
5a484a1aed gave unused_fn WeakAnyLinkage; moved create_pgo_func_name_var
The sample json5format tests produce coverage results again (and work
with opt-level 3!)
2021-03-19 20:46:15 -07:00
mark
db5629adcb stabilize or_patterns 2021-03-19 19:45:32 -05:00
Rich Kadel
bcf755562a coverage bug fixes and optimization support
Adjusted LLVM codegen for code compiled with `-Zinstrument-coverage` to
address multiple, somewhat related issues.

Fixed a significant flaw in prior coverage solution: Every counter
generated a new counter variable, but there should have only been one
counter variable per function. This appears to have bloated .profraw
files significantly. (For a small program, it increased the size by
about 40%. I have not tested large programs, but there is anecdotal
evidence that profraw files were way too large. This is a good fix,
regardless, but hopefully it also addresses related issues.

Fixes: #82144

Invalid LLVM coverage data produced when compiled with -C opt-level=1

Existing tests now work up to at least `opt-level=3`. This required a
detailed analysis of the LLVM IR, comparisons with Clang C++ LLVM IR
when compiled with coverage, and a lot of trial and error with codegen
adjustments.

The biggest hurdle was figuring out how to continue to support coverage
results for unused functions and generics. Rust's coverage results have
three advantages over Clang's coverage results:

1. Rust's coverage map does not include any overlapping code regions,
   making coverage counting unambiguous.
2. Rust generates coverage results (showing zero counts) for all unused
   functions, including generics. (Clang does not generate coverage for
   uninstantiated template functions.)
3. Rust's unused functions produce minimal stubbed functions in LLVM IR,
   sufficient for including in the coverage results; while Clang must
   generate the complete LLVM IR for each unused function, even though
   it will never be called.

This PR removes the previous hack of attempting to inject coverage into
some other existing function instance, and generates dedicated instances
for each unused function. This change, and a few other adjustments
(similar to what is required for `-C link-dead-code`, but with lower
impact), makes it possible to support LLVM optimizations.

Fixes: #79651

Coverage report: "Unexecuted instantiation:..." for a generic function
from multiple crates

Fixed by removing the aforementioned hack. Some "Unexecuted
instantiation" notices are unavoidable, as explained in the
`used_crate.rs` test, but `-Zinstrument-coverage` has new options to
back off support for either unused generics, or all unused functions,
which avoids the notice, at the cost of less coverage of unused
functions.

Fixes: #82875

Invalid LLVM coverage data produced with crate brotli_decompressor

Fixed by disabling the LLVM function attribute that forces inlining, if
`-Z instrument-coverage` is enabled. This attribute is applied to
Rust functions with `#[inline(always)], and in some cases, the forced
inlining breaks coverage instrumentation and reports.
2021-03-19 17:11:50 -07:00
SparrowLii
b93590e5d8 correct macro names 2021-03-19 03:47:13 +08:00
SparrowLii
0fa158b38f Add simd_neg platform intrinsic 2021-03-19 02:16:21 +08:00
Dylan DPC
b688b694d0
Rollup merge of #83080 - tmiasko:inline-coverage, r=wesleywiser
Make source-based code coverage compatible with MIR inlining

When codegenning code coverage use the instance that coverage data was
originally generated for, to ensure basic level of compatibility with
MIR inlining.

Fixes #83061
2021-03-18 00:28:09 +01:00
bors
0c341226ad Auto merge of #83084 - nagisa:nagisa/features-native, r=petrochenkov
Adjust `-Ctarget-cpu=native` handling in cg_llvm

When cg_llvm encounters the `-Ctarget-cpu=native` it computes an
explciit set of features that applies to the target in order to
correctly compile code for the host CPU (because e.g. `skylake` alone is
not sufficient to tell if some of the instructions are available or
not).

However there were a couple of issues with how we did this. Firstly, the
order in which features were overriden wasn't quite right – conceptually
you'd expect `-Ctarget-cpu=native` option to override the features that
are implicitly set by the target definition. However due to how other
`-Ctarget-cpu` values are handled we must adopt the following order
of priority:

* Features from -Ctarget-cpu=*; are overriden by
* Features implied by --target; are overriden by
* Features from -Ctarget-feature; are overriden by
* function specific features.

Another problem was in that the function level `target-features`
attribute would overwrite the entire set of the globally enabled
features, rather than just the features the
`#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` specified. With something like
`-Ctarget-cpu=native` we'd end up in a situation wherein a function
without `#[target_feature(enable)]` annotation would have a broader
set of features compared to a function with one such attribute. This
turned out to be a cause of heavy run-time regressions in some code
using these function-level attributes in conjunction with
`-Ctarget-cpu=native`, for example.

With this PR rustc is more careful about specifying the entire set of
features for functions that use `#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` or
`#[instruction_set]` attributes.

Sadly testing the original reproducer for this behaviour is quite
impossible – we cannot rely on `-Ctarget-cpu=native` to be anything in
particular on developer or CI machines.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83027 `@BurntSushi`
2021-03-17 05:46:08 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
72fb4379d5 Adjust -Ctarget-cpu=native handling in cg_llvm
When cg_llvm encounters the `-Ctarget-cpu=native` it computes an
explciit set of features that applies to the target in order to
correctly compile code for the host CPU (because e.g. `skylake` alone is
not sufficient to tell if some of the instructions are available or
not).

However there were a couple of issues with how we did this. Firstly, the
order in which features were overriden wasn't quite right – conceptually
you'd expect `-Ctarget-cpu=native` option to override the features that
are implicitly set by the target definition. However due to how other
`-Ctarget-cpu` values are handled we must adopt the following order
of priority:

* Features from -Ctarget-cpu=*; are overriden by
* Features implied by --target; are overriden by
* Features from -Ctarget-feature; are overriden by
* function specific features.

Another problem was in that the function level `target-features`
attribute would overwrite the entire set of the globally enabled
features, rather than just the features the
`#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` specified. With something like
`-Ctarget-cpu=native` we'd end up in a situation wherein a function
without `#[target_feature(enable)]` annotation would have a broader
set of features compared to a function with one such attribute. This
turned out to be a cause of heavy run-time regressions in some code
using these function-level attributes in conjunction with
`-Ctarget-cpu=native`, for example.

With this PR rustc is more careful about specifying the entire set of
features for functions that use `#[target_feature(enable/disable)]` or
`#[instruction_set]` attributes.

Sadly testing the original reproducer for this behaviour is quite
impossible – we cannot rely on `-Ctarget-cpu=native` to be anything in
particular on developer or CI machines.
2021-03-16 21:32:55 +02:00
bors
f24ce9b014 Auto merge of #82838 - Amanieu:rustdoc_asm, r=nagisa
Allow rustdoc to handle asm! of foreign architectures

This allows rustdoc to process code containing `asm!` for architectures other than the current one. Since this never reaches codegen, we just replace target-specific registers and register classes with a dummy one.

Fixes #82869
2021-03-16 10:05:46 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
5a9538acb5 Functions inlined into reachable functions are reachable
Consider functions to be reachable for code coverage purposes, either
when they reach the code generation directly, or indirectly as inlined
part of another function.
2021-03-15 23:26:03 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
1796cc0e6c Make source-based code coverage compatible with MIR inlining
When codegenning code coverage use the instance that coverage data was
originally generated for, to ensure basic level of compatibility with
MIR inlining.
2021-03-15 23:26:03 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
fa3694fada Always lower asm! to valid HIR 2021-03-13 20:49:32 +00:00
Hiroki Noda
8357e57346 Add support for storing code model to LLVM module IR
This patch avoids undefined behavior by linking different object files.
Also this would it could be propagated properly to LTO.

See https://reviews.llvm.org/D52322 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D52323.

This patch is based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74002
2021-03-12 11:02:25 +09:00
Tomasz Miąsko
1aee8083be Import small cold functions
The Rust code is often written under an assumption that for generic
methods inline attribute is mostly unnecessary, since for optimized
builds using ThinLTO, a method will be generated in at least one CGU and
available for import.

For example, deref implementations for Box, Vec, MutexGuard, and
MutexGuard are not currently marked as inline, neither is identity
implementation of From trait.

In PGO builds, when functions are determined to be cold, the default
multiplier of zero will stop the import, even for completely trivial
functions.

Increase slightly the default multiplier from 0 to 0.1 to import them
regardless.
2021-03-11 00:00:00 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
0517acd543 Remove the -Zinsert-sideeffect
This removes all of the code we had in place to work-around LLVM's
handling of forward progress. From this removal excluded is a workaround
where we'd insert a `sideeffect` into clearly infinite loops such as
`loop {}`. This code remains conditionally effective when the LLVM
version is earlier than 12.0, which fixed the forward progress related
miscompilations at their root.
2021-03-10 12:21:43 +02:00
Tomasz Miąsko
1ec905766d Use FromStr trait for number option parsing
Replace `parse_uint` with generic `parse_number` based on `FromStr`.
Use it for parsing inlining threshold to avoid casting later.
2021-03-09 14:49:04 +01:00
bors
234781afe3 Auto merge of #82285 - nhwn:nonzero-debug, r=nagisa
Use u32 over Option<u32> in DebugLoc

~~Changes `Option<u32>` fields in `DebugLoc` to `Option<NonZeroU32>`. Since the respective fields (`line` and `col`) are guaranteed to be 1-based, this layout optimization is a freebie.~~

EDIT: Changes `Option<u32>` fields in `DebugLoc` to `u32`. As `@bugadani` pointed out, an `Option<NonZeroU32>` is probably an unnecessary layer of abstraction since the `None` variant is always used as `UNKNOWN_LINE_NUMBER` (which is just `0`).  Also, `SourceInfo` in `metadata.rs` already uses a `u32` instead of an `Option<u32>` to encode the same information, so I think this change is warranted.

Since `@jyn514` raised some concerns over measuring performance in a similar PR (#82255), does this need a perf run?
2021-03-07 20:23:23 +00:00
bors
409920873c Auto merge of #81451 - nikic:llvm-12, r=nagisa
Upgrade to LLVM 12

This implements the necessary adjustments to make rustc work with LLVM 12. I didn't encounter any major issues so far.

r? `@cuviper`
2021-03-04 15:16:44 +00:00
Nikita Popov
bc96516a28 Mark pure asm as willreturn 2021-03-01 23:35:35 +01:00
Nikita Popov
1d280b012d Don't directly expose coverage::CounterMappingRegion via FFI
The definition of this struct changes in LLVM 12 due to the addition
of branch coverage support. To avoid future mismatches, declare our
own struct and then convert between them.
2021-03-01 23:35:35 +01:00
Dániel Buga
b97eb23cd0 Box generator-related Body fields 2021-03-01 08:32:49 +01:00
Nikita Popov
55f345f325 Support LLVM 12 in rustc 2021-02-28 10:19:44 +01:00
Dylan DPC
6d288c65df
Rollup merge of #82537 - wesleywiser:update_measureme, r=oli-obk
Update measureme dependency to the latest version

This version adds the ability to use `rdpmc` hardware-based performance
counters instead of wall-clock time for measuring duration. This also
introduces a dependency on the `perf-event-open-sys` crate on Linux
which is used when using hardware counters.

r? ```@oli-obk```
2021-02-27 21:56:20 +01:00
Dylan DPC
cabe97272d
Rollup merge of #82057 - upsuper-forks:cstr, r=davidtwco,wesleywiser
Replace const_cstr with cstr crate

This PR replaces the `const_cstr` macro inside `rustc_data_structures` with `cstr` macro from [cstr](https://crates.io/crates/cstr) crate.

The two macros basically serve the same purpose, which is to generate `&'static CStr` from a string literal. `cstr` is better because it validates the literal at compile time, while the existing `const_cstr` does it at runtime when `debug_assertions` is enabled. In addition, the value `cstr` generates can be used in constant context (which is seemingly not needed anywhere currently, though).
2021-02-27 02:34:21 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
039b1b62ac
Rollup merge of #82456 - klensy:or-else, r=estebank
Replaced some unwrap_or and map_or with lazy variants

Replaced some `unwrap_or` and `map_or` with `unwrap_or_else` and `map_or_else`.
2021-02-26 15:52:31 +01:00
Wesley Wiser
e130e9cf77 Update measureme dependency to the latest version
This version adds the ability to use `rdpmc` hardware-based performance
counters instead of wall-clock time for measuring duration. This also
introduces a dependency on the `perf-event-open-sys` crate on Linux
which is used when using hardware counters.
2021-02-25 18:25:38 -05:00
Dylan DPC
00aa3e6880
Rollup merge of #82214 - est31:no_to_string, r=oli-obk
Remove redundant to_string calls
2021-02-25 14:33:59 +01:00
Dylan DPC
199095afc6
Rollup merge of #82213 - est31:slices_for_vecs, r=jyn514
Slices for vecs
2021-02-25 14:33:58 +01:00
klensy
08b1e8004b fix review 2021-02-25 04:21:12 +03:00
klensy
c75c4a579b replaced some map_or with map_or_else 2021-02-24 02:43:35 +03:00
bors
446d4533e8 Auto merge of #82102 - nagisa:nagisa/fix-dwo-name, r=davidtwco
Set path of the compile unit to the source directory

As part of the effort to implement split dwarf debug info, we ended up
setting the compile unit location to the output directory rather than
the source directory. Furthermore, it seems like we failed to remap the
prefixes for this as well!

The desired behaviour is to instead set the `DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name` to a
path relative to compiler's working directory. This still allows
debuggers to find the split dwarf files, while not changing the
behaviour of the code that is compiling with regular debug info, and not
changing the compiler's behaviour with regards to reproducibility.

Fixes #82074

cc `@alexcrichton` `@davidtwco`
2021-02-23 10:02:16 +00:00
Nathan Nguyen
408d4027d0 nhwn: use plain u32 in DebugLoc 2021-02-20 11:46:58 -06:00
Nathan Nguyen
f5aa1bceb9 nhwn: use Option<NonZeroU32> in DebugLoc 2021-02-20 11:46:50 -06:00
Guillaume Gomez
7292d5ff60
Rollup merge of #82105 - nagisa:nagisa/ensure-removed, r=petrochenkov
Don't fail to remove files if they are missing

In the backend we may want to remove certain temporary files, but in
certain other situations these files might not be produced in the first
place. We don't exactly care about that, and the intent is really that
these files are gone after a certain point in the backend.

Here we unify the backend file removing calls to use `ensure_removed`
which will attempt to delete a file, but will not fail if it does not
exist (anymore).

The tradeoff to this approach is, of course, that we may miss instances
were we are attempting to remove files at wrong paths due to some bug –
compilation would silently succeed but the temporary files would remain
there somewhere.
2021-02-17 20:37:57 +01:00
est31
003670748f Remove redundant to_string calls 2021-02-17 11:25:55 +01:00
est31
c5b9264929 Replace vec![] calls with slice literals
There is no need to create vec's here
2021-02-17 10:37:47 +01:00
Johnathan Van Why
fd21eb18e9 32-bit ARM: Emit lr instead of r14 when specified as an asm! output register.
On 32-bit ARM platforms, the register `r14` has the alias `lr`. When used as an output register in `asm!`, rustc canonicalizes the name to `r14`. LLVM only knows the register by the name `lr`, and rejects it. This changes rustc's LLVM code generation to output `lr` instead.
2021-02-14 23:41:10 -08:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
fa3621b468 Don't fail to remove files if they are missing
In the backend we may want to remove certain temporary files, but in
certain other situations these files might not be produced in the first
place. We don't exactly care about that, and the intent is really that
these files are gone after a certain point in the backend.

Here we unify the backend file removing calls to use `ensure_removed`
which will attempt to delete a file, but will not fail if it does not
exist (anymore).

The tradeoff to this approach is, of course, that we may miss instances
were we are attempting to remove files at wrong paths due to some bug –
compilation would silently succeed but the temporary files would remain
there somewhere.
2021-02-14 18:31:57 +02:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
16c71886c9 Set path of the compile unit to the source directory
As part of the effort to implement split dwarf debug info, we ended up
setting the compile unit location to the output directory rather than
the source directory. Furthermore, it seems like we failed to remap the
prefixes for this as well!

The desired behaviour is to instead set the `DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name` to a
path relative to compiler's working directory. This still allows
debuggers to find the split dwarf files, while not changing the
behaviour of the code that is compiling with regular debug info, and not
changing the compiler's behaviour with regards to reproducibility.

Fixes #82074
2021-02-14 17:12:14 +02:00
klensy
93c8ebe022 bumped smallvec deps 2021-02-14 18:03:11 +03:00
Xidorn Quan
38e4233a32 Replace const_cstr with cstr crate 2021-02-14 09:45:35 +11:00
Tri Vo
c7d9bffe76 HWASan support 2021-02-07 23:48:58 -08:00
bors
bb587b1a17 Auto merge of #80652 - calebzulawski:simd-lanes, r=nagisa
Improve SIMD type element count validation

Resolves rust-lang/stdsimd#53.

These changes are motivated by `stdsimd` moving in the direction of const generic vectors, e.g.:
```rust
#[repr(simd)]
struct SimdF32<const N: usize>([f32; N]);
```

This makes a few changes:
* Establishes a maximum SIMD lane count of 2^16 (65536).  This value is arbitrary, but attempts to validate lane count before hitting potential errors in the backend.  It's not clear what LLVM's maximum lane count is, but cranelift's appears to be much less than `usize::MAX`, at least.
* Expands some SIMD intrinsics to support arbitrary lane counts.  This resolves the ICE in the linked issue.
* Attempts to catch invalid-sized vectors during typeck when possible.

Unresolved questions:
* Generic-length vectors can't be validated in typeck and are only validated after monomorphization while computing layout.  This "works", but the errors simply bail out with no context beyond the name of the type.  Should these errors instead return `LayoutError` or otherwise provide context in some way?  As it stands, users of `stdsimd` could trivially produce monomorphization errors by making zero-length vectors.

cc `@bjorn3`
2021-02-07 22:25:14 +00:00
Mara Bos
add80c9d4b
Rollup merge of #81664 - bjorn3:no_codegen_hir, r=lcnr
Avoid a hir access inside get_static

Together with #81056 this ensures that the codegen unit DepNode doesn't have a direct dependency on any part of the hir.
2021-02-06 00:14:13 +01:00
bjorn3
da536554a0 Use is_local instead of as_local 2021-02-04 11:17:01 +01:00
bors
b593389edb Auto merge of #81346 - hug-dev:nonsecure-call-abi, r=jonas-schievink
Add a new ABI to support cmse_nonsecure_call

This adds support for the `cmse_nonsecure_call` feature to be able to perform non-secure function call.

See the discussion on Zulip [here](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Support.20for.20callsite.20attributes/near/223054928).

This is a followup to #75810 which added `cmse_nonsecure_entry`. As for that PR, I assume that the changes are small enough to not have to go through a RFC but I don't mind doing one if needed 😃
I did not yet create a tracking issue, but if most of it is fine, I can create one and update the various files accordingly (they refer to the other tracking issue now).

On the Zulip chat, I believe `@jonas-schievink` volunteered to be a reviewer 💯
2021-02-03 06:00:43 +00:00
Jack Huey
399c0a8e52
Rollup merge of #81455 - Amanieu:aarch64_ilp32, r=sanxiyn
Add AArch64 big-endian and ILP32 targets

This PR adds 3 new AArch64 targets:
- `aarch64_be-unknown-linux-gnu`
- `aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32`
- `aarch64_be-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32`

It also fixes some ABI issues on big-endian ARM and AArch64.
2021-02-02 16:01:35 -05:00
bjorn3
fbe109a2fc Avoid a hir access inside get_static 2021-02-02 16:36:54 +01:00
Hugues de Valon
ce9818f2b7 Add a new ABI to support cmse_nonsecure_call
This commit adds a new ABI to be selected via `extern
"C-cmse-nonsecure-call"` on function pointers in order for the compiler to
apply the corresponding cmse_nonsecure_call callsite attribute.
For Armv8-M targets supporting TrustZone-M, this will perform a
non-secure function call by saving, clearing and calling a non-secure
function pointer using the BLXNS instruction.

See the page on the unstable book for details.

Signed-off-by: Hugues de Valon <hugues.devalon@arm.com>
2021-02-02 13:04:31 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
d9e56f48c5
Rollup merge of #79570 - alexcrichton:split-debuginfo, r=bjorn3
rustc: Stabilize `-Zrun-dsymutil` as `-Csplit-debuginfo`

This commit adds a new stable codegen option to rustc,
`-Csplit-debuginfo`. The old `-Zrun-dsymutil` flag is deleted and now
subsumed by this stable flag. Additionally `-Zsplit-dwarf` is also
subsumed by this flag but still requires `-Zunstable-options` to
actually activate. The `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag takes one of
three values:

* `off` - This indicates that split-debuginfo from the final artifact is
  not desired. This is not supported on Windows and is the default on
  Unix platforms except macOS. On macOS this means that `dsymutil` is
  not executed.

* `packed` - This means that debuginfo is desired in one location
  separate from the main executable. This is the default on Windows
  (`*.pdb`) and macOS (`*.dSYM`). On other Unix platforms this subsumes
  `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` and produces a `*.dwp` file.

* `unpacked` - This means that debuginfo will be roughly equivalent to
  object files, meaning that it's throughout the build directory
  rather than in one location (often the fastest for local development).
  This is not the default on any platform and is not supported on Windows.

Each target can indicate its own default preference for how debuginfo is
handled. Almost all platforms default to `off` except for Windows and
macOS which default to `packed` for historical reasons.

Some equivalencies for previous unstable flags with the new flags are:

* `-Zrun-dsymutil=yes` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zrun-dsymutil=no` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=split` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`

Note that `-Csplit-debuginfo` still requires `-Zunstable-options` for
non-macOS platforms since split-dwarf support was *just* implemented in
rustc.

There's some more rationale listed on #79361, but the main gist of the
motivation for this commit is that `dsymutil` can take quite a long time
to execute in debug builds and provides little benefit. This means that
incremental compile times appear that much worse on macOS because the
compiler is constantly running `dsymutil` over every single binary it
produces during `cargo build` (even build scripts!). Ideally rustc would
switch to not running `dsymutil` by default, but that's a problem left
to get tackled another day.

Closes #79361
2021-01-29 09:17:20 +09:00
Alex Crichton
a124043fb0 rustc: Stabilize -Zrun-dsymutil as -Csplit-debuginfo
This commit adds a new stable codegen option to rustc,
`-Csplit-debuginfo`. The old `-Zrun-dsymutil` flag is deleted and now
subsumed by this stable flag. Additionally `-Zsplit-dwarf` is also
subsumed by this flag but still requires `-Zunstable-options` to
actually activate. The `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag takes one of
three values:

* `off` - This indicates that split-debuginfo from the final artifact is
  not desired. This is not supported on Windows and is the default on
  Unix platforms except macOS. On macOS this means that `dsymutil` is
  not executed.

* `packed` - This means that debuginfo is desired in one location
  separate from the main executable. This is the default on Windows
  (`*.pdb`) and macOS (`*.dSYM`). On other Unix platforms this subsumes
  `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` and produces a `*.dwp` file.

* `unpacked` - This means that debuginfo will be roughly equivalent to
  object files, meaning that it's throughout the build directory
  rather than in one location (often the fastest for local development).
  This is not the default on any platform and is not supported on Windows.

Each target can indicate its own default preference for how debuginfo is
handled. Almost all platforms default to `off` except for Windows and
macOS which default to `packed` for historical reasons.

Some equivalencies for previous unstable flags with the new flags are:

* `-Zrun-dsymutil=yes` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zrun-dsymutil=no` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=split` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`

Note that `-Csplit-debuginfo` still requires `-Zunstable-options` for
non-macOS platforms since split-dwarf support was *just* implemented in
rustc.

There's some more rationale listed on #79361, but the main gist of the
motivation for this commit is that `dsymutil` can take quite a long time
to execute in debug builds and provides little benefit. This means that
incremental compile times appear that much worse on macOS because the
compiler is constantly running `dsymutil` over every single binary it
produces during `cargo build` (even build scripts!). Ideally rustc would
switch to not running `dsymutil` by default, but that's a problem left
to get tackled another day.

Closes #79361
2021-01-28 08:51:11 -08:00
Yuki Okushi
446edd1e1a
Rollup merge of #79951 - LeSeulArtichaut:ty-ir, r=nikomatsakis
Refractor a few more types to `rustc_type_ir`

In the continuation of #79169, ~~blocked on that PR~~.

This PR:
 - moves `IntVarValue`, `FloatVarValue`, `InferTy` (and friends) and `Variance`
 - creates the `IntTy`, `UintTy` and `FloatTy` enums in `rustc_type_ir`, based on their `ast` and `chalk_ir` equilavents, and uses them for types in the rest of the compiler.

~~I will split up that commit to make this easier to review and to have a better commit history.~~
EDIT: done, I split the PR in commits of 200-ish lines each

r? `````@nikomatsakis````` cc `````@jackh726`````
2021-01-28 15:09:02 +09:00
Amanieu d'Antras
8afe59893a Add big-endian support for AArch64 va_arg 2021-01-27 22:47:56 +00:00
bors
72c7b70267 Auto merge of #80838 - nagisa:nagisa/stack-probe-type, r=cuviper
Target stack-probe support configurable finely

This adds capability to configure the target's stack probe support in a
more precise manner than just on/off. In particular now we allow
choosing between always inline-asm, always call or either one of those
depending on the LLVM version.

Note that this removes the ability to turn off the generation of the
stack-probe attribute. This is valid to replace it with inline-asm for all targets because
`probe-stack="inline-asm"` will not generate any machine code on targets
that do not currently support stack probes. This makes support for stack
probes on targets that don't have any right now automatic with LLVM
upgrades in the future.

(This is valid to do based on the fact that clang unconditionally sets
this attribute when `-fstack-clash-protection` is used, AFAICT)

cc #77885
r? `@cuviper`
2021-01-24 09:44:42 +00:00
Caleb Zulawski
4d72ed61ee Make declare_cfn more flexible 2021-01-23 17:19:49 -05:00
LeSeulArtichaut
50e1ae15e9 Use ty::{IntTy,UintTy,FloatTy} in rustc 2021-01-18 21:09:30 +01:00
Mara Bos
7e2425ab73
Rollup merge of #81095 - LingMan:unwrap, r=oli-obk
Use Option::unwrap_or instead of open-coding it

r? ```@oli-obk``` Noticed this while we were talking about the other PR just now 😆
```@rustbot``` modify labels +C-cleanup +T-compiler
2021-01-17 12:24:59 +00:00
LingMan
5a706cfc49 Use Option::unwrap_or instead of open-coding it 2021-01-16 20:13:06 +01:00
LingMan
76003f31f1 Use Option::map instead of open-coding it 2021-01-16 20:05:02 +01:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
007080b607 Target stack-probe support configurable finely
This adds capability to configure the target's stack probe support in a
more precise manner than just on/off. In particular now we allow
choosing between always inline-asm, always call or either one of those
depending on the LLVM version on a per-target basis.
2021-01-16 12:38:02 +02:00
bors
635ccfe01c Auto merge of #77885 - erikdesjardins:probeasm, r=cuviper
Use probe-stack=inline-asm in LLVM 11+

Fixes (?) #74405, related to #43241

r? `@cuviper`
2021-01-16 03:10:52 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
ce06df2e4a
Rollup merge of #81008 - tmiasko:generator-layout-err, r=tmandry
Don't ICE when computing a layout of a generator tainted by errors

Fixes #80998.
2021-01-15 18:26:16 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
a584d87417
Rollup merge of #80944 - LingMan:map_or, r=nagisa
Use Option::map_or instead of `.map(..).unwrap_or(..)`

``@rustbot`` modify labels +C-cleanup +T-compiler
2021-01-15 18:26:14 +09:00
Erik Desjardins
cd25807223 Use probe-stack=inline-asm in LLVM 11+ 2021-01-14 22:49:16 -05:00
LingMan
a56bffb4f9 Use Option::map_or instead of .map(..).unwrap_or(..) 2021-01-14 19:23:59 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
5ea1d0e865 Don't ICE when computing a layout of a generator tainted by errors 2021-01-14 13:13:13 +01:00
Josh Stone
0342fd16ff Remove the unused context from CreateDebugLocation
This went unused in commit 88d874de63, part of #68965.
2021-01-13 11:55:49 -08:00
bors
fc9944fe84 Auto merge of #80499 - matthiaskrgr:red_clos, r=estebank
remove redundant closures (clippy::redundant_closure)
2021-01-12 11:20:47 +00:00
bors
c87ef0a2fc Auto merge of #80749 - as-com:target-cpu-actually-native, r=nagisa
Make target-cpu=native detect individual features

This PR makes target-cpu=native check for and enable/disable individual features instead of detecting and targeting a CPU by name. This brings the flag's behavior more in line with clang and gcc and ensures that the host actually supports each feature that we are compiling for.

This should resolve issues with miscompilations on e.g. "Haswell" Pentiums and Celerons that lack support for AVX, and also enable support for `aes` on Broadwell processors that support it. It should also resolve issues with failing to detect feature support in newer CPUs that aren't yet known by LLVM (see: #80633).

Fixes #54688
Fixes #48464
Fixes #38218
2021-01-09 04:36:24 +00:00
Andrew Sun
80ca198212 Check if the pointer is null/string is not utf8 2021-01-08 11:50:21 -05:00
Andrew Sun
bc4c5bac40 Use LLVMGetHostCPUFeatures instead of stdsimd 2021-01-07 23:25:19 -05:00
Lzu Tao
fa4d8bc878 Prefer enum Endian in rustc_target::Target 2021-01-06 13:34:19 +00:00
Andrew Sun
bf80159050 Make target-cpu=native detect individual features 2021-01-06 03:23:54 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
e2272cdffc remove redundant closures (clippy::redundant_closure) 2021-01-03 13:34:24 +01:00
Caleb Zulawski
07db2bfe39 Implement floating point SIMD intrinsics over all vector widths, and limit SIMD vector lengths. 2021-01-03 01:06:54 -05:00
Dylan DPC
55cfcd596f
Rollup merge of #80323 - camelid:codegen-base-docs, r=nagisa
Update and improve `rustc_codegen_{llvm,ssa}` docs

Fixes #75342.

These docs were very out of date and misleading. They even said that
they codegen'd the *AST*!

For some reason, the `rustc_codegen_ssa::base` docs were exactly
identical to the `rustc_codegen_llvm::base` docs. They didn't really
make sense, because they had LLVM-specific information even though
`rustc_codegen_ssa` is supposed to be somewhat generic. So I removed
them as they were misleading.

r? ``@pnkfelix`` maybe?
2020-12-31 22:20:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e5ead5fc58 remove unused return types such as empty Results or Options that would always be Some(..)
remove unused return type of dropck::check_drop_obligations()
don't wrap return type in Option in get_macro_by_def_id() since we would always return Some(..)
remove redundant return type of back::write::optimize()
don't Option-wrap return type of compute_type_parameters() since we always return Some(..)
don't return empty Result in assemble_generator_candidates()
don't return empty Result in assemble_closure_candidates()
don't return empty result in assemble_fn_pointer_candidates()
don't return empty result in assemble_candidates_from_impls()
don't return empty result in assemble_candidates_from_auto_impls()
don't return emtpy result in assemble_candidates_for_trait_alias()
don't return empty result in assemble_builtin_bound_candidates()
don't return empty results in assemble_extension_candidates_for_traits_in_scope() and assemble_extension_candidates_for_trait()
remove redundant wrapping of return type of StripItem::strip() since it always returns Some(..)
remove unused return type of assemble_extension_candidates_for_all_traits()
2020-12-30 13:15:40 +01:00
Dylan DPC
98d80bda01
Rollup merge of #79662 - bjorn3:move_more_code_out_of_codegen_backend, r=oli-obk
Move some more code out of CodegenBackend::{codegen_crate,link}

Kind of a follow up to #77795
2020-12-28 14:12:59 +01:00
Camelid
5b32ab671a Update and improve rustc_codegen_{llvm,ssa} docs
These docs were very out of date and misleading. They even said that
they codegen'd the *AST*!

For some reason, the `rustc_codegen_ssa::base` docs were exactly
identical to the `rustc_codegen_llvm::base` docs. They didn't really
make sense, because they had LLVM-specific information even though
`rustc_codegen_ssa` is supposed to be somewhat generic. So I removed
them as they were misleading.
2020-12-22 19:42:23 -08:00
David Wood
88dc58fc9b
Revert "cg_llvm: fewer_names in uncached_llvm_type"
This reverts commit fa01ce802f.
2020-12-17 16:40:47 +00:00
bjorn3
2c0dccb7f2 Move some code out of CodegenBackend::{codegen_crate,link} 2020-12-17 10:02:06 +01:00
David Wood
ee073b5ec5
cg_llvm: split dwarf filename and comp dir
llvm-dwp concatenates `DW_AT_comp_dir` with `DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name` (only
when `DW_AT_comp_dir` exists), which can result in it failing to find
the DWARF object files.

In earlier testing, `DW_AT_comp_dir` wasn't present in the final
object and the current directory was the output directory.

When running tests through compiletest, the working directory of the
compilation is different from output directory and that resulted in
`DW_AT_comp_dir` being in the object file (and set to the current
working directory, rather than the output directory), and
`DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name` being set to the full path (rather than just
the filename), so llvm-dwp was failing.

This commit changes the compilation directory provided to LLVM to match
the output directory, where DWARF objects are output; and ensures that
only the filename is used for `DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name`.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2020-12-16 10:33:52 +00:00
David Wood
e3fdae9d81
cg_llvm: implement split dwarf support
This commit implements Split DWARF support, wiring up the flag (added in
earlier commits) to the modified FFI wrapper (also from earlier
commits).

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2020-12-16 10:33:47 +00:00
David Wood
6890312ea3
cg_ssa: introduce TargetMachineFactoryFn alias
This commit removes the `TargetMachineFactory` struct and adds a
`TargetMachineFactoryFn` type alias which is used everywhere that the
previous, long type was used.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2020-12-16 10:33:43 +00:00
David Wood
341aa97adb
llvm: update ffi bindings for split dwarf
This commit modifies the FFI bindings to LLVM required for Split DWARF
support in rustc. In particular:

- `addPassesToEmitFile`'s wrapper, `LLVMRustWriteOutputFile` now takes
  a `DwoPath` `const char*`. When disabled, `nullptr` should be provided
  which will preserve existing behaviour. When enabled, the path to the
  `.dwo` file should be provided.
- `createCompileUnit`'s wrapper, `LLVMRustDIBuilderCreateCompileUnit`
  now has two additional arguments, for the `DWOId` and to enable
  `SplitDebugInlining`. `DWOId` should always be zero.
- `createTargetMachine`'s wrapper, `LLVMRustCreateTargetMachine` has an
  additional argument which should be provided the path to the `.dwo`
  when enabled.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2020-12-16 10:31:42 +00:00
bors
e99a89c7c0 Auto merge of #73210 - wesleywiser:consts_in_debuginfo, r=oli-obk
[mir-opt] Allow debuginfo to be generated for a constant or a Place

Prior to this commit, debuginfo was always generated by mapping a name
to a Place. This has the side-effect that `SimplifyLocals` cannot remove
locals that are only used for debuginfo because their other uses have
been const-propagated.

To allow these locals to be removed, we now allow debuginfo to point to
a constant value. The `ConstProp` pass detects when debuginfo points to
a local with a known constant value and replaces it with the value. This
allows the later `SimplifyLocals` pass to remove the local.
2020-12-15 08:46:00 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
5c8de1cf49 use strip_prefix over slicing (clippy::manual_strip) 2020-12-11 23:02:17 +01:00
Rich Kadel
95c268f64d Fixes to Rust coverage
Fixes: #79725

Some macros can create a situation where `fn_sig_span` and `body_span`
map to different files.

New documentation on coverage tests incorrectly assumed multiple test
binaries could just be listed at the end of the `llvm-cov` command,
but it turns out each binary needs a `--object` prefix.

This PR fixes the bug and updates the documentation to correct that
issue. It also fixes a few other minor issues in internal implementation
comments, and adds documentation on getting coverage results for doc
tests.
2020-12-07 17:56:19 -08:00
Wesley Wiser
01aec8d185 [mir-opt] Allow debuginfo to be generated for a constant or a Place
Prior to this commit, debuginfo was always generated by mapping a name
to a Place. This has the side-effect that `SimplifyLocals` cannot remove
locals that are only used for debuginfo because their other uses have
been const-propagated.

To allow these locals to be removed, we now allow debuginfo to point to
a constant value. The `ConstProp` pass detects when debuginfo points to
a local with a known constant value and replaces it with the value. This
allows the later `SimplifyLocals` pass to remove the local.
2020-12-06 20:48:25 -05:00
Rich Kadel
d96f351fa3 Addressed feedback from 2020-12-01
Added one more test (two files) showing coverage of generics and unused
functions across crates.

Created and referenced new Issues, as requested.

Added comments.

Added a note about the possible effects of compiler options on LLVM
coverage maps.
2020-12-03 09:50:10 -08:00
Rich Kadel
def932ca86 Combination of commits
Fixes multiple issue with counters, with simplification

  Includes a change to the implicit else span in ast_lowering, so coverage
  of the implicit else no longer spans the `then` block.

  Adds coverage for unused closures and async function bodies.

  Fixes: #78542

Adding unreachable regions for known MIR missing from coverage map

Cleaned up PR commits, and removed link-dead-code requirement and tests

  Coverage no longer depends on Issue #76038 (`-C link-dead-code` is
  no longer needed or enforced, so MSVC can use the same tests as
  Linux and MacOS now)

Restrict adding unreachable regions to covered files

  Improved the code that adds coverage for uncalled functions (with MIR
  but not-codegenned) to avoid generating coverage in files not already
  included in the files with covered functions.

Resolved last known issue requiring --emit llvm-ir workaround

  Fixed bugs in how unreachable code spans were added.
2020-12-03 09:50:10 -08:00
bors
6645da366e Auto merge of #78684 - devsnek:inline-asm-wasm, r=Amanieu
Add wasm32 support to inline asm

There is some contention around inline asm and wasm, and I really only made this to figure out the process of hacking on rustc, but I figured as long as the code existed, it was worth uploading.

cc `@Amanieu`
2020-12-01 20:23:06 +00:00
Gus Caplan
d9f237caa6
Add wasm32 support to inline asm 2020-12-01 12:18:21 -06:00
bors
760430e6fd Auto merge of #78863 - KodrAus:feat/simd-array, r=oli-obk
Support repr(simd) on ADTs containing a single array field

This is a squash and rebase of `@gnzlbg's` #63531

I've never actually written code in the compiler before so just fumbled my way around until it would build 😅

I imagine there'll be some work we need to do in `rustc_codegen_cranelift` too for this now, but might need some input from `@bjorn3` to know what that is.

cc `@rust-lang/project-portable-simd`

-----

This PR allows using `#[repr(simd)]` on ADTs containing a single array field:

```rust
 #[repr(simd)] struct S0([f32; 4]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S1<const N: usize>([f32; N]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S2<T, const N: usize>([T; N]);
```

This should allow experimenting with portable packed SIMD abstractions on nightly that make use of const generics.
2020-11-29 09:28:09 +00:00
Jonas Schievink
0ae653a531
Rollup merge of #79365 - richkadel:llvm-cov-map-version-4, r=wesleywiser
Upgrades the coverage map to Version 4

Changes the coverage map injected into binaries compiled with
`-Zinstrument-coverage` to LLVM Coverage Mapping Format, Version 4 (from
Version 3). Note, binaries compiled with this version will require LLVM
tools from at least LLVM Version 11.

r? ``@wesleywiser``
2020-11-26 13:39:09 +01:00
Rich Kadel
d334f589c4
Update compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/coverageinfo/mapgen.rs 2020-11-25 11:41:23 -08:00
Rich Kadel
b1df6c0e63
replace assert with condition and fatal error 2020-11-25 11:38:09 -08:00
Rich Kadel
b4668ecb73 Improved version check 2020-11-25 09:45:33 -08:00
Rich Kadel
b5fef37d23
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Wesley Wiser <wwiser@gmail.com>
2020-11-24 18:34:10 -08:00
Rich Kadel
51268d2735 Check for LLVM 11+ when using -Z instrument-coverage
* `rustc` should now compile under LLVM 9 or 10
* Compiler generates an error if `-Z instrument-coverage` is specified
  but LLVM version is less than 11
* Coverage tests that require `-Z instrument-coverage` and run codegen
  should be skipped if LLVM version is less than 11
2020-11-24 11:50:24 -08:00
Rich Kadel
5d5dc4c9d8 Updated links to LLVM 11 docs and types 2020-11-23 19:15:10 -08:00
Dario Nieuwenhuis
7b62e09b03 Allow disabling TrapUnreachable via -Ztrap-unreachable=no
This is useful for embedded targets where small code size is desired.
For example, on my project (thumbv7em-none-eabi) this yields a 0.6% code size reduction.
2020-11-24 01:08:27 +01:00
Rich Kadel
1d8c381c01 Upgrades the coverage map to Version 4
Changes the coverage map injected into binaries compiled with
`-Zinstrument-coverage` to LLVM Coverage Mapping Format, Version 4 (from
Version 3). Note, binaries compiled with this version will require LLVM
tools from at least LLVM Version 11.
2020-11-23 15:14:47 -08:00
LingMan
cd8973250d Use Option::map instead of open coding it 2020-11-23 04:58:21 +01:00
bjorn3
6a5f537fb9 Rename prefix_chunk to prefix_chunk_size 2020-11-21 19:22:31 +01:00
bjorn3
39b8b2b623 Remove StructRet arg attr
It is applied exactly when the return value has an indirect pass mode.
Except for InReg on x86 fastcall, arg attrs are now only used for
optimization purposes and thus are fine to ignore.
2020-11-21 19:22:31 +01:00
bjorn3
42b0b8080d Replace ByVal attribute with on_stack field for Indirect
This makes it clearer that only PassMode::Indirect allows ByVal
2020-11-21 19:22:30 +01:00
bjorn3
967a228208 Replace ZExt and SExt flags with ArgExtension enum
Both flags are mutually exclusive
2020-11-21 19:07:38 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
c2fb99984c Never inline naked functions
The `#[naked]` attribute disabled prologue / epilogue emission for the
function and it is responsibility of a developer to provide them. The
compiler is no position to inline such functions correctly.

Disable inlining of naked functions at LLVM and MIR level.
2020-11-20 00:00:00 +00:00
bors
675f114d95 Auto merge of #79106 - tmiasko:inline-hint, r=nagisa,eddyb
Fix setting inline hint based on `InstanceDef::requires_inline`

For instances where `InstanceDef::requires_inline` is true, an attempt
is made to set an inline hint though a call to the `inline` function.
The attempt is ineffective, since all attributes will be usually removed
by the second call.

Fix the issue by applying the attributes only once, with user provided
attributes having a priority when provided.

Closes #79108.
2020-11-18 23:44:54 +00:00
Mara Bos
c7e9029b80
Rollup merge of #78361 - DevJPM:master, r=workingjubilee
Updated the list of white-listed target features for x86

This PR both adds in-source documentation on what to look out for when adding a new (X86) feature set and [adds all that are detectable at run-time in Rust stable as of 1.27.0](https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/blob/master/crates/std_detect/src/detect/arch/x86.rs).

This should only enable the use of the corresponding LLVM intrinsics.
Actual intrinsics need to be added separately in rust-lang/stdarch.

It also re-orders the run-time-detect test statements to be more consistent
with the actual list of intrinsics whitelisted and removes underscores not present
in the actual names (which might be mistaken as being part of the name)

The reference for LLVM's feature names used is [this file](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/master/llvm/include/llvm/Support/X86TargetParser.def).

This PR was motivated as the compiler end's part for allowing #67329 to be adressed over on rust-lang/stdarch
2020-11-18 15:46:19 +01:00
Mara Bos
fa45fce0d3
Rollup merge of #78702 - wesleywiser:self_profile_cgu_sizes, r=Mark-Simulacrum
[self-profiling] Include the estimated size of each cgu in the profile

This is helpful when looking for CGUs where the size estimate isn't a
good indicator of compilation time.

I verified that moving the profiling timer call doesn't affect the
results.

Results:

<img width="297" alt="Screen Shot 2020-11-03 at 7 25 04 AM" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/831192/97985503-5901d100-1da6-11eb-9f10-f3e399702952.png">

`measureme` doesn't have support for custom arg names yet so `arg0` is the CGU name and `arg1` is the estimated size.
2020-11-17 16:13:49 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
4ea25da237 Fix setting inline hint based on InstanceDef::requires_inline
For instances where `InstanceDef::requires_inline` is true, an attempt
is made to set an inline hint though a call to the `inline` function.
The attempt is ineffective, since all attributes will be usually removed
by the second call.

Fix the issue by applying the attributes only once, with user provided
attributes having a priority when provided.
2020-11-17 00:00:00 +00:00
Bastian Kauschke
2bf93bd852 compiler: fold by value 2020-11-16 22:34:57 +01:00
Jonas Schievink
8825942e86
Rollup merge of #77802 - jyn514:bootstrap-specific, r=nikomatsakis
Allow making `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` conditional on the crate name

Motivation: This came up in the [Zulip stream](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/233931-t-compiler.2Fmajor-changes/topic/Require.20users.20to.20confirm.20they.20know.20RUSTC_.E2.80.A6.20compiler-team.23350/near/208403962) for https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/350.
See also https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/6608#issuecomment-458546258; this implements https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/6627.
The goal is for this to eventually allow prohibiting setting `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` in build.rs (https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/7088).

## User-facing changes

- `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1` still works; there is no current plan to remove this.
- Things like `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=0` no longer activate nightly features. In practice this shouldn't be a big deal, since `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` is the opposite of stable and everyone uses `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1` anyway.
- `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=x` will enable nightly features only for crate `x`.
- `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=x,y` will enable nightly features only for crates `x` and `y`.

## Implementation changes

The main change is that `UnstableOptions::from_environment` now requires
an (optional) crate name. If the crate name is unknown (`None`), then the new feature is not available and you still have to use `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1`. In practice this means the feature is only available for `--crate-name`, not for `#![crate_name]`; I'm interested in supporting the second but I'm not sure how.

Other major changes:

- Added `Session::is_nightly_build()`, which uses the `crate_name` of
the session
- Added `nightly_options::match_is_nightly_build`, a convenience method
for looking up `--crate-name` from CLI arguments.
`Session::is_nightly_build()`should be preferred where possible, since
it will take into account `#![crate_name]` (I think).
- Added `unstable_features` to `rustdoc::RenderOptions`

I'm not sure whether this counts as T-compiler or T-lang; _technically_ RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP is an implementation detail, but it's been used so much it seems like this counts as a language change too.

r? `@joshtriplett`
cc `@Mark-Simulacrum` `@hsivonen`
2020-11-15 13:39:43 +01:00
Dylan DPC
ae7020fcb4
Rollup merge of #78848 - DevJPM:ci-llvm-9, r=nikic
Bump minimal supported LLVM version to 9

This bumps the minimal tested llvm version to 9.
This should enable supporting newer LLVM features (and CPU extensions).

This was motived by #78361 having to drop features because of LLVM 8 not supporting certain CPU extensions yet.
This was declared relatively uncontroversial on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/182449-t-compiler.2Fhelp/topic/Min.20Supported.20LLVM.20Upgrade.20Process.3F/near/215957859).

Paging ````@eddyb```` because there was a comment in the [dockerfile](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/ci/docker/host-x86_64/x86_64-gnu-llvm-8/Dockerfile#L42) describing a hack (which I don't quite understand) which was also blocked by not having LLVM 9.
2020-11-15 03:02:39 +01:00
bors
66c1309446 Auto merge of #78959 - petrochenkov:likeuefi, r=nagisa
rustc_target: Mark UEFI targets as `is_like_windows`/`is_like_msvc`

And document what `is_like_windows` and `is_like_msvc` actually mean in more detail.

Addresses FIXMEs left from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/71030.
r? `@nagisa`
2020-11-14 09:11:25 +00:00
Ashley Mannix
045105b1a2 remove internal simd_size_and_ty from llvm backend 2020-11-13 14:43:45 +10:00
Mara Bos
76fa5f25ab
Rollup merge of #78950 - khyperia:spirv-asm, r=Amanieu
Add asm register information for SPIR-V

As discussed in [zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/182449-t-compiler.2Fhelp/topic/Defining.20asm!.20for.20new.20architecture), we at [rust-gpu](https://github.com/EmbarkStudios/rust-gpu) would like to support `asm!` for our SPIR-V backend. However, we cannot do so purely without frontend support: [this match](d4ea0b3e46/compiler/rustc_target/src/asm/mod.rs (L185)) fails and so `asm!` is not supported ([error reported here](d4ea0b3e46/compiler/rustc_ast_lowering/src/expr.rs (L1095))). To resolve this, we need to stub out register information for SPIR-V to support getting the `asm!` content all the way to [`AsmBuilderMethods::codegen_inline_asm`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_codegen_ssa/traits/trait.AsmBuilderMethods.html#tymethod.codegen_inline_asm), at which point the rust-gpu backend can do all the parsing and codegen that is needed.

This is a pretty weird PR - adding support for a backend that isn't in-tree feels pretty gross to me, but I don't see an easy way around this. ``@Amanieu`` said I should submit it anyway, so, here we are! Let me know if this needs to go through a more formal process (MCP?) and what I should do to help this along.

I based this off the [wasm asm PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/78684), which unfortunately this PR conflicts with that one quite a bit, sorry for any merge conflict pain :(

---

Some open questions:

- What do we call the register class? Some context, SPIR-V is an SSA-based IR, there are "instructions" that create IDs (referred to as `<id>` in the spec), which can be referenced by other instructions. So, `reg` isn't exactly accurate, they're SSA IDs, not re-assignable registers.
- What happens when a SPIR-V register gets to the LLVM backend? Right now it's a `bug!`, but should that be a `sess.fatal()`? I'm not sure if it's even possible to reach that point, maybe there's a check that prevents the `spirv` target from even reaching that codepath.
2020-11-12 19:46:14 +01:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
04d41e1f40 rustc_target: Mark UEFI targets as is_like_windows/is_like_msvc
Document what `is_like_windows` and `is_like_msvc` mean in more detail.
2020-11-12 19:40:41 +03:00
DevJPM
86193ca91c fixed a re-format due to removed chain call 2020-11-12 14:40:41 +01:00
DevJPM
7e443c4282 Dropped Support for Bidirectional Custom Target Definition Emulation
as requested in the review and argued that this is only consistent with later LLVM upgrades
2020-11-12 14:39:47 +01:00
DevJPM
8236830209 Removed an unused function now that LLVM 9 is the minimal supported version
The function was only used in LLVM 8 compatibility code
and was found and flagged by dead code detection and now removed.
2020-11-12 14:39:47 +01:00
DevJPM
b51bcc72d9 fully exploited the dropped support of LLVM 8
This commit grepped for LLVM_VERSION_GE, LLVM_VERSION_LT, get_major_version and
min-llvm-version and statically evaluated every expression possible
(and sensible) assuming that the LLVM version is >=9 now
2020-11-12 14:39:47 +01:00
khyperia
0e34b73996 Change capitalization of Spirv to SpirV
This matches the capitalization of RiscV
2020-11-11 19:18:06 +01:00
khyperia
f3441348e0 Add asm register information for SPIR-V 2020-11-11 17:38:02 +01:00
Nicholas-Baron
261ca04c92 Changed unwrap_or to unwrap_or_else in some places.
The discussion seems to have resolved that this lint is a bit "noisy" in
that applying it in all places would result in a reduction in
readability.

A few of the trivial functions (like `Path::new`) are fine to leave
outside of closures.

The general rule seems to be that anything that is obviously an
allocation (`Box`, `Vec`, `vec![]`) should be in a closure, even if it
is a 0-sized allocation.
2020-11-10 20:07:47 -08:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
dc004d4809 rustc_target: Rename some target options to avoid tautology
`target.target_endian` -> `target.endian`
`target.target_c_int_width` -> `target.c_int_width`
`target.target_os` -> `target.os`
`target.target_env` -> `target.env`
`target.target_vendor` -> `target.vendor`
`target.target_family` -> `target.os_family`
`target.target_mcount` -> `target.mcount`
2020-11-08 17:29:13 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
bf66988aa1 Collapse all uses of target.options.foo into target.foo
with an eye on merging `TargetOptions` into `Target`.

`TargetOptions` as a separate structure is mostly an implementation detail of `Target` construction, all its fields logically belong to `Target` and available from `Target` through `Deref` impls.
2020-11-08 17:29:13 +03:00
gnzlbg
6e88e96ccf Support repr(simd) on ADTs containing a single array field
This PR allows using `#[repr(simd)]` on ADTs containing a
single array field:

```rust
 #[repr(simd)] struct S0([f32; 4]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S1<const N: usize>([f32; N]);
 #[repr(simd)] struct S2<T, const N: usize>([T; N]);
```

This should allow experimenting with portable packed SIMD
abstractions on nightly that make use of const generics.
2020-11-08 12:01:48 +10:00
Joshua Nelson
622c48e4f1 Allow making RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP conditional on the crate name
The main change is that `UnstableOptions::from_environment` now requires
an (optional) crate name. If the crate name is unknown (`None`), then the new feature is not available and you still have to use `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1`. In practice this means the feature is only available for `--crate-name`, not for `#![crate_name]`; I'm interested in supporting the second but I'm not sure how.

Other major changes:

- Added `Session::is_nightly_build()`, which uses the `crate_name` of
the session
- Added `nightly_options::match_is_nightly_build`, a convenience method
for looking up `--crate-name` from CLI arguments.
`Session::is_nightly_build()`should be preferred where possible, since
it will take into account `#![crate_name]` (I think).
- Added `unstable_features` to `rustdoc::RenderOptions`

  There is a user-facing change here: things like `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=0` no
  longer active nightly features. In practice this shouldn't be a big
  deal, since `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` is the opposite of stable and everyone
  uses `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1` anyway.

- Add tests

  Check against `Cheat`, not whether nightly features are allowed.
  Nightly features are always allowed on the nightly channel.

- Only call `is_nightly_build()` once within a function

- Use booleans consistently for rustc_incremental

  Sessions can't be passed through threads, so `read_file` couldn't take a
  session. To be consistent, also take a boolean in `write_file_header`.
2020-11-07 13:45:11 -05:00
Rich Kadel
1973f84ebb Addressed all feedback to date 2020-11-05 18:24:17 -08:00
Rich Kadel
198ba3bd1c Injecting expressions in place of counters where helpful
Implementing the Graph traits for the BasicCoverageBlock
graph.

optimized replacement of counters with expressions plus new BCB graphviz

* Avoid adding coverage to unreachable blocks.
* Special case for Goto at the end of the body. Make it non-reportable.

Improved debugging and formatting options (from env)

Don't automatically add counters to BCBs without CoverageSpans. They may
still get counters but only if there are dependencies from
other BCBs that have spans, I think.

Make CodeRegions optional for Counters too. It is
possible to inject counters (`llvm.instrprof.increment` intrinsic calls
without corresponding code regions in the coverage map. An expression
can still uses these counter values.

Refactored instrument_coverage.rs -> instrument_coverage/mod.rs, and
then broke up the mod into multiple files.

Compiling with coverage, with the expression optimization, works on
the json5format crate and its dependencies.

Refactored debug features from mod.rs to debug.rs
2020-11-05 18:24:15 -08:00
Rich Kadel
c7747cc772 Rust coverage before splitting instrument_coverage.rs 2020-11-05 18:24:12 -08:00
bors
89631663b7 Auto merge of #78280 - bugadani:span, r=lcnr
Codegen: Query span as late as possible
2020-11-04 17:17:01 +00:00
oli
abacaf2aef u128 truncation and sign extension are not just interpreter related 2020-11-04 13:41:58 +00:00
oli
df4d717d0b s/Scalar::Raw/Scalar::Int 2020-11-04 10:11:31 +00:00
Oliver Scherer
362123dd75 Split the "raw integer bytes" part out of Scalar 2020-11-04 09:58:59 +00:00
Mara Bos
52405f7c0c
Rollup merge of #77950 - arlosi:sha256, r=eddyb
Add support for SHA256 source file hashing

Adds support for `-Z src-hash-algorithm sha256`, which became available in LLVM 11.

Using an older version of LLVM will cause an error `invalid checksum kind` if the hash algorithm is set to sha256.

r? `@eddyb`
cc #70401 `@est31`
2020-11-03 19:32:26 +01:00
Wesley Wiser
efe703a01a [self-profiling] Include the estimated size of each cgu in the profile
This is helpful when looking for CGUs where the size estimate isn't a
good indicator of compilation time.

I verified that moving the profiling timer call doesn't affect the
results.
2020-11-03 07:55:17 -05:00
bors
7b5a9e9cd2 Auto merge of #78448 - rylev:cache-foreign_modules, r=wesleywiser
foreign_modules query hash table lookups

When compiling a large monolithic crate we're seeing huge times in the `foreign_modules` query due to repeated iteration over foreign modules (in order to find a module by its id). This implements hash table lookups so that which massively reduces time spent in that query in this particular case. We'll need to see if the overhead of creating the hash table has a negative impact on performance in more normal compilation scenarios.

I'm working with `@wesleywiser` on this.
2020-11-03 04:27:27 +00:00
Anthony Ramine
6febaf2419 Implement -Z relax-elf-relocations=yes|no
This lets rustc users tweak whether the linker should relax ELF relocations,
namely whether it should emit R_X86_64_GOTPCRELX relocations instead of
R_X86_64_GOTPCREL, as the former is allowed by the ABI to be further
optimised. The default value is whatever the target defines.
2020-10-31 17:16:56 +01:00
Joshua Nelson
57c6ed0c07 Fix even more clippy warnings 2020-10-30 10:13:39 -04:00
bors
3dddf6ac1e Auto merge of #78414 - nox:function-sections, r=nagisa,bjorn3
Implement -Z function-sections=yes|no

This lets rustc users tweak whether all functions should be put in their own TEXT section, using whatever default value the target defines if the flag is missing.

I'm having fun experimenting with musl libc and trying to implement the start symbol in Rust, that means avoiding code that requires relocations, and AFAIK putting everything in its own section makes the toolchain generate `GOTPCREL` relocations for symbols that could use plain old PC-relative addressing (at least on `x86_64`) if they were all in the same section.
2020-10-28 17:47:36 +00:00
Ryan Levick
69dc98161a Cache foreign_modules query 2020-10-27 16:21:55 +01:00
Dániel Buga
caf9131e65 Query span as late as possible 2020-10-27 10:17:01 +01:00
Anthony Ramine
056942215c Implement -Z function-sections=yes|no
This lets rustc users tweak whether all functions should be put in their own
TEXT section, using whatever default value the target defines if the flag
is missing.
2020-10-26 23:26:43 +01:00
bors
0da6d42f29 Auto merge of #68965 - eddyb:mir-inline-scope, r=nagisa,oli-obk
rustc_mir: track inlined callees in SourceScopeData.

We now record which MIR scopes are the roots of *other* (inlined) functions's scope trees, which allows us to generate the correct debuginfo in codegen, similar to what LLVM inlining generates.
This PR makes the `ui` test `backtrace-debuginfo` pass, if the MIR inliner is turned on by default.

Also, `#[track_caller]` is now correct in the face of MIR inlining (cc `@anp).`

Fixes #76997.

r? `@rust-lang/wg-mir-opt`
2020-10-26 18:50:22 +00:00
DevJPM
3daa93f555 Updated documentation, x86 feature detection testing, and removed LLVM 9 exclusive features
Updated the added documentation in llvm_util.rs to note which copies of LLVM need to be inspected.
Removed avx512bf16 and avx512vp2intersect because they are unsupported before LLVM 9 with the build with external LLVM 8 being supported
Re-introduced detection testing previously removed for un-requestable features tsc and mmx
2020-10-26 08:36:14 +01:00
Dylan DPC
147a001fd3
Rollup merge of #78126 - shepmaster:aarch64-apple-darwin-valist, r=nagisa
Properly define va_arg and va_list for aarch64-apple-darwin

From [Apple][]:

> Because of these changes, the type `va_list` is an alias for `char*`,
> and not for the struct type in the generic procedure call standard.

With this change `/x.py test --stage 1 src/test/ui/abi/variadic-ffi`
passes.

Fixes #78092

[Apple]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/xcode/writing_arm64_code_for_apple_platforms
2020-10-26 03:09:00 +01:00
Jake Goulding
0a91755ff4 Properly define va_arg and va_list for aarch64-apple-darwin
From [Apple][]:

> Because of these changes, the type `va_list` is an alias for `char*`,
> and not for the struct type in the generic procedure call standard.

With this change `/x.py test --stage 1 src/test/ui/abi/variadic-ffi`
passes.

Fixes #78092

[Apple]: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/xcode/writing_arm64_code_for_apple_platforms
2020-10-25 21:37:01 -04:00
DevJPM
9feb567399 Updated the list of white-listed target features for x86
This PR both adds in-source documentation on what to look out for
when adding a new (X86) feature set and adds all that are detectable at run-time in Rust stable
as of 1.27.0.

This should only enable the use of the corresponding LLVM intrinsics.
Actual intrinsics need to be added separately in rust-lang/stdarch.

It also re-orders the run-time-detect test statements to be more consistent
with the actual list of intrinsics whitelisted and removes underscores not present
in the actual names (which might be mistaken as being part of the name)
2020-10-25 17:06:40 +01:00
Wesley Wiser
5ac5556d63 Upgrade to measureme 9.0.0 2020-10-24 22:39:42 -04:00
Jake Goulding
c6ab758e54 Switch from tuple matching to match guards 2020-10-24 12:58:38 -04:00
Jonas Schievink
1ac137be93
Rollup merge of #78307 - rust-lang:revert-77961-embed-bitcode, r=tmandry
Revert "Set .llvmbc and .llvmcmd sections as allocatable"

Reverts rust-lang/rust#77961, see discussion starting from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77961#issuecomment-712313902
2020-10-24 14:12:20 +02:00
Rich Kadel
f75a236fe0
Update compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/coverageinfo/mapgen.rs
Co-authored-by: Wesley Wiser <wwiser@gmail.com>
2020-10-23 14:58:08 -07:00
Tyler Mandry
6640a62e0e
Revert "Set .llvmbc and .llvmcmd sections as allocatable" 2020-10-23 12:54:00 -07:00
Rich Kadel
a7bc1a2edf Make codegen coverage_context optional, and check
Addresses Issue #78286

Libraries compiled with coverage and linked with out enabling coverage
would fail when attempting to add the library's coverage statements to
the codegen coverage context (None).

Now, if coverage statements are encountered while compiling / linking
with `-Z instrument-coverage` disabled, codegen will *not* attempt to
add code regions to a coverage map, and it will not inject the LLVM
instrprof_increment intrinsic calls.
2020-10-23 12:00:30 -07:00
varkor
878c97e70c Update to rustc-demangle 0.1.18 2020-10-21 21:11:11 +01:00
varkor
2b9d22d3a9 Update rustc-demangle 2020-10-21 21:05:38 +01:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
0ce4452fce rustc_codegen_llvm: add support for inlined function debuginfo. 2020-10-21 04:43:57 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
737499593d rustc_codegen_llvm: expose DILocation to rustc_codegen_ssa. 2020-10-21 04:43:57 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
88d874de63 rustc_codegen_llvm: avoid converting between DILocation and Value. 2020-10-21 04:43:57 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
fa2b381ec8 rustc_codegen_llvm: move DISubprogram creation to a dbg_scope_fn method. 2020-10-21 04:43:57 +03:00
Eduard-Mihai Burtescu
9d57c417fc rustc_codegen_llvm: create DIFiles from just SourceFiles. 2020-10-21 04:43:56 +03:00
bors
94332bbe10 Auto merge of #78047 - khyperia:set_span_mut, r=bjorn3
Make set_span take mut self

This was a mistake in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/77614

It's not a _huge_ deal, because backends can always implement this with interior mutability, but it's nice to avoid interior mutability when possible. For context, the `set_source_location` method, called alongside `set_span`, also takes `&mut self`.

r? `@eddyb`
2020-10-18 05:36:23 +00:00
khyperia
3d484481c7 Make set_span take mut self 2020-10-17 13:28:58 +02:00
bors
6f0ea299cf Auto merge of #77685 - jackh726:binder-map, r=lcnr
Use rebind instead of Binder::bind when possible

These are really only the easy places. I just searched for `Binder::bind` and replaced where it straightforward.

r? `@lcnr`
cc. `@nikomatsakis`
2020-10-17 10:28:52 +00:00
Dylan DPC
55f9676c47
Rollup merge of #77961 - glandium:embed-bitcode, r=nagisa
Set .llvmbc and .llvmcmd sections as allocatable

This marks both sections as allocatable rather than excluded, which matches what
clang does with the equivalent `-fembed-bitcode` flag.
2020-10-17 03:27:20 +02:00
Jack Huey
11d62aa284 Review comments 2020-10-16 12:58:50 -04:00
Jack Huey
dd5c9bf139 Use map_bound(_ref) instead of Binder::bind when possible 2020-10-16 12:58:50 -04:00
bors
a78a62fc99 Auto merge of #77972 - Mark-Simulacrum:side-effect-loop, r=nagisa
Prevent miscompilation in trivial loop {}

Ideally, we would want to handle a broader set of cases to fully fix the
underlying bug here. That is currently relatively expensive at compile and
runtime, so we don't do that for now.

Performance results indicate this is not a major regression, if at all, so it should be safe to land.

cc #28728
2020-10-16 14:06:37 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
e2efec8976 Prevent miscompilation in trivial loop {}
Ideally, we would want to handle a broader set of cases to fully fix the
underlying bug here. That is currently relatively expensive at compile and
runtime, so we don't do that for now.
2020-10-15 09:42:06 -04:00
est31
d683e3ac23 Remove rustc_session::config::Config
The wrapper type led to tons of target.target
across the compiler. Its ptr_width field isn't
required any more, as target_pointer_width
is already present in parsed form.
2020-10-15 12:02:24 +02:00
est31
4fa5578774 Replace target.target with target and target.ptr_width with target.pointer_width
Preparation for a subsequent change that replaces
rustc_target::config::Config with its wrapped Target.

On its own, this commit breaks the build. I don't like making
build-breaking commits, but in this instance I believe that it
makes review easier, as the "real" changes of this PR can be
seen much more easily.

Result of running:

find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target\.target\([)\.,; ]\)/target\1/g' {} \;
find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target\.target$/target/g' {} \;
find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target.ptr_width/target.pointer_width/g' {} \;
./x.py fmt
2020-10-15 12:02:24 +02:00
est31
0d1aa1e034 Rename target_pointer_width to pointer_width and turn it into an u32
Rename target_pointer_width to pointer_width because it is already
member of the Target struct.

The compiler supports only three valid values for target_pointer_width:
16, 32, 64. Thus it can safely be turned into an int.
This means less allocations and clones as well as easier handling of the type.
2020-10-15 12:02:23 +02:00
Mike Hommey
684d142e70 Set .llvmbc and .llvmcmd sections as allocatable 2020-10-15 14:04:57 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
022d20759b
Rollup merge of #77739 - est31:remove_unused_code, r=petrochenkov,varkor
Remove unused code

Rustc has a builtin lint for detecting unused code inside a crate, but when an item is marked `pub`, the code, even if unused inside the entire workspace, is never marked as such. Therefore, I've built [warnalyzer](https://github.com/est31/warnalyzer) to detect unused items in a cross-crate setting.

Closes https://github.com/est31/warnalyzer/issues/2
2020-10-15 07:32:29 +09:00
Arlo Siemsen
3296d5ca7b Add support for SHA256 source file hashing for LLVM 11+. 2020-10-14 15:09:51 -07:00
est31
feaac592a3 Remove unused code from rustc_codegen_* 2020-10-14 04:14:32 +02:00
Dylan DPC
17ee28b71f
Rollup merge of #77795 - bjorn3:codegen_backend_interface_refactor, r=oli-obk
Codegen backend interface refactor

This moves several things away from the codegen backend to rustc_interface. There are a few behavioral changes where previously the incremental cache (incorrectly) wouldn't get finalized, but now it does. See the individual commit messages.
2020-10-14 02:30:38 +02:00
Dylan DPC
596235281c
Rollup merge of #77765 - amshafer:master, r=petrochenkov
Add LLVM flags to limit DWARF version to 2 on BSD

This has been a thorn in my side for a while, I can finally generate flamegraphs of rust programs on bsd again. This fixes dtrace profiling on freebsd, I think it might help with lldb as well but I can't test that because my current rust-lldb setup is messed up.

I'm limiting the dwarf version to 2 on all bsd's (netbsd/openbsd/freebsd) since it looks like this applies to all of them, but I have only tested on freebsd.

Let me know if there's anything I can improve!

---
Currently on FreeBSD dtrace profiling does not work and shows jumbled/incorrect
symbols in the backtraces. FreeBSD does not support the latest versions of DWARF
in dtrace (and lldb?) yet, and needs to be limited to DWARF2 in the same way as macos.

This adds an is_like_bsd flag since it was missing. NetBSD/OpenBSD/FreeBSD all
match this.

This effectively copies #11864 but targets FreeBSD instead of macos.
2020-10-14 02:30:34 +02:00
Austin Shafer
4511f8b9f3 Add a target option for selecting a DWARF version
Certain platforms need to limit the DWARF version emitted (oxs, *bsd). This
change adds a dwarf_version entry to the options that allows a platform to
specify the dwarf version to use. By default this option is none and the default
DWARF version is selected.

Also adds an option for printing Option<u32> json keys
2020-10-13 15:56:30 -04:00
est31
a0fc455d30 Replace absolute paths with relative ones
Modern compilers allow reaching external crates
like std or core via relative paths in modules
outside of lib.rs and main.rs.
2020-10-13 14:16:45 +02:00
bors
f54072bb81 Auto merge of #76830 - Artoria2e5:tune, r=nagisa
Pass tune-cpu to LLVM

I think this is how it should work...

See https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/expose-tune-cpu-from-llvm/13088 for the background. Or the documentation diff.
2020-10-13 02:49:00 +00:00
bjorn3
b620e49cca Remove dump_incremental_data 2020-10-12 10:34:30 +02:00
bors
c71248b708 Auto merge of #76859 - Aaron1011:fix/llvm-cgu-reuse, r=davidtwco,nikic
Use llvm::computeLTOCacheKey to determine post-ThinLTO CGU reuse

During incremental ThinLTO compilation, we attempt to re-use the
optimized (post-ThinLTO) bitcode file for a module if it is 'safe' to do
so.

Up until now, 'safe' has meant that the set of modules that our current
modules imports from/exports to is unchanged from the previous
compilation session. See PR #67020 and PR #71131 for more details.

However, this turns out be insufficient to guarantee that it's safe
to reuse the post-LTO module (i.e. that optimizing the pre-LTO module
would produce the same result). When LLVM optimizes a module during
ThinLTO, it may look at other information from the 'module index', such
as whether a (non-imported!) global variable is used. If this
information changes between compilation runs, we may end up re-using an
optimized module that (for example) had dead-code elimination run on a
function that is now used by another module.

Fortunately, LLVM implements its own ThinLTO module cache, which is used
when ThinLTO is performed by a linker plugin (e.g. when clang is used to
compile a C proect). Using this cache directly would require extensive
refactoring of our code - but fortunately for us, LLVM provides a
function that does exactly what we need.

The function `llvm::computeLTOCacheKey` is used to compute a SHA-1 hash
from all data that might influence the result of ThinLTO on a module.
In addition to the module imports/exports that we manually track, it
also hashes information about global variables (e.g. their liveness)
which might be used during optimization. By using this function, we
shouldn't have to worry about new LLVM passes breaking our module re-use
behavior.

In LLVM, the output of this function forms part of the filename used to
store the post-ThinLTO module. To keep our current filename structure
intact, this PR just writes out the mapping 'CGU name -> Hash' to a
file. To determine if a post-LTO module should be reused, we compare
hashes from the previous session.

This should unblock PR #75199 - by sheer chance, it seems to have hit
this issue due to the particular CGU partitioning and optimization
decisions that end up getting made.
2020-10-11 20:50:02 +00:00
bors
7bc5839e99 Auto merge of #77337 - lzutao:asm-mips64, r=Amanieu
Add asm! support for mips64

- [x] Updated `src/doc/unstable-book/src/library-features/asm.md`.
- [ ] No vector type support. I don't know much about those types.

cc #76839
2020-10-10 17:32:28 +00:00
bjorn3
12a2941214 Move llvm_util::time_trace_profiler_finish call to join_codegen
This makes it also run when compilation has failed, neither --emit exe
nor --emit metadata is passed, or -Zno-link is used.
2020-10-10 16:20:42 +02:00
bjorn3
69f26b7761 Use fixed type for CodegenResults
This also moves the -Zno-link implementation to rustc_interface
2020-10-10 16:18:36 +02:00
bjorn3
f141acf067 Move finalize_session_directory call out of cg_llvm
This causes it to be called even when passing `-Zno-link`, when linking
fails or when neither `--emit link` nor `--emit metadata` is used.
2020-10-10 15:20:35 +02:00
bjorn3
69f45cd965 Move save_work_product_index call out of cg_llvm 2020-10-10 15:14:58 +02:00
bjorn3
46f2f023b0 Move supported_target_features query provider to cg_ssa 2020-10-09 19:35:17 +02:00
xd009642
a6e2b636e6 Implement the instruction_set attribute 2020-10-08 23:32:20 +01:00
khyperia
c5bc95676b Let backends access span information
Sometimes, a backend may need to emit warnings, errors, or otherwise
need to know the span of the current item in a basic block. So, add a
set_span method to give the backend that information.
2020-10-06 15:39:12 +02:00
Rich Kadel
f5aebad28f Updates to experimental coverage counter injection
This is a combination of 18 commits.

Commit #2:

Additional examples and some small improvements.

Commit #3:

fixed mir-opt non-mir extensions and spanview title elements

Corrected a fairly recent assumption in runtest.rs that all MIR dump
files end in .mir. (It was appending .mir to the graphviz .dot and
spanview .html file names when generating blessed output files. That
also left outdated files in the baseline alongside the files with the
incorrect names, which I've now removed.)

Updated spanview HTML title elements to match their content, replacing a
hardcoded and incorrect name that was left in accidentally when
originally submitted.

Commit #4:

added more test examples

also improved Makefiles with support for non-zero exit status and to
force validation of tests unless a specific test overrides it with a
specific comment.

Commit #5:

Fixed rare issues after testing on real-world crate

Commit #6:

Addressed PR feedback, and removed temporary -Zexperimental-coverage

-Zinstrument-coverage once again supports the latest capabilities of
LLVM instrprof coverage instrumentation.

Also fixed a bug in spanview.

Commit #7:

Fix closure handling, add tests for closures and inner items

And cleaned up other tests for consistency, and to make it more clear
where spans start/end by breaking up lines.

Commit #8:

renamed "typical" test results "expected"

Now that the `llvm-cov show` tests are improved to normally expect
matching actuals, and to allow individual tests to override that
expectation.

Commit #9:

test coverage of inline generic struct function

Commit #10:

Addressed review feedback

* Removed unnecessary Unreachable filter.
* Replaced a match wildcard with remining variants.
* Added more comments to help clarify the role of successors() in the
CFG traversal

Commit #11:

refactoring based on feedback

* refactored `fn coverage_spans()`.
* changed the way I expand an empty coverage span to improve performance
* fixed a typo that I had accidently left in, in visit.rs

Commit #12:

Optimized use of SourceMap and SourceFile

Commit #13:

Fixed a regression, and synched with upstream

Some generated test file names changed due to some new change upstream.

Commit #14:

Stripping out crate disambiguators from demangled names

These can vary depending on the test platform.

Commit #15:

Ignore llvm-cov show diff on test with generics, expand IO error message

Tests with generics produce llvm-cov show results with demangled names
that can include an unstable "crate disambiguator" (hex value). The
value changes when run in the Rust CI Windows environment. I added a sed
filter to strip them out (in a prior commit), but sed also appears to
fail in the same environment. Until I can figure out a workaround, I'm
just going to ignore this specific test result. I added a FIXME to
follow up later, but it's not that critical.

I also saw an error with Windows GNU, but the IO error did not
specify a path for the directory or file that triggered the error. I
updated the error messages to provide more info for next, time but also
noticed some other tests with similar steps did not fail. Looks
spurious.

Commit #16:

Modify rust-demangler to strip disambiguators by default

Commit #17:

Remove std::process::exit from coverage tests

Due to Issue #77553, programs that call std::process::exit() do not
generate coverage results on Windows MSVC.

Commit #18:

fix: test file paths exceeding Windows max path len
2020-10-05 08:02:58 -07:00
Mingye Wang
a35a93f09c Pass tune-cpu to LLVM
I think this is how it should work...
2020-10-05 07:50:44 +08:00
Jonas Schievink
5889cf3146
Rollup merge of #77521 - bjorn3:target_feature_whitelist, r=lcnr
Move target feature whitelist from cg_llvm to cg_ssa

These target features have to be supported or at least emulated by alternative codegen backends anyway as they are used by common crates. By moving this list to cg_ssa, other codegen backends don't have to copy
this code.
2020-10-04 15:45:48 +02:00
Jonas Schievink
5bd9ce5cd4
Rollup merge of #77504 - Amanieu:select_simd_bitmask, r=ecstatic-morse
Support vectors with fewer than 8 elements for simd_select_bitmask

Resolves the issue raised here: https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/issues/310#issuecomment-693730094
2020-10-04 15:45:43 +02:00
Lzu Tao
79f477bb1f Add asm! support for mips64 2020-10-04 12:01:21 +00:00
bjorn3
17d1cbbbe0 Move target feature whitelist from cg_llvm to cg_ssa
These target features have to be supported or at least emulated by
alternative codegen backends anyway as they are used by common crates.
By moving this list to cg_ssa, other codegen backends don't have to copy
this code.
2020-10-04 11:49:00 +02:00
Amanieu d'Antras
e41a14412e Support vectors with fewer than 8 elements for simd_select_bitmask 2020-10-03 20:35:59 +01:00
Harald Hoyer
cadd12b5f0 Implement Make handle_alloc_error default to panic (for no_std + liballoc)
Related: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66741

Guarded with `#![feature(default_alloc_error_handler)]` a default
`alloc_error_handler` is called, if a custom allocator is used and no
other custom `#[alloc_error_handler]` is defined.

The panic message does not contain the size anymore, because it would
pull in the fmt machinery, which would blow up the code size
significantly.
2020-10-02 09:00:29 +02:00
Hugues de Valon
1aaafac6ff Add support for cmse_nonsecure_entry attribute
This patch adds support for the LLVM cmse_nonsecure_entry attribute.
This is a target-dependent attribute that only has sense for the
thumbv8m Rust targets.
You can find more information about this attribute here:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ecm0359818/latest/

Signed-off-by: Hugues de Valon <hugues.devalon@arm.com>
2020-09-30 15:48:59 +01:00
Hugues de Valon
d255d70e7a Update LLVM and add Unsupported diagnostic
Secure entry functions do not support if arguments are passed on the
stack. An "unsupported" diagnostic will be emitted by LLVM if that is
the case.
This commits adds support in Rust for that diagnostic so that an error
will be output if that is the case!

Signed-off-by: Hugues de Valon <hugues.devalon@arm.com>
2020-09-30 14:57:37 +01:00
Jonas Schievink
ec1766c5b6
Rollup merge of #76839 - lzutao:mips-asm, r=Amanieu
Add asm! support for MIPS

For now, I only add support for mips32.
mips64 may come in future PRs if I could learn more about the target.
2020-09-27 18:37:20 +02:00
Lzu Tao
9000710959 Add MIPS asm! support
This patch also:
* Add soft-float supports: only f32
* zero-extend i8/i16 to i32 because MIPS only supports register-length
  arithmetic.
* Update table in asm! chapter in unstable book.
2020-09-27 02:36:50 +00:00
Ralf Jung
9e02642fb3
Rollup merge of #77211 - est31:remove_unused_allow, r=oli-obk
Remove unused #[allow(...)] statements from compiler/
2020-09-26 12:58:34 +02:00
Ralf Jung
7c47b1e5f4
Rollup merge of #77161 - est31:swich_len_already_trusted, r=petrochenkov
Remove TrustedLen requirement from BuilderMethods::switch

The main use case of TrustedLen is allowing APIs to specialize on it,
but no use of it uses that specialization. Instead, only the .len()
function provided by ExactSizeIterator is used, which is already
required to be accurate.

Thus, the TrustedLen requirement on BuilderMethods::switch is redundant.
2020-09-26 12:58:24 +02:00
est31
12187b7f86 Remove unused #[allow(...)] statements from compiler/ 2020-09-26 01:25:55 +02:00
marmeladema
35bad3edbf Address review comment 2020-09-25 22:48:44 +01:00
marmeladema
bb8e1764bb Simplify some match statements on `DefPathDataName' 2020-09-25 22:46:15 +01:00
marmeladema
657ecdb75e Rename DefPathData::get_name() to DefPathData::name() 2020-09-25 22:46:15 +01:00
marmeladema
f1878d19fa Move from {{closure}}#0 syntax to {closure#0} for (def) path components 2020-09-25 22:46:14 +01:00
est31
12ada5cf4b Remove TrustedLen requirement from BuilderMethods::switch
The main use case of TrustedLen is allowing APIs to specialize on it,
but no use of it uses that specialization. Instead, only the .len()
function provided by ExactSizeIterator is used, which is already
required to be accurate.

Thus, the TrustedLen requirement on BuilderMethods::switch is redundant.
2020-09-24 19:10:34 +02:00
Erik Hofmayer
138a2e5eaa /nightly/nightly-rustc 2020-09-23 21:51:56 +02:00
Erik Hofmayer
dd66ea2d3d Updated html_root_url for compiler crates 2020-09-23 21:14:43 +02:00
Ralf Jung
9aba4962f5
Rollup merge of #76962 - est31:const_cstr, r=oli-obk
Use const_cstr macro in consts.rs
2020-09-21 10:40:45 +02:00
Ralf Jung
048866bd6b
Rollup merge of #76958 - est31:ns, r=oli-obk
Replace manual as_nanos and as_secs_f64 reimplementations
2020-09-21 10:40:39 +02:00
Ralf Jung
02d787bef8
Rollup merge of #76872 - khyperia:remove_declare_methods, r=eddyb
Remove DeclareMethods

Most of the `DeclareMethods` API was only used internally by rustc_codegen_llvm. As such, it makes no sense to require other backends to implement them.

(`get_declared_value` and `declare_cfn` were used, in one place, specific to the `main` symbol, which I've replaced with a more specialized function to allow more flexibility in implementation - the intent is that `declare_c_main` can go away once we do something more clever, e.g. @eddyb has ideas around having a MIR shim or somesuch we can explore in a follow-up PR)
2020-09-21 10:40:35 +02:00
bors
0f9f0b384a Auto merge of #76295 - mati865:remove-mmx, r=Amanieu,oli-obk
Remove MMX from Rust

Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/890
This removes most of MMX from Rust (tests pass with small changes), keeping stable `is_x86_feature_detected!("mmx")` working.
2020-09-21 00:43:26 +00:00
Mateusz Mikuła
5de2c95e6e Remove MMX from Rust 2020-09-20 15:13:11 +02:00
bors
41507ed0d5 Auto merge of #76964 - RalfJung:rollup-ybn06fs, r=RalfJung
Rollup of 15 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #76722 (Test and fix Send and Sync traits of BTreeMap artefacts)
 - #76766 (Extract some intrinsics out of rustc_codegen_llvm)
 - #76800 (Don't generate bootstrap usage unless it's needed)
 - #76809 (simplfy condition in ItemLowerer::with_trait_impl_ref())
 - #76815 (Fix wording in mir doc)
 - #76818 (Don't compile regex at every function call.)
 - #76821 (Remove redundant nightly features)
 - #76823 (black_box: silence unused_mut warning when building with cfg(miri))
 - #76825 (use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler)
 - #76827 (fix array_windows docs)
 - #76828 (use strip_prefix over starts_with and manual slicing based on pattern length (clippy::manual_strip))
 - #76840 (Move to intra doc links in core/src/future)
 - #76845 (Use intra docs links in core::{ascii, option, str, pattern, hash::map})
 - #76853 (Use intra-doc links in library/core/src/task/wake.rs)
 - #76871 (support panic=abort in Miri)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
2020-09-20 11:02:36 +00:00
est31
812ff66803 Use const_cstr macro in consts.rs 2020-09-20 11:34:34 +02:00
est31
cebbd9fcd3 Use as_nanos in bench.rs and base.rs 2020-09-20 10:16:01 +02:00
Oliver Scherer
2d7ac728e4 Stop using the const_eval query for initializers of statics
As a side effect, we now represent most promoteds as `ConstValue::Scalar` again. This is useful because all implict promoteds are just references anyway and most explicit promoteds are numeric arguments to `asm!` or SIMD instructions.
2020-09-19 10:36:36 +02:00
khyperia
0bc405e352 Remove DeclareMethods 2020-09-18 13:11:59 +02:00
Aaron Hill
cfe07cd42a
Use llvm::computeLTOCacheKey to determine post-ThinLTO CGU reuse
During incremental ThinLTO compilation, we attempt to re-use the
optimized (post-ThinLTO) bitcode file for a module if it is 'safe' to do
so.

Up until now, 'safe' has meant that the set of modules that our current
modules imports from/exports to is unchanged from the previous
compilation session. See PR #67020 and PR #71131 for more details.

However, this turns out be insufficient to guarantee that it's safe
to reuse the post-LTO module (i.e. that optimizing the pre-LTO module
would produce the same result). When LLVM optimizes a module during
ThinLTO, it may look at other information from the 'module index', such
as whether a (non-imported!) global variable is used. If this
information changes between compilation runs, we may end up re-using an
optimized module that (for example) had dead-code elimination run on a
function that is now used by another module.

Fortunately, LLVM implements its own ThinLTO module cache, which is used
when ThinLTO is performed by a linker plugin (e.g. when clang is used to
compile a C proect). Using this cache directly would require extensive
refactoring of our code - but fortunately for us, LLVM provides a
function that does exactly what we need.

The function `llvm::computeLTOCacheKey` is used to compute a SHA-1 hash
from all data that might influence the result of ThinLTO on a module.
In addition to the module imports/exports that we manually track, it
also hashes information about global variables (e.g. their liveness)
which might be used during optimization. By using this function, we
shouldn't have to worry about new LLVM passes breaking our module re-use
behavior.

In LLVM, the output of this function forms part of the filename used to
store the post-ThinLTO module. To keep our current filename structure
intact, this PR just writes out the mapping 'CGU name -> Hash' to a
file. To determine if a post-LTO module should be reused, we compare
hashes from the previous session.

This should unblock PR #75199 - by sheer chance, it seems to have hit
this issue due to the particular CGU partitioning and optimization
decisions that end up getting made.
2020-09-17 22:04:13 -04:00
khyperia
21b0c1286a Extract some intrinsics out of rustc_codegen_llvm
A significant amount of intrinsics do not actually need backend-specific
behaviors to be implemented, instead relying on methods already in
rustc_codegen_ssa. So, extract those methods out to rustc_codegen_ssa,
so that each backend doesn't need to reimplement the same code.
2020-09-15 23:35:31 +02:00
Tyler Mandry
f09372ab60
Rollup merge of #74787 - petrochenkov:rustllvm, r=cuviper
Move `rustllvm` into `compiler/rustc_llvm`

The `rustllvm` directory is not self-contained, it contains C++ code built by a build script of the `rustc_llvm` crate which is then linked into that crate.
So it makes sense to make `rustllvm` a part of `rustc_llvm` and move it into its directory.
I replaced `rustllvm` with more obvious `llvm-wrapper` as the subdirectory name, but something like `llvm-adapter` would work as well, other suggestions are welcome.

To make things more confusing, the Rust side of FFI functions defined in `rustllvm` can be found in `rustc_codegen_llvm` rather than in `rustc_llvm`. Perhaps they need to be moved as well, but this PR doesn't do that.

The presence of multiple LLVM-related directories in `src` (`llvm-project`, `rustllvm`, `librustc_llvm`, `librustc_codegen_llvm` and their predecessors) historically confused me and made me wonder about their purpose.
With this PR we will have LLVM itself (`llvm-project`), a FFI crate (`rustc_llvm`, kind of `llvm-sys`) and a codegen backend crate using LLVM through the FFI crate (`rustc_codegen_llvm`).
2020-09-09 21:02:24 -07:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
10d3f8a484 Move rustllvm into rustc_llvm 2020-09-09 23:05:43 +03:00
Victor Ding
c81b43d8ac Add -Z combine_cgu flag
Introduce a compiler option to let rustc combines all regular CGUs into
a single one at the end of compilation.

Part of Issue #64191
2020-09-09 17:32:23 +10:00
LeSeulArtichaut
3e14b684dd Change ty.kind to a method 2020-09-04 17:47:51 +02:00
Dan Aloni
07e7823c01 pretty: trim paths of unique symbols
If a symbol name can only be imported from one place for a type, and
as long as it was not glob-imported anywhere in the current crate, we
can trim its printed path and print only the name.

This has wide implications on error messages with types, for example,
shortening `std::vec::Vec` to just `Vec`, as long as there is no other
`Vec` importable anywhere.

This adds a new '-Z trim-diagnostic-paths=false' option to control this
feature.

On the good path, with no diagnosis printed, we should try to avoid
issuing this query, so we need to prevent trimmed_def_paths query on
several cases.

This change also relies on a previous commit that differentiates
between `Debug` and `Display` on various rustc types, where the latter
is trimmed and presented to the user and the former is not.
2020-09-02 22:26:37 +03:00
bors
6f1bbf5ee0 Auto merge of #76071 - khyperia:configurable_to_immediate, r=eddyb
Make to_immediate/from_immediate configurable by backends

`librustc_codegen_ssa` has the concept of an immediate vs. memory type, and `librustc_codegen_llvm` uses this distinction to implement `bool`s being `i8` in memory, and `i1` in immediate contexts. However, some of that implementation leaked into `codegen_ssa` when converting to/from immediate values. So, move those methods into builder traits, so that behavior can be configured by backends.

This is useful if a backend is able to keep bools as bools, or, needs to do more trickery than just bools to bytes.

(Note that there's already a large amount of things abstracted with "immediate types" - this is just bringing this particular thing in line to be abstracted as well)

---

Pinging @eddyb since that's who I was talking about this change with when they suggested I submit a PR.
2020-09-01 07:44:34 +00:00
David Wood
fa01ce802f
cg_llvm: fewer_names in uncached_llvm_type
This commit changes `uncached_llvm_type` so that a named struct type
(with an empty name) is always created when the `fewer_names` option
is enabled. By skipping the generation of names, we can improve perf.
Giving `LLVMStructCreateNamed` an empty name works because LLVM will
perform random renames to avoid collisions.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2020-08-31 11:20:52 +01:00
David Wood
6ff471b1cf
ty: remove obsolete printer
This commit removes the obsolete printer and replaces all uses of it
with `FmtPrinter`. Of the replaced uses, all but one use was in `debug!`
logging, two cases were notable:

- `MonoItem::to_string` is used in `-Z print-mono-items` and therefore
  affects the output of all codegen-units tests.
- `DefPathBasedNames` was used in `librustc_codegen_llvm/type_of.rs`
  with `LLVMStructCreateNamed` and that'll now get different values, but
  this should result in no functional change.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2020-08-30 18:59:07 +01:00
mark
9e5f7d5631 mv compiler to compiler/ 2020-08-30 18:45:07 +03:00