Add approximate suggestions for rustfix
This adds `span_approximate_suggestion()` that lets you emit a
suggestion marked as "non-machine applicable" in the JSON output. UI
users see no difference. This is for when rustc and clippy wish to
emit suggestions which will make sense to the reader (e.g. they may
have placeholders like `<type>`) but are not source-applicable, so that
rustfix/etc can ignore these.
fixes#39254
This commit primarily adds the ability to control what kind of LTO happens when
rustc performs LTO, namely allowing values to be specified to the `-C lto`
option, such as `-C lto=thin` and `-C lto=fat`. (where "fat" is the previous
kind of LTO, throw everything in one giant module)
Along the way this also refactors a number of fields which store information
about whether LTO/ThinLTO are enabled to unify them all into one field through
which everything is dispatched, hopefully removing a number of special cases
throughout.
This is intended to help mitigate #47409 but will require a backport as well,
and this would unfortunately need to be an otherwise insta-stable option.
Create the concept of an `StructuredDiagnostic` that is self-contained
with enough knowledge of all variables to create a `DiagnosticBuilder`,
including different possible versions (one line output and expanded
explanations).
Use DefIndex encoding that works better with on-disk variable length integer representations.
Use the least instead of the most significant bit for representing the address space.
r? @eddyb
Use name-discarding LLVM context
This is only applicable when neither of --emit=llvm-ir or --emit=llvm-bc are not
requested.
In case either of these outputs are wanted, but the benefits of such context are
desired as well, -Zfewer_names option provides the same functionality regardless
of the outputs requested.
Should be a viable fix for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/46449
This showed up on the Windows bot for testing this PR, and this pr allows
`mark_incr_comp_session_as_invalid` ok if it's already invalid, hopefully
avoiding scary ICEs and instead leaving the nicely printed errors
This is only applicable when neither of --emit=llvm-ir or --emit=llvm-bc are not
requested.
In case either of these outputs are wanted, but the benefits of such context are
desired as well, -Zfewer_names option provides the same functionality regardless
of the outputs requested.
rustc: Set release mode cgus to 16 by default
This commit is the next attempt to enable multiple codegen units by default in
release mode, getting some of those sweet, sweet parallelism wins by running
codegen in parallel. Performance should not be lost due to ThinLTO being on by
default as well.
Closes#45320
This commit is the next attempt to enable multiple codegen units by default in
release mode, getting some of those sweet, sweet parallelism wins by running
codegen in parallel. Performance should not be lost due to ThinLTO being on by
default as well.
Closes#45320
In particular, -Znll might as well imply -Zborrowck=mir by default,
just like `#![feature(nll)]` does.
Also, if NLL is in use, no reason to emit end regions. The NLL pass
just strips them out anyway.
304c8b1eda made the Session's one-time-diagnostics set take a
special-purpose `DiagnosticMessageId` enum rather than a LintID so that
it could support more than just lints, but the `diag_span_note_once` and
`diag_note_once` methods continued to take references to lints: for API
consistency, we now make these methods take a `DiagnosticMessageId`
while we add support for one-time span-suggestions.
This commit prepares to enable ThinLTO and multiple codegen units in release
mode by default. We've still got a debuginfo bug or two to sort out before
actually turning it on by default.
show macro backtrace with -Z flag
Fixes#39413 by adding a facility to restore the "old school" macro expansion backtraces (previously removed in 61865384b8).
The restored functionality is accessed through the flag `-Z external-macro-backtrace`. Errors showing the truncated backtraces will suggest this flag.
### Example
Code: <details>
`a/src/lib.rs`
```rust
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! a {
() => { a!(@) };
(@) => { a!(@@) };
(@@) => {
syntax error;
}
}
```
`b/src/main.rs`
```rust
#[macro_use] extern crate a;
macro_rules! b {
() => { b!(@) };
(@) => { b!(@@) };
(@@) => {
syntax error;
}
}
fn main() {
a!();
b!();
}
```
</details>
<br/><br/>
Running without env var (note: first error is from remote macro, second from local macro):
<details>
```
$ cargo +custom run
Compiling b v0.1.0
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `{`, `}`, or an operator, found `error`
--> src/main.rs:12:5
|
12 | a!();
| ^^^^^
| |
| expected one of 8 possible tokens here
| unexpected token
|
= note: this error originates in a macro outside of the current crate (run with RUST_MACRO_BACKTRACE=1 for more info)
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `{`, `}`, or an operator, found `error`
--> src/main.rs:7:16
|
7 | syntax error;
| -^^^^^ unexpected token
| |
| expected one of 8 possible tokens here
...
13 | b!();
| ----- in this macro invocation
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
error: Could not compile `b`.
To learn more, run the command again with --verbose.
```
</details>
The output is the same as today, except for an addition to the note which aids discoverability of the new environment variable.
<br/><br/>
Running _with_ env var:
<details>
```
$ RUST_MACRO_BACKTRACE=1 cargo +custom run
Compiling b v0.1.0
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `{`, `}`, or an operator, found `error`
--> <a macros>:1:72
|
1 | ( ) => { a ! ( @ ) } ; ( @ ) => { a ! ( @ @ ) } ; ( @ @ ) => { syntax error ;
| -^^^^^ unexpected token
| |
| expected one of 8 possible tokens here
src/main.rs:12:5: 12:10 note: in this expansion of a! (defined in <a macros>)
<a macros>:1:11: 1:20 note: in this expansion of a! (defined in <a macros>)
<a macros>:1:36: 1:47 note: in this expansion of a! (defined in <a macros>)
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `{`, `}`, or an operator, found `error`
--> src/main.rs:7:16
|
7 | syntax error;
| -^^^^^ unexpected token
| |
| expected one of 8 possible tokens here
src/main.rs:12:5: 12:10 note: in this expansion of a! (defined in <a macros>)
<a macros>:1:11: 1:20 note: in this expansion of a! (defined in <a macros>)
<a macros>:1:36: 1:47 note: in this expansion of a! (defined in <a macros>)
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `{`, `}`, or an operator, found `error`
--> src/main.rs:7:16
|
7 | syntax error;
| -^^^^^ unexpected token
| |
| expected one of 8 possible tokens here
src/main.rs:13:5: 13:10 note: in this expansion of b! (defined in src/main.rs)
src/main.rs:4:13: 4:18 note: in this expansion of b! (defined in src/main.rs)
src/main.rs:5:14: 5:20 note: in this expansion of b! (defined in src/main.rs)
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
error: Could not compile `b`.
To learn more, run the command again with --verbose.
```
</details>
The output is hard to read, but better than nothing (and it's exactly what we used to have before the infamous `fix_multispans_in_std_macros`).
<br/><br/>
Wishlist:
- Save the actual source of macros in crate metadata, not just AST, so the output can be improved
- Hopefully this would allow line numbers in the trace as well
- Show the actual macro invocations in the traces
r? @nrc
This commit adds a new target to the compiler: wasm32-unknown-unknown. This
target is a reimagining of what it looks like to generate WebAssembly code from
Rust. Instead of using Emscripten which can bring with it a weighty runtime this
instead is a target which uses only the LLVM backend for WebAssembly and a
"custom linker" for now which will hopefully one day be direct calls to lld.
Notable features of this target include:
* There is zero runtime footprint. The target assumes nothing exists other than
the wasm32 instruction set.
* There is zero toolchain footprint beyond adding the target. No custom linker
is needed, rustc contains everything.
* Very small wasm modules can be generated directly from Rust code using this
target.
* Most of the standard library is stubbed out to return an error, but anything
related to allocation works (aka `HashMap`, `Vec`, etc).
* Naturally, any `#[no_std]` crate should be 100% compatible with this new
target.
This target is currently somewhat janky due to how linking works. The "linking"
is currently unconditional whole program LTO (aka LLVM is being used as a
linker). Naturally that means compiling programs is pretty slow! Eventually
though this target should have a linker.
This target is also intended to be quite experimental. I'm hoping that this can
act as a catalyst for further experimentation in Rust with WebAssembly. Breaking
changes are very likely to land to this target, so it's not recommended to rely
on it in any critical capacity yet. We'll let you know when it's "production
ready".
---
Currently testing-wise this target is looking pretty good but isn't complete.
I've got almost the entire `run-pass` test suite working with this target (lots
of tests ignored, but many passing as well). The `core` test suite is still
getting LLVM bugs fixed to get that working and will take some time. Relatively
simple programs all seem to work though!
---
It's worth nothing that you may not immediately see the "smallest possible wasm
module" for the input you feed to rustc. For various reasons it's very difficult
to get rid of the final "bloat" in vanilla rustc (again, a real linker should
fix all this). For now what you'll have to do is:
cargo install --git https://github.com/alexcrichton/wasm-gc
wasm-gc foo.wasm bar.wasm
And then `bar.wasm` should be the smallest we can get it!
---
In any case for now I'd love feedback on this, particularly on the various
integration points if you've got better ideas of how to approach them!
The `ErrorId` variant takes a u16 so that `DiagnosticMessageId` can retain
its `Copy` status (the present author's first choice having been the "EXXX"
code as a string).
The duplicated "type mismatch resolving `{}`" literal is unfortunate, but
the `struct_span_err!` macro (which we want to mark that error code as
used) is fussy about taking a literal, and the one-time-diagnostics set
needs an owned string.
This is concerning #33941 and probably #45805!
Avoid repetition on “use of unstable library feature 'rustc_private'”
This PR fixes the error by only emitting it when the span contains a real file (is not inside a macro) - and making sure it's emitted only once per span.
The first check was needed because spans-within-macros seem to differ a lot and "fixing" them to the real location is not trivial (and the method that does this is private to another module). It also feels like there always will be an error on import, with the real file name, so not sure there's a point to re-emit the same error at macro use.
Fix#44953.