Commit Graph

995 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
8e6f69afc9 Auto merge of #77962 - bugadani:arena2, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove arena's dependency on `rustc_data_structures`

`rustc_arena` currently has a dependency on `rustc_data_structures` because of a trivial "don't inline me" function. This PR copies that function and removes the dependency.
2020-10-16 04:40:53 +00:00
Joshua Nelson
65835d1059 Deny broken intra-doc links in linkchecker
Since rustdoc isn't warning about these links, check for them manually.
2020-10-15 20:22:16 -04:00
Dániel Buga
52ff31a7eb Arena: Copy cold_path and remove rustc_data_structures dependency 2020-10-15 10:56:33 +02:00
Eric Huss
71bf7cfce1 Update cargo 2020-10-14 18:17:47 -07:00
Arlo Siemsen
3296d5ca7b Add support for SHA256 source file hashing for LLVM 11+. 2020-10-14 15:09:51 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
16612a9292
Rollup merge of #77239 - shepmaster:silicon-ci-plus, r=pietroalbini
Enable building Cargo for aarch64-apple-darwin

r? @ghost
2020-10-14 06:02:12 +09:00
Jake Goulding
d909d69d3a Upgrade OpenSSL to 1.1.1h and add support for aarch64-apple-darwin 2020-10-12 13:57:39 -04:00
Pietro Albini
f3d07b36ed
build-manifest: allow configuring the number of threads 2020-10-12 19:53:28 +02:00
Mateusz Mikuła
5aa661757a Update crossbeam-channel to avoid UB 2020-10-11 23:40:29 +02:00
Aaron Hill
44fdfd66ab
Bump backtrace-rs
Fixes #77791
2020-10-11 13:52:20 -04:00
Stefan Lankes
98fcc3fbc7
using the latest version of libhermit-rs 2020-10-11 11:53:54 +02:00
bors
cae8bc1f23 Auto merge of #77731 - cuviper:big-endian-backtrace, r=alexcrichton
Update the backtrace crate to fix big-endian ELF

Pulls in rust-lang/backtrace-rs#373.
Fixes #77410.

r? `@alexcrichton`
2020-10-10 12:51:15 +00:00
bors
7b06cb1052 Auto merge of #77747 - flip1995:clippyup, r=Manishearth
Update Clippy

Biweekly Clippy update.

This includes a `Cargo.lock` update: 7ea42be

r? `@Manishearth`
2020-10-09 17:14:39 +00:00
flip1995
7ea42be036
Update Cargo.lock 2020-10-09 12:46:26 +02:00
bors
6b8b396aee Auto merge of #77698 - vandenheuvel:chalkup, r=jackh726
Update chalk to 0.32.0

r? `@jackh726`
2020-10-09 10:32:52 +00:00
Josh Stone
4addede1e7 Update the backtrace crate to fix big-endian ELF 2020-10-08 17:17:28 -07:00
Bram van den Heuvel
e185278534 Update chalk to 0.32.0 2020-10-08 13:17:01 +02:00
Joshua Nelson
8b22d079bf Upgrade to tracing 0.2.13
The primary motivation is to get the changes from
https://github.com/tokio-rs/tracing/pull/990. Example output:

```
$ RUSTDOC_LOG=debug rustdoc +rustc2
warning: some trace filter directives would enable traces that are disabled statically
 | `debug` would enable the DEBUG level for all targets
 = note: the static max level is `info`
 = help: to enable DEBUG logging, remove the `max_level_info` feature
```

- Remove useless test

  This was testing for an ICE when passing `RUST_LOG=rustc_middle`.  I
  noticed it because it started giving the tracing warning (because tests
  are not run with debug-logging enabled). Since this bug seems unlikely
  to re-occur, I just removed it altogether.
2020-10-07 19:27:10 -04:00
bors
59dafb876e Auto merge of #77630 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-kfwl55z, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 11 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #76784 (Add some docs to rustdoc::clean::inline and def_id functions)
 - #76911 (fix VecDeque::iter_mut aliasing issues)
 - #77400 (Fix suggestions for x.py setup)
 - #77515 (Update to chalk 0.31)
 - #77568 (inliner: use caller param_env)
 - #77571 (Use matches! for core::char methods)
 - #77582 (Move `EarlyOtherwiseBranch` to mir-opt-level 2)
 - #77590 (Update RLS and Rustfmt)
 - #77605 (Fix rustc_def_path to show the full path and not the trimmed one)
 - #77614 (Let backends access span information)
 - #77624 (Add c as a shorthand check alternative for new options #77603)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
2020-10-06 23:07:17 +00:00
Dylan DPC
6951c3180e
Rollup merge of #77590 - Xanewok:update-rls, r=dtolnay
Update RLS and Rustfmt

refs: https://github.com/rust-lang/rls/pull/1701

cc @calebcartwright

r? @dtolnay
2020-10-07 00:16:10 +02:00
bors
98edd1fbf8 Auto merge of #77386 - joshtriplett:static-glibc, r=petrochenkov
Support static linking with glibc and target-feature=+crt-static

With this change, it's possible to build on a linux-gnu target and pass
RUSTFLAGS='-C target-feature=+crt-static' or the equivalent via a
`.cargo/config.toml` file, and get a statically linked executable.

Update to libc 0.2.78, which adds support for static linking with glibc.

Add `crt_static_respected` to the `linux_base` target spec.

Update `android_base` and `linux_musl_base` accordingly. Avoid enabling
crt_static_respected on Android platforms, since that hasn't been
tested.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65447.
2020-10-06 21:11:04 +00:00
Jack Huey
23491084bc Update to chalk 0.31. Implement some unimplemented. Ignore some tests in compare mode chalk don't finish. 2020-10-06 14:14:25 -04:00
Igor Matuszewski
1b9c45bddc Update RLS and Rustfmt 2020-10-05 21:40:20 +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
Josh Triplett
16ebf750cf Update libc to 0.2.79
This also fixes issues with inconsistent `unsafe` on functions.
2020-10-04 22:12:07 -07:00
Dylan DPC
fffeaa7b83
Rollup merge of #77407 - pietroalbini:less-build-manifest, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Improve build-manifest to work with the improved promote-release

This PR makes some changes to build-manifest to have it work better with the other improvements I'm making to [promote-release](https://github.com/rust-lang/promote-release).

A new way to invoke the tool was added: `./x.py run src/tools/build-manifest`. The new invocation disables the generation of `.sha256` files and the generation of GPG signatures, as those steps are not tied to the Rust version we're building the manifest of: handling them in `promote-release` will improve the maintenability of our release process. Invocations through the old command (`./x.py dist hash-and-sign`) are referred inside the source code as "legacy". The new invocation also enables internal parallelism, disabled on legacy to avoid overloading our old server.

Improvements were also made on how the checksums included in the manifest are generated:

* The manifest is first generated with placeholder checksums, and then a function walks through the manifes and calculates only the needed hashes. Before this PR, all the hashes were calculated beforehand, including the hashes of unused files.
* Calculating the hashes is now done in parallel with rayon, to better utilize all the available disk bandwidth.
* The `sha2` crate is now used instead of the `sha256sum` CLI tool: this avoids the overhead of calling another process, but more importantly enables hardware acceleration whenever available (the `sha256sum` CLI tool doesn't support it at all).

r? @Mark-Simulacrum
This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.
2020-10-05 02:29:33 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
6e25418474
Rollup merge of #75143 - oli-obk:tracing, r=RalfJung
Use `tracing` spans to trace the entire MIR interp stack

r? @RalfJung

While being very verbose, this allows really good tracking of what's going on. While I considered schemes like the previous indenter that we had (which we could get by using the `tracing-tree` crate), this will break down horribly with things like multithreaded rustc. Instead, we can now use `RUSTC_LOG` to restrict the things being traced. You could specify a filter in a way that only shows the logging of a specific frame.

![screenshot of command line output of the new formatting](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/332036/89291343-aa40de00-d65a-11ea-9f6c-ea06c1806327.png)

If we lower the span's level to `debug`, then in `info` level logging we'd not see the frames, but in `debug` level we would see them. The filtering rules in `tracing` are super powerful, but  I'm not sure if we can specify a filter so we do see `debug` level events, but *not* the `frame` spans. The documentation at https://docs.rs/tracing-subscriber/0.2.10/tracing_subscriber/struct.EnvFilter.html makes me think that we can only turn on things, not turn off things at a more precise level.

cc @hawkw
2020-10-04 11:44:49 +09:00
Pietro Albini
acd8e59b66
build-manifest: calculate checksums lazily and in parallel
This commit improves the way build-manifest calculates the checksums
included in the manifest, speeding it up:

* Instead of calculating all the hashes beforehand and then using the
  ones we need, the manifest is first generated with placeholder hashes,
  and then a function walks through the manifest and calculates only the
  needed checksums.

* Calculating the checksums is now done in parallel with rayon, to
  better utilize all the available disk bandwidth.

* Calculating the checksums now uses the sha2 crate instead of the
  sha256sum CLI tool: this avoids the overhead of calling another
  process, but more importantly uses hardware acceleration whenever
  available (the CLI tool doesn't support it at all).
2020-10-01 17:30:24 +02:00
bors
9b77a6a200 Auto merge of #77145 - pietroalbini:refactor-build-manifest-versions, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Refactor versions detection in build-manifest

This PR refactors how `build-manifest` handles versions, making the following changes:

* `build-manifest` now detects the "package releases" on its own, without relying on rustbuild providing them through CLI arguments. This drastically simplifies calling the tool outside of `x.py`, and will allow to ship the prebuilt tool in a tarball in the future, with the goal of stopping to invoke `x.py` during `promote-release`.
* The `tar` command is not used to extract the version and the git hash from tarballs anymore. The `flate2` and `tar` crates are used instead. This makes detecting those pieces of data way faster, as the archive is decompressed just once and we stop parsing the archive once all the information is retrieved.
* The code to extract the version and the git hash now stores all the collected data dynamically, without requiring to add new fields to the `Builder` struct every time.

I tested the changes locally and it should behave the same as before.

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
2020-09-29 16:41:53 +00:00
Oliver Scherer
43c181bac4 Use tracing spans to trace the entire MIR interp stack 2020-09-28 20:07:57 +02:00
bors
4e3eb52493 Auto merge of #77265 - vandenheuvel:chalkup, r=Dylan-DPC
Update chalk to 0.29.0
2020-09-28 06:20:02 +00:00
bors
7f7a1cbfd3 Auto merge of #77229 - tmiasko:liveness, r=lcnr
Small improvements in liveness pass

* Remove redundant debug logging (`add_variable` already contains logging).
* Remove redundant fields for a number of live nodes and variables.
* Delay conversion from a symbol to a string until linting.
* Inline contents of specials struct.
* Remove unnecessary local variable exit_ln.
* Use newtype_index for Variable and LiveNode.
* Access live nodes directly through self.lnks[ln].

No functional changes intended (except those related to the logging).
2020-09-27 19:38:01 +00:00
Bram van den Heuvel
ef7377eb05 Update chalk to 0.29.0 2020-09-27 15:54:07 +02:00
Tomasz Miąsko
57d38975cc liveness: Use newtype_index for Variable and LiveNode 2020-09-26 16:44:41 +02:00
Ralf Jung
7ff5b44a58
Rollup merge of #77127 - camelid:update-mdbook, r=Dylan-DPC
Update mdBook

0.4.2 -> 0.4.3

Also updated version requirement in `Cargo.toml` from 0.4.0 to 0.4.3.
2020-09-26 12:58:22 +02:00
bors
b984ef6797 Auto merge of #77152 - vandenheuvel:update_chalk_further, r=jackh726
Update chalk to 0.28.0
2020-09-25 12:22:05 +00:00
Bram van den Heuvel
51c781f613 Upgrade chalk to 0.28.0 2020-09-24 20:54:33 +02:00
Pietro Albini
89ffab76b7
build-manifest: refactor detecting package versions 2020-09-24 19:26:43 +02:00
Bram van den Heuvel
5f67571e34 Update chalk to 0.27.0 2020-09-24 19:10:01 +02:00
Bram van den Heuvel
61b2a6f5e5 Update chalk to 0.26.0 2020-09-24 19:10:01 +02:00
Bram van den Heuvel
ed784023e5 Update chalk to 0.25.0 2020-09-24 19:10:01 +02:00
Bram van den Heuvel
cb660c6ab5 Update chalk to 0.24.0 2020-09-24 19:10:01 +02:00
Bram van den Heuvel
52eeff6fbe Update chalk to 0.23.0 2020-09-24 19:10:00 +02:00
Bram van den Heuvel
b832a97a51 Update chalk to 0.22.0 2020-09-24 19:10:00 +02:00
flip1995
d445493479
Update Cargo.lock 2020-09-24 14:51:13 +02:00
Camelid
945a732dd6 Update mdBook
0.4.2 -> 0.4.3
2020-09-23 16:18:59 -07:00
Andreas Jonson
6586c37bec Move MiniSet to data_structures
remove the need for T to be copy from MiniSet as was done for MiniMap
2020-09-23 08:09:16 +02:00
bors
6d3acf5129 Auto merge of #76928 - lcnr:opaque-types-cache, r=tmandry
cache types during normalization

partially fixes #75992

reduces the following test from 14 to 3 seconds locally.

cc `@Mark-Simulacrum` would it make sense to add that test to `perf`?
```rust
#![recursion_limit="2048"]
#![type_length_limit="112457564"]

pub async fn h0(v: &String, x: &u64) { println!("{} {}", v, x) }
pub async fn h1(v: &String, x: &u64) { h0(v, x).await }
pub async fn h2(v: &String, x: &u64) { h1(v, x).await }
pub async fn h3(v: &String, x: &u64) { h2(v, x).await }
pub async fn h4(v: &String, x: &u64) { h3(v, x).await }
pub async fn h5(v: &String, x: &u64) { h4(v, x).await }
pub async fn h6(v: &String, x: &u64) { h5(v, x).await }
pub async fn h7(v: &String, x: &u64) { h6(v, x).await }
pub async fn h8(v: &String, x: &u64) { h7(v, x).await }
pub async fn h9(v: &String, x: &u64) { h8(v, x).await }

pub async fn h10(v: &String, x: &u64) { h9(v, x).await }
pub async fn h11(v: &String, x: &u64) { h10(v, x).await }
pub async fn h12(v: &String, x: &u64) { h11(v, x).await }
pub async fn h13(v: &String, x: &u64) { h12(v, x).await }
pub async fn h14(v: &String, x: &u64) { h13(v, x).await }
pub async fn h15(v: &String, x: &u64) { h14(v, x).await }
pub async fn h16(v: &String, x: &u64) { h15(v, x).await }
pub async fn h17(v: &String, x: &u64) { h16(v, x).await }
pub async fn h18(v: &String, x: &u64) { h17(v, x).await }
pub async fn h19(v: &String, x: &u64) { h18(v, x).await }

macro_rules! async_recursive {
    (29, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(28, $inner) }.await };
    (28, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(27, $inner) }.await };
    (27, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(26, $inner) }.await };
    (26, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(25, $inner) }.await };
    (25, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(24, $inner) }.await };
    (24, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(23, $inner) }.await };
    (23, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(22, $inner) }.await };
    (22, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(21, $inner) }.await };
    (21, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(20, $inner) }.await };
    (20, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(19, $inner) }.await };

    (19, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(18, $inner) }.await };
    (18, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(17, $inner) }.await };
    (17, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(16, $inner) }.await };
    (16, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(15, $inner) }.await };
    (15, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(14, $inner) }.await };
    (14, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(13, $inner) }.await };
    (13, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(12, $inner) }.await };
    (12, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(11, $inner) }.await };
    (11, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(10, $inner) }.await };
    (10, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(9, $inner) }.await };

    (9, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(8, $inner) }.await };
    (8, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(7, $inner) }.await };
    (7, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(6, $inner) }.await };
    (6, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(5, $inner) }.await };
    (5, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(4, $inner) }.await };
    (4, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(3, $inner) }.await };
    (3, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(2, $inner) }.await };
    (2, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(1, $inner) }.await };
    (1, $inner:expr) => { async { async_recursive!(0, $inner) }.await };
    (0, $inner:expr) => { async { h19(&String::from("owo"), &0).await; $inner }.await };
}

async fn f() {
    async_recursive!(14, println!("hello"));
}

fn main() {
    let _ = f();
}
```
r? `@eddyb` requires a perf run.
2020-09-22 22:52:07 +00:00
bors
b01326ab03 Auto merge of #76680 - Julian-Wollersberger:nongeneric_ensure_sufficient_stack, r=jyn514
Make `ensure_sufficient_stack()` non-generic, using cargo-llvm-lines

Inspired by [this blog post](https://blog.mozilla.org/nnethercote/2020/08/05/how-to-speed-up-the-rust-compiler-some-more-in-2020/) from `@nnethercote,` I used [cargo-llvm-lines](https://github.com/dtolnay/cargo-llvm-lines/) on the rust compiler itself, to improve it's compile time. This PR contains only one low-hanging fruit, but I also want to share some measurements.

The function `ensure_sufficient_stack()` was monomorphized 1500 times, and with it the `stacker` and `psm` crates, for a total of 1.5% of all llvm IR lines. With some trickery I convert the generic closure into a dynamic one, and thus all that code is only monomorphized once.

# Measurements
Getting these numbers took some fiddling with CLI flags and I [modified](https://github.com/Julian-Wollersberger/cargo-llvm-lines/blob/master/src/main.rs#L115) cargo-llvm-lines to read from a folder instead of invoking cargo. Commands I used:
```
./x.py clean
RUSTFLAGS="--emit=llvm-ir -C link-args=-fuse-ld=lld -Z self-profile=profile" CARGOFLAGS_BOOTSTRAP="-Ztimings" RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=1 ./x.py build -i --stage 1 library/std

# Then manually copy all .ll files into a folder I hardcoded in cargo-llvm-lines in main.rs#L115
cd ../cargo-llvm-lines
cargo run llvm-lines
```

The result is this list (see [first 500 lines](https://github.com/Julian-Wollersberger/cargo-llvm-lines/blob/master/llvm-lines-rustc-before.txt) ), before the change:
```
  Lines            Copies        Function name
  -----            ------        -------------
  16894211 (100%)  58417 (100%)  (TOTAL)
   2223855 (13.2%)   502 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::get_query_impl::{{closure}}
   1331918 (7.9%)   1287 (2.2%)  hashbrown::raw::RawTable<T>::reserve_rehash
    774434 (4.6%)  12043 (20.6%) core::ptr::drop_in_place
    294170 (1.7%)    499 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::dep_graph::graph::DepGraph<K>::with_task_impl
    245410 (1.5%)   1552 (2.7%)  psm::on_stack::with_on_stack
    210311 (1.2%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_target::spec::load_specific
    200962 (1.2%)    513 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::get_query_impl
    190704 (1.1%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::query::<impl rustc_middle::ty::context::TyCtxt>::alloc_self_profile_query_strings
    180272 (1.1%)    468 (0.8%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::load_from_disk_and_cache_in_memory
    177396 (1.1%)    114 (0.2%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::force_query_impl
    161134 (1.0%)    445 (0.8%)  rustc_query_system::dep_graph::graph::DepGraph<K>::with_anon_task
    141551 (0.8%)    186 (0.3%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::incremental_verify_ich
    110191 (0.7%)      7 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::context::_DERIVE_rustc_serialize_Decodable_D_FOR_TypeckResults::<impl rustc_serialize::serialize::Decodable<__D> for rustc_middle::ty::context::TypeckResults>::decode::{{closure}}
    108590 (0.6%)    420 (0.7%)  core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
     88488 (0.5%)     21 (0.0%)  rustc_query_system::dep_graph::graph::DepGraph<K>::try_mark_previous_green
     86368 (0.5%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::query::stats::query_stats
     85654 (0.5%)   3973 (6.8%)  <&T as core::fmt::Debug>::fmt
     84475 (0.5%)      1 (0.0%)  rustc_middle::ty::query::Queries::try_collect_active_jobs
     81220 (0.5%)    862 (1.5%)  <hashbrown::raw::RawIterHash<T> as core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator>::next
     77636 (0.5%)     54 (0.1%)  core::slice::sort::recurse
     66484 (0.4%)    461 (0.8%)  <hashbrown::raw::RawIter<T> as core::iter::traits::iterator::Iterator>::next
```

All `.ll` files together had 4.4GB. After my change they had 4.2GB. So a few percent less code LLVM has to process. Hurray!
Sadly, I couldn't measure an actual wall-time improvement. Watching YouTube while compiling added to much noise...

Here is the top of the list after the change:
```
  16460866 (100%)  58341 (100%)  (TOTAL)
   1903085 (11.6%)   504 (0.9%)  rustc_query_system::query::plumbing::get_query_impl::{{closure}}
   1331918 (8.1%)   1287 (2.2%)  hashbrown::raw::RawTable<T>::reserve_rehash
    777796 (4.7%)  12031 (20.6%) core::ptr::drop_in_place
    551462 (3.4%)   1519 (2.6%)  rustc_data_structures::stack::ensure_sufficient_stack::{{closure}}
```
Note that the total was reduced by 430 000 lines and `psm::on_stack::with_on_stack` has disappeared. Instead `rustc_data_structures::stack::ensure_sufficient_stack::{{closure}}` appeared. I'm confused about that one, but it seems to consist of inlined calls to `rustc_query_system::*` stuff.

Further note the other two big culprits in this list: `rustc_query_system` and `hashbrown`. These two are monomorphized many times, the query system summing to more than 20% of all lines, not even counting code that's probably inlined elsewhere.
Assuming compile times scale linearly with llvm-lines, that means a possible 20% compile time reduction.

Reducing eg. `get_query_impl` would probably need a major refactoring of the qery system though. _Everything_ in there is generic over multiple types, has associated types and passes generic Self arguments by value. Which means you can't simply make things `dyn`.

---------------------------------------
This PR is a small step to make rustc compile faster and thus make contributing to rustc less painful. Nonetheless I love Rust and I find the work around rustc fascinating :)
2020-09-21 17:32:57 +00:00
Ralf Jung
8fa75a2b3a
Rollup merge of #76628 - jyn514:default-config-files, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Add sample defaults for config.toml

- Allow including defaults in `src/bootstrap/defaults` using `profile = "..."`.
- Add default config files, with a README noting they're experimental and asking you to open an issue if you run into trouble. The config files have comments explaining why the defaults are set.
- Combine config files using the `merge` dependency.

This introduces a new dependency on `merge` that hasn't yet been vetted.

I want to improve the output when `include = "x"` isn't found:

```
thread 'main' panicked at 'fs::read_to_string(&file) failed with No such file or directory (os error 2) ("configuration file did not exist")', src/bootstrap/config.rs:522:28
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
failed to run: /home/joshua/rustc/build/bootstrap/debug/bootstrap test tidy
Build completed unsuccessfully in 0:00:00
```

However that seems like it could be fixed in a follow-up.

Closes #76619
2020-09-21 10:40:28 +02:00
Joshua Nelson
c9c8fb88cf Add sample defaults for config.toml
- Allow including defaults in `src/bootstrap/defaults` using `profile = "..."`
- Add default config files
- Combine config files using the merge dependency.
- Add comments to default config files
- Add a README asking to open an issue if the defaults are bad
- Give a loud error if trying to merge `.target`, since it's not
  currently supported
- Use an exhaustive match
- Use `<none>` in config.toml.example to avoid confusion
- Fix bugs in `Merge` derives

Previously, it would completely ignore the profile defaults if there
were any settings in `config.toml`. I sent an email to the `merge` maintainer
asking them to make the behavior in this commit the default.

This introduces a new dependency on `merge` that hasn't yet been vetted.

I want to improve the output when `include = "x"` isn't found:

```
thread 'main' panicked at 'fs::read_to_string(&file) failed with No such file or directory (os error 2) ("configuration file did not exist")', src/bootstrap/config.rs:522:28
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
failed to run: /home/joshua/rustc/build/bootstrap/debug/bootstrap test tidy
Build completed unsuccessfully in 0:00:00
```

However that seems like it could be fixed in a follow-up.
2020-09-20 16:18:58 -04:00
Julian Wollersberger
53aaa1e532 To avoid monomorphizing psm::on_stack::with_on_stack 1500 times, I made a change in stacker to wrap the callback in dyn. 2020-09-20 19:07:52 +02:00
Ralf Jung
0e90875968 update Miri 2020-09-20 17:05:12 +02:00
Bastian Kauschke
1146c39da7 cache types during normalization 2020-09-19 17:27:13 +02:00
bors
b3aae050cd Auto merge of #76880 - shepmaster:cc-rs, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update cc crate to 1.0.60 to understand aarch64-apple-darwin with clang

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`

/cc `@alexcrichton`
2020-09-19 13:31:23 +00:00
bors
4e8a8b49ae Auto merge of #76879 - shepmaster:zlib-sys, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Upgrade libz-sys to 1.1.2

The current version has warnings that become errors on new versions of clang shipped in XCode:

```
warning: src/zlib/gzlib.c:214:15: error: implicitly declaring library function 'snprintf' with type 'int (char *, unsigned long, const char *, ...)' [-Werror,-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
warning:         (void)snprintf(state->path, len + 1, "%s", (const char *)path);
warning:               ^
warning: src/zlib/gzlib.c:214:15: note: include the header <stdio.h> or explicitly provide a declaration for 'snprintf'
warning: 1 error generated.

warning: src/zlib/gzwrite.c:428:11: error: implicitly declaring library function 'vsnprintf' with type 'int (char *, unsigned long, const char *, __builtin_va_list)' [-Werror,-Wimplicit-function-declaration
warning:     len = vsnprintf(next, state->size, format, va);
warning:           ^
warning: src/zlib/gzwrite.c:428:11: note: include the header <stdio.h> or explicitly provide a declaration for 'vsnprintf'
warning: 1 error generated.
```

r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`

/cc `@joshtriplett`
2020-09-19 06:28:37 +00:00
Pietro Albini
3bddfea7e2
build-manifest: stop receiving release numbers from bootstrap 2020-09-18 17:42:58 +02:00
bors
fdc3405c20 Auto merge of #72412 - VFLashM:issue-72408-nested-closures-exponential, r=tmandry
Issue 72408 nested closures exponential

This fixes #72408.

Nested closures were resulting in exponential compilation time.

This PR is enhancing asymptotic complexity, but also increasing the constant, so I would love to see perf run results.
2020-09-18 14:08:39 +00:00
Jake Goulding
9803c9b252 Update cc crate to understand aarch64-apple-darwin with clang 2020-09-18 09:22:07 -04:00
Jake Goulding
15bd2365fc Upgrade libz-sys to 1.1.2 2020-09-18 09:18:10 -04:00
Valerii Lashmanov
f583513dc2 Intorduced MiniMap - a tiny small storage optimized map implementation
This makes everything about 1% faster in rustc-perf,
mostly negating performance hit of previous commit.
2020-09-17 20:44:11 -05:00
Valerii Lashmanov
2f3296192b Only visit types once when walking the type tree
This fixes #72408.

Nested closures were resulting in exponential compilation time.

As a performance optimization this change introduces MiniSet,
which is a simple small storage optimized set.
2020-09-17 20:44:11 -05:00
Dylan DPC
1fd22fc34e
Rollup merge of #76689 - jyn514:update-pulldown, r=GuillaumeGomez
Upgrade to pulldown-cmark 0.8.0

Thanks to marcusklaas' hard work in https://github.com/raphlinus/pulldown-cmark/pull/469, this fixes a lot of rustdoc bugs!

- Get rid of unnecessary `RefCell`
- Fix duplicate warnings for broken implicit reference link
- Remove unnecessary copy of links

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73264, closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76687.
r? @euclio

I'm not sure if the switch away from `locate` fixes any open bugs - euclio mentioned some in https://github.com/raphlinus/pulldown-cmark/issues/165, but I didn't see any related issues open for rustdoc. Let me know if I missed one.
2020-09-16 01:30:44 +02:00
bors
b5f55b7e15 Auto merge of #76549 - ehuss:lints-comments, r=wesleywiser
Auto-generate lint documentation.

This adds a tool which will generate the lint documentation in the rustc book automatically. This is motivated by keeping the documentation up-to-date, and consistently formatted. It also ensures the examples are correct and that they actually generate the expected lint. The lint groups table is also auto-generated. See https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/349 for the original proposal.

An outline of how this works:
- The `declare_lint!` macro now accepts a doc comment where the documentation is written. This is inspired by how clippy works.
- A new tool `src/tools/lint-docs` scrapes the documentation and adds it to the rustc book during the build.
    - It runs each example and verifies its output and embeds the output in the book.
    - It does a few formatting checks.
    - It verifies that every lint is documented.
- Groups are collected from `rustc -W help`.

I updated the documentation for all the missing lints. I have also added an "Explanation" section to each lint providing a reason for the lint and suggestions on how to resolve it.

This can lead towards a future enhancement of possibly showing these docs via the `--explain` flag to make them easily accessible and discoverable.
2020-09-14 05:54:44 +00:00
Joshua Nelson
e4c28bf61a Upgrade to pulldown-cmark 0.8.0
Thanks to marcusklaas' hard work in https://github.com/raphlinus/pulldown-cmark/pull/469, this fixes a lot of rustdoc bugs!

- Get rid of unnecessary `RefCell`
- Fix duplicate warnings for broken implicit reference link
- Remove unnecessary copy of links
2020-09-13 20:15:01 -04:00
Eric Huss
45c1e0ae07 Auto-generate lint documentation. 2020-09-13 08:48:03 -07:00
Jonas Schievink
a447c21afa Don't query unstable data when staged_api is off 2020-09-13 02:10:39 +02:00
bors
bd51226305 Auto merge of #76632 - andjo403:updateDep, r=Mark-Simulacrum
update the version of itertools and parking_lot

this is to avoid compiling multiple version of the crates in rustc speeding up compilation of rustc

an old version of parking_lot is still used in measureme but new version will not be released for some time see [zulip chat](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/187831-t-compiler.2Fwg-self-profile/topic/new.20release.20of.20measureme)
2020-09-12 14:00:39 +00:00
Andreas Jonson
b8752fff19 update the version of itertools and parking_lot
this is to avoid compiling multiple version of the crates in rustc
2020-09-12 08:26:53 +02:00
Thomas de Zeeuw
7c3e1ffd7a Update libc in Cargo.lock 2020-09-10 16:27:28 +02:00
Matt Brubeck
15ccdeb224 Update to hashbrown 0.9 2020-09-08 17:23:26 -07:00
bors
fa79db83f6 Auto merge of #76210 - Mark-Simulacrum:tracing-update, r=oli-obk
Tracing update

This does not bring the more significant changes that are coming down the pipeline, but since I've already prepared the PR leaving it up :)

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76210#issuecomment-685065938:
> Unfortunately, tracing 0.1.20 — which contained the change to reduce the amount of code generated by the tracing macros — had to be yanked, as it broke previously-compiling code for some downstream crates. I've not yet had the chance to fix this and release a new patch. So, in order to benefit from the changes to reduce generated code, you'll need to wait until there's a new version of tracing as well as tracing-attributes and tracing-core.
2020-09-08 03:22:31 +00:00
bors
71569e4201 Auto merge of #75138 - jumbatm:session-diagnostic-derive, r=oli-obk
Add derive macro for specifying diagnostics using attributes.

Introduces `#[derive(SessionDiagnostic)]`, a derive macro for specifying structs that can be converted to Diagnostics using directions given by attributes on the struct and its fields. Currently, the following attributes have been implemented:
- `#[code = "..."]` -- this sets the Diagnostic's error code, and must be provided on the struct iself (ie, not on a field). Equivalent to calling `code`.
- `#[message = "..."]` -- this sets the Diagnostic's primary error message.
- `#[label = "..."]` -- this must be applied to fields of type `Span`, and is equivalent to `span_label`
- `#[suggestion(..)]` -- this allows a suggestion message to be supplied. This attribute must be applied to a field of type `Span` or `(Span, Applicability)`, and is equivalent to calling `span_suggestion`. Valid arguments are:
    - `message = "..."` -- this sets the suggestion message.
    - (Optional) `code = "..."` -- this suggests code for the suggestion. Defaults to empty.

`suggestion`also  comes with other variants: `#[suggestion_short(..)]`, `#[suggestion_hidden(..)]` and `#[suggestion_verbose(..)]` which all take the same keys.

Within the strings passed to each attribute, fields can be referenced without needing to be passed explicitly into the format string -- eg, `#[error = "{ident} already declared"] ` will set the error message to `format!("{} already declared", &self.ident)`. Any fields on the struct can be referenced in this way.

Additionally, for any of these attributes, Option fields can be used to only optionally apply the decoration -- for example:

```rust
#[derive(SessionDiagnostic)]
#[code = "E0123"]
struct SomeKindOfError {
    ...
    #[suggestion(message = "informative error message")]
    opt_sugg: Option<(Span, Applicability)>
    ...
}
```
will not emit a suggestion if `opt_sugg` is `None`.

We plan on iterating on this macro further; this PR is a start.

Closes #61132.

r? `@oli-obk`
2020-09-08 00:58:43 +00:00
bors
0e2c1281e9 Auto merge of #76044 - ecstatic-morse:dataflow-lattice, r=oli-obk
Support dataflow problems on arbitrary lattices

This PR implements last of the proposed extensions I mentioned in the design meeting for the original dataflow refactor. It extends the current dataflow framework to work with arbitrary lattices, not just `BitSet`s. This is a prerequisite for dataflow-enabled MIR const-propagation. Personally, I am skeptical of the usefulness of doing const-propagation pre-monomorphization, since many useful constants only become known after monomorphization (e.g. `size_of::<T>()`) and users have a natural tendency to hand-optimize the rest. It's probably worth exprimenting with, however, and others have shown interest cc `@rust-lang/wg-mir-opt.`

The `Idx` associated type is moved from `AnalysisDomain` to `GenKillAnalysis` and replaced with an associated `Domain` type that must implement `JoinSemiLattice`. Like before, each `Analysis` defines the "bottom value" for its domain, but can no longer override the dataflow join operator. Analyses that want to use set intersection must now use the `lattice::Dual` newtype. `GenKillAnalysis` impls have an additional requirement that `Self::Domain: BorrowMut<BitSet<Self::Idx>>`, which effectively means that they must use `BitSet<Self::Idx>` or `lattice::Dual<BitSet<Self::Idx>>` as their domain.

Most of these changes were mechanical. However, because a `Domain` is no longer always a powerset of some index type, we can no longer use an `IndexVec<BasicBlock, GenKillSet<A::Idx>>>` to store cached block transfer functions. Instead, we use a boxed `dyn Fn` trait object. I discuss a few alternatives to the current approach in a commit message.

The majority of new lines of code are to preserve existing Graphviz diagrams for those unlucky enough to have to debug dataflow analyses. I find these diagrams incredibly useful when things are going wrong and considered regressing them unacceptable, especially the pretty-printing of `MovePathIndex`s, which are used in many dataflow analyses. This required a parallel `fmt` trait used only for printing dataflow domains, as well as a refactoring of the `graphviz` module now that we cannot expect the domain to be a `BitSet`. Some features did have to be removed, such as the gen/kill display mode (which I didn't use but existed to mirror the output of the old dataflow framework) and line wrapping. Since I had to rewrite much of it anyway, I took the opportunity to switch to a `Visitor` for printing dataflow state diffs instead of using cursors, which are error prone for code that must be generic over both forward and backward analyses. As a side-effect of this change, we no longer have quadratic behavior when writing graphviz diagrams for backward dataflow analyses.

r? `@pnkfelix`
2020-09-07 21:29:43 +00:00
Caleb Cartwright
1ceb82488f Update RLS and Rustfmt 2020-09-05 15:40:07 -05:00
Jubilee Young
b97d4131fe Refactor byteorder to std in rustc_middle
Use std::io::{Read, Write} and {to, from}_{le, be}_bytes methods in
order to remove byteorder from librustc_middle's dependency graph.
2020-09-04 21:51:17 -07:00
Jack Huey
d66452c3e5 Upgrade chalk to 0.21 2020-09-04 19:12:54 -04:00
marmeladema
99c96c5bfe driver: replace lazy_static by SyncLazy from std 2020-09-01 22:06:47 +01:00
marmeladema
73a7204983 feature: replace lazy_static by SyncLazy from std 2020-09-01 22:06:47 +01:00
marmeladema
67b8f9491c hir: replace lazy_static by SyncLazy from std 2020-09-01 22:06:47 +01:00
marmeladema
1b650d0fea datastructures: replace lazy_static by SyncLazy from std 2020-09-01 22:06:47 +01:00
marmeladema
bd49eec3d7 interface: use OnceCell from standard library 2020-09-01 22:06:39 +01:00
Mark Rousskov
77d4f94201 Bump tracing 2020-09-01 14:39:46 -04:00
jumbatm
93eaf15646 Add SessionDiagnostic derive macro.
Co-authored-by: Oliver Scherer <github35764891676564198441@oli-obk.de>
2020-09-01 22:02:45 +10:00
Tyler Mandry
8d328d785f
Rollup merge of #76178 - matklad:et, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update expect-test to 1.0

The only change is that `expect_file` now uses path relative to the
current file (same as `include!`). Before, it used paths relative to
the workspace root, which makes no sense.
2020-08-31 19:18:31 -07:00
Eric Huss
103c497668 Update cargo 2020-08-31 14:08:53 -07:00
Aleksey Kladov
5716c3e18d Update expect-test to 1.0
The only change is that `expect_file` now uses path relative to the
current file (same as `include!`). Before, it used paths relative to
the workspace root, which makes no sense.
2020-08-31 21:04:09 +02:00
marmeladema
68500ffacb datastructures: replace once_cell crate with an impl from std 2020-08-30 20:06:14 +01:00
Dylan MacKenzie
a88dc37c54 Add regex dependency to librustc_mir 2020-08-30 11:15:21 -07:00
bors
62850d882b Auto merge of #76090 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-eksndcr, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 14 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #75832 (Move to intra-doc links for wasi/ext/fs.rs, os_str_bytes.rs…)
 - #75852 (Switch to intra-doc links in `core::hash`)
 - #75874 (Shorten liballoc doc intra link while readable)
 - #75881 (Expand rustdoc theme chooser x padding)
 - #75885 (Fix another clashing_extern_declarations false positive.)
 - #75892 (Fix typo in TLS Model in Unstable Book)
 - #75910 (Add test for issue #27130)
 - #75917 (Move to intra doc links for core::ptr::non_null)
 - #75975 (Allow --bess ing expect-tests in tools)
 - #75990 (Add __fastfail for Windows on arm/aarch64)
 - #76015 (Fix loading pretty-printers in rust-lldb script)
 - #76022 (Clean up rustdoc front-end source code)
 - #76029 (Move to intra-doc links for library/core/src/sync/atomic.rs)
 - #76057 (Move retokenize hack to save_analysis)

Failed merges:

r? @ghost
2020-08-30 00:47:37 +00:00
Dylan DPC
9d7d24d516
Rollup merge of #76057 - matklad:remove-retokenize, r=petrochenkov
Move retokenize hack to save_analysis

closes #76046
2020-08-30 01:44:01 +02:00
bors
ced37a53d9 Auto merge of #75775 - matklad:rustc-lexer-rustdoc-highlight, r=GuillaumeGomez
Use rustc_lexer for rustdoc syntax highlighting

r? @ghost
2020-08-29 22:42:08 +00:00
Ralf Jung
d150cd2c30 bump Miri 2020-08-29 21:19:31 +02:00
bors
7fc048f071 Auto merge of #75754 - joshtriplett:wip-perf-snappy, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Switch to Snappy compression for metadata
2020-08-29 16:59:39 +00:00
bors
fe8ab8a530 Auto merge of #76034 - flip1995:clippyup, r=Manishearth
Update Clippy

Bi-weekly Clippy update, as per the [new policy](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#syncing-back-changes-in-clippy-to-rust-langrust).

r? @Manishearth
2020-08-29 14:36:46 +00:00
Aleksey Kladov
6621895365 Move retokenize hack to save_analysis 2020-08-29 12:29:06 +02:00
bors
360a372f2c Auto merge of #75877 - vigoux:master, r=Amanieu
Update compiler-builtins

Update the compiler-builtins dependency to include latest changes.

This allows for `aarch64-unknown-linux-musl` to pass all tests.

Fixes #57820 and fixes #46651
2020-08-29 01:48:40 +00:00
flip1995
575e27d3ce
Update Cargo.lock 2020-08-28 18:43:41 +02:00
Thomas Vigouroux
392478c29e Update compiler-builtins
Fixes #57820 and #46651
2020-08-28 09:02:39 +02:00
Aleksey Kladov
b4f4db946e Add expect test for rustdoc html highlighting
It's a unit-test in a sense that it only checks syntax highlighting.
However, the resulting HTML is written to disk and can be easily
inspected in the browser.

To update the test, run with `--bless` argument or set
`UPDATE_EXPEC=1` env var
2020-08-27 18:48:06 +02:00
bors
c35007dbbe Auto merge of #75773 - matklad:snapshot-tests, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Introduce expect snapshot testing library into rustc

Snapshot testing is a technique for writing maintainable unit tests.
Unlike usual `assert_eq!` tests, snapshot tests allow
to *automatically* upgrade expected values on test failure.
In a sense, snapshot tests are inline-version of our beloved
UI-tests.

Example:

![expect](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1711539/90888810-3bcc8180-e3b7-11ea-9626-d06e89e1a0bb.gif)

A particular library we use, `expect_test` provides an `expect!`
macro, which creates a sort of self-updating string literal (by using
`file!` macro). Self-update is triggered by setting `UPDATE_EXPECT`
environmental variable (this info is printed during the test failure).
This library was extracted from rust-analyzer, where we use it for
most of our tests.

There are some other, more popular snapshot testing libraries:

* https://github.com/mitsuhiko/insta
* https://github.com/aaronabramov/k9

The main differences of `expect` are:

* first-class snapshot objects (so, tests can be written as functions,
  rather than as macros)
* focus on inline-snapshots (but file snapshots are also supported)
* restricted feature set (only `assert_eq` and `assert_debug_eq`)
* no extra runtime (ie, no `cargo insta`)

See rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer#5101 for a
an extended comparison.

It is unclear if this testing style will stick with rustc in the long
run. At the moment, rustc is mainly tested via integrated UI tests.
But in the library-ified world, unit-tests will become somewhat more
important (that's why use use `rustc_lexer` library-ified library as
an example in this PR). Given that the cost of removal shouldn't be
too high, it probably makes sense to just see if this flies!
2020-08-25 09:36:23 +00:00
Aleksey Kladov
f7be59c593 Introduce expect snapshot testing library into rustc
Snapshot testing is a technique for writing maintainable unit tests.
Unlike usual `assert_eq!` tests, snapshot tests allow
to *automatically* upgrade expected values on test failure.
In a sense, snapshot tests are inline-version of our beloved
UI-tests.

Example:

![expect](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1711539/90888810-3bcc8180-e3b7-11ea-9626-d06e89e1a0bb.gif)

A particular library we use, `expect_test` provides an `expect!`
macro, which creates a sort of self-updating string literal (by using
`file!` macro). Self-update is triggered by setting `UPDATE_EXPECT`
environmental variable (this info is printed during the test failure).
This library was extracted from rust-analyzer, where we use it for
most of our tests.

There are some other, more popular snapshot testing libraries:

* https://github.com/mitsuhiko/insta
* https://github.com/aaronabramov/k9

The main differences of `expect` are:

* first-class snapshot objects (so, tests can be written as functions,
  rather than as macros)
* focus on inline-snapshots (but file snapshots are also supported)
* restricted feature set (only `assert_eq` and `assert_debug_eq`)
* no extra runtime (ie, no `cargo insta`)

See https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/pull/5101 for a
an extended comparison.

It is unclear if this testing style will stick with rustc in the long
run. At the moment, rustc is mainly tested via integrated UI tests.
But in the library-ified world, unit-tests will become somewhat more
important (that's why use use `rustc_lexer` library-ified library as
an example in this PR). Given that the cost of removal shouldn't be
too high, it probably makes sense to just see if this flies!
2020-08-24 15:38:42 +02:00
Jubilee Young
31afacf651 bump tidy to cargo_metadata 0.11
Updates cargo_metadata in tidy's Cargo.toml from 0.9.1 to 0.11
Real version change 0.9.11 -> 0.11.1
https://github.com/oli-obk/cargo_metadata/compare/v0.9.1...v0.11.1
2020-08-21 10:48:24 -07:00
Josh Triplett
574f6bed62 Switch to Snappy compression for metadata 2020-08-20 16:16:30 -07:00
Joshua Nelson
219e93d91e Use impls for intra doc links as well 2020-08-19 08:26:28 -04:00
Joshua Nelson
3ddd8b233c Return all impls, not just the primary one 2020-08-19 08:18:24 -04:00
Jubilee Young
25441fb60a Downgrade version_check 0.9.2 -> 0.9.1
0.9.2 is a breaking change to the #[cfg(version)] test in
src/test/ui/feature-gates/feature-gate-config-version.*
Let's downgrade for now.
2020-08-18 10:27:13 -04:00
Jubilee Young
8f5ea8083d Resolve licensing by updating tinyvec 0.3.3 -> 0.3.4
Per https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75555#issuecomment-675090858
Zlib license might be OK. "OR Apache-2.0 OR MIT" definitely is.
unicode-normalization depends on this and rustc_parse, clippy,
and many other things depend on unicode-normalization.
2020-08-18 10:27:13 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
342d956749 Update dependencies
This runs cargo update, applying the following changes:
      Adding arrayref v0.3.6
      Adding base64 v0.11.0
      Adding blake2b_simd v0.5.10
      Adding cloudabi v0.1.0
      Adding crossbeam-queue v0.2.3
      Adding instant v0.1.6
      Adding lock_api v0.4.1
      Adding maybe-uninit v2.0.0
      Adding parking_lot_core v0.7.2
      Adding parking_lot_core v0.8.0
      Adding parking_lot v0.11.0
      Adding proc-macro-error-attr v1.0.4
      Adding quick-error v2.0.0
      Adding rust-argon2 v0.7.0
      Adding signal-hook-registry v1.2.1
      Adding smallvec v0.6.13
      Adding smallvec v1.4.2
      Adding tinyvec v0.3.3
    Removing argon2rs v0.2.5
    Removing arrayvec v0.4.7
    Removing blake2-rfc v0.2.18
    Removing fuchsia-cprng v0.1.1
    Removing nodrop v0.1.12
    Removing parking_lot_core v0.7.1
    Removing rand_core v0.3.0
    Removing rand_core v0.4.0
    Removing rand_os v0.1.3
    Removing rdrand v0.4.0
    Removing scoped_threadpool v0.1.9
    Removing signal-hook v0.1.7
    Removing smallvec v0.6.10
    Removing smallvec v1.4.0
    Updating aho-corasick v0.7.10 -> v0.7.13
    Updating anyhow v1.0.31 -> v1.0.32
    Updating arc-swap v0.3.7 -> v0.4.7
    Updating bitmaps v2.0.0 -> v2.1.0
    Updating bstr v0.1.3 -> v0.2.13
    Updating byteorder v1.3.2 -> v1.3.4
    Updating bytesize v1.0.0 -> v1.0.1
    Updating bytes v0.4.11 -> v0.4.12
    Updating cargo_metadata v0.8.0 -> v0.8.2
    Updating chrono v0.4.6 -> v0.4.15
    Updating clap v2.33.0 -> v2.33.3
    Updating cmake v0.1.42 -> v0.1.44
    Updating constant_time_eq v0.1.3 -> v0.1.5
    Updating crossbeam-channel v0.4.0 -> v0.4.3
    Updating crossbeam-deque v0.7.1 -> v0.7.3
    Updating crossbeam-epoch v0.7.2 -> v0.8.2
    Updating crossbeam-utils v0.6.5 -> v0.6.6
    Updating crypto-hash v0.3.1 -> v0.3.4
    Updating ctor v0.1.13 -> v0.1.15
    Updating curl-sys v0.4.25 -> v0.4.34+curl-7.71.1
    Updating curl v0.4.25 -> v0.4.31
    Updating derive_more v0.99.2 -> v0.99.9
    Updating diff v0.1.11 -> v0.1.12
    Updating directories v2.0.1 -> v2.0.2
    Updating dirs-sys v0.3.3 -> v0.3.5
    Updating dirs v2.0.1 -> v2.0.2
    Updating either v1.5.0 -> v1.6.0
    Updating failure v0.1.5 -> v0.1.8
    Updating filetime v0.2.9 -> v0.2.12
    Updating fnv v1.0.6 -> v1.0.7
    Updating fortanix-sgx-abi v0.3.2 -> v0.3.3
    Updating fst v0.3.0 -> v0.3.5
    Updating futures v0.1.28 -> v0.1.29
    Updating git2 v0.13.5 -> v0.13.8
    Updating globset v0.4.3 -> v0.4.5
    Updating handlebars v3.0.1 -> v3.4.0
    Updating heck v0.3.0 -> v0.3.1
    Updating hex v0.4.0 -> v0.4.2
    Updating home v0.5.1 -> v0.5.3
    Updating humantime v2.0.0 -> v2.0.1
    Updating ignore v0.4.11 -> v0.4.16
    Updating itertools v0.8.0 -> v0.8.2
    Updating itoa v0.4.4 -> v0.4.6
    Updating jemalloc-sys v0.3.0 -> v0.3.2
    Updating jsonrpc-client-transports v14.0.5 -> v14.2.1
    Updating jsonrpc-core-client v14.0.5 -> v14.2.0
    Updating jsonrpc-core v14.0.5 -> v14.2.0
    Updating jsonrpc-derive v14.0.5 -> v14.2.1
    Updating jsonrpc-pubsub v14.0.6 -> v14.2.0
    Updating jsonrpc-server-utils v14.0.5 -> v14.2.0
    Updating json v0.11.13 -> v0.11.15
    Updating lazycell v1.2.1 -> v1.3.0
    Updating libgit2-sys v0.12.7+1.0.0 -> v0.12.9+1.0.1
    Updating libnghttp2-sys v0.1.2 -> v0.1.4+1.41.0
    Updating libssh2-sys v0.2.14 -> v0.2.18
    Updating libz-sys v1.0.25 -> v1.0.27
    Updating linked-hash-map v0.5.2 -> v0.5.3
    Updating log v0.4.8 -> v0.4.11
    Updating lzma-sys v0.1.14 -> v0.1.16
    Updating macro-utils v0.1.2 -> v0.1.3
    Updating maplit v1.0.1 -> v1.0.2
    Updating mdbook v0.4.0 -> v0.4.2
    Updating memoffset v0.5.1 -> v0.5.5
    Updating mio-named-pipes v0.1.6 -> v0.1.7
    Updating mio-uds v0.6.7 -> v0.6.8
    Updating mio v0.6.16 -> v0.6.22
    Updating miow v0.3.3 -> v0.3.5
    Updating net2 v0.2.33 -> v0.2.34
    Updating new_debug_unreachable v1.0.3 -> v1.0.4
    Updating num_cpus v1.10.1 -> v1.13.0
    Updating num-integer v0.1.39 -> v0.1.43
    Updating num-traits v0.2.6 -> v0.2.12
    Updating once_cell v1.1.0 -> v1.4.0
    Updating opener v0.4.0 -> v0.4.1
    Updating openssl-src v111.9.0+1.1.1g -> v111.10.2+1.1.1g
    Updating openssl-sys v0.9.54 -> v0.9.58
    Updating openssl v0.10.25 -> v0.10.30
    Updating open v1.2.1 -> v1.4.0
    Updating packed_simd v0.3.1 -> v0.3.3
    Updating pest v2.1.0 -> v2.1.3
    Updating pkg-config v0.3.17 -> v0.3.18
    Updating proc-macro2 v1.0.3 -> v1.0.19
    Updating proc-macro-crate v0.1.4 -> v0.1.5
    Updating proc-macro-error v0.2.6 -> v1.0.4
    Updating psm v0.1.10 -> v0.1.11
    Updating pulldown-cmark v0.7.1 -> v0.7.2
    Updating punycode v0.4.0 -> v0.4.1
    Updating quote v1.0.2 -> v1.0.7
    Updating rayon-core v1.6.0 -> v1.7.1
    Updating rayon v1.2.0 -> v1.3.1
    Updating redox_syscall v0.1.56 -> v0.1.57
    Updating redox_users v0.3.0 -> v0.3.4
    Updating regex-syntax v0.6.17 -> v0.6.18
    Updating regex v1.3.7 -> v1.3.9
    Updating remove_dir_all v0.5.2 -> v0.5.3
    Updating rustfix v0.5.0 -> v0.5.1
    Updating ryu v1.0.0 -> v1.0.5
    Updating same-file v1.0.4 -> v1.0.6
    Updating schannel v0.1.16 -> v0.1.19
    Updating scopeguard v1.0.0 -> v1.1.0
    Updating serde_derive v1.0.106 -> v1.0.115
    Updating serde_ignored v0.1.0 -> v0.1.2
    Updating serde_json v1.0.40 -> v1.0.57
    Updating serde_repr v0.1.5 -> v0.1.6
    Updating serde v1.0.99 -> v1.0.115
    Updating shell-escape v0.1.4 -> v0.1.5
    Updating stable_deref_trait v1.1.0 -> v1.2.0
    Updating stacker v0.1.9 -> v0.1.11
    Updating structopt-derive v0.3.1 -> v0.4.9
    Updating structopt v0.3.1 -> v0.3.16
    Updating synstructure v0.12.1 -> v0.12.4
    Updating syn v1.0.11 -> v1.0.38
    Updating tar v0.4.26 -> v0.4.29
    Updating tendril v0.4.0 -> v0.4.1
    Updating term v0.6.0 -> v0.6.1
    Updating thiserror-impl v1.0.5 -> v1.0.20
    Updating thiserror v1.0.5 -> v1.0.20
    Updating time v0.1.42 -> v0.1.43
    Updating tokio-codec v0.1.1 -> v0.1.2
    Updating tokio-current-thread v0.1.6 -> v0.1.7
    Updating tokio-executor v0.1.9 -> v0.1.10
    Updating tokio-fs v0.1.6 -> v0.1.7
    Updating tokio-io v0.1.12 -> v0.1.13
    Updating tokio-process v0.2.4 -> v0.2.5
    Updating tokio-reactor v0.1.11 -> v0.1.12
    Updating tokio-signal v0.2.7 -> v0.2.9
    Updating tokio-sync v0.1.7 -> v0.1.8
    Updating tokio-tcp v0.1.3 -> v0.1.4
    Updating tokio-threadpool v0.1.17 -> v0.1.18
    Updating tokio-timer v0.2.12 -> v0.2.13
    Updating tokio-udp v0.1.5 -> v0.1.6
    Updating tokio-uds v0.2.5 -> v0.2.7
    Updating toml v0.5.3 -> v0.5.6
    Updating tracing-attributes v0.1.9 -> v0.1.10
    Updating tracing-core v0.1.12 -> v0.1.14
    Updating tracing-subscriber v0.2.10 -> v0.2.11
    Updating tracing v0.1.18 -> v0.1.19
    Updating ucd-parse v0.1.4 -> v0.1.8
    Updating ucd-trie v0.1.1 -> v0.1.3
    Updating unicode-normalization v0.1.12 -> v0.1.13
    Updating unicode-script v0.5.1 -> v0.5.2
    Updating unicode-width v0.1.6 -> v0.1.8
    Updating unicode-xid v0.2.0 -> v0.2.1
    Updating url v2.1.0 -> v2.1.1
    Updating utf-8 v0.7.2 -> v0.7.5
    Updating vcpkg v0.2.8 -> v0.2.10
    Updating vec_map v0.8.1 -> v0.8.2
    Updating version_check v0.9.1 -> v0.9.2
    Updating walkdir v2.2.7 -> v2.3.1
    Updating winapi v0.3.8 -> v0.3.9
    Updating xz2 v0.1.5 -> v0.1.6
    Updating yaml-merge-keys v0.4.0 -> v0.4.1
    Updating yaml-rust v0.4.3 -> v0.4.4
2020-08-18 10:27:13 -04:00
Matthew Jasper
c4f91bb281 Fix rustc_serialize unit tests 2020-08-14 17:34:32 +01:00
Matthew Jasper
cbcef3effc Rework rustc_serialize
- Move the type parameter from `encode` and `decode` methods to
  the trait.
- Remove `UseSpecialized(En|De)codable` traits.
- Remove blanket impls for references.
- Add `RefDecodable` trait to allow deserializing to arena-allocated
  references safely.
- Remove ability to (de)serialize HIR.
- Create proc-macros `(Ty)?(En|De)codable` to help implement these new
  traits.
2020-08-14 17:34:30 +01:00
bors
d69b0997d7 Auto merge of #75431 - ehuss:platform-support, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Move platform support to the rustc book.

This moves the [Platform Support](https://forge.rust-lang.org/release/platform-support.html) page from the forge to the rustc book. There are several reasons for doing this:

* The forge is not really oriented towards end-users (it mostly contains infrastructure, governance and policy, internal team pages, etc.). This platform support page is useful to user to know which targets are supported.
* This page can now be updated in-sync with any PRs that add or remove a target, or change its status.
* This is now automatically checked on CI to verify the list does not get out of sync. Currently it only checks the presence/absence of an entry, but more sophisticated checks could be added in the future.

I'm not 100% certain this is the best location, but I think it fits. I'd like to see the rustc guide continue to grow, including things like linking information and more platform-specific details.
2020-08-13 06:17:25 +00:00
Eric Huss
ce717476ff Add a script to verify the Platform Support page is up-to-date. 2020-08-12 08:40:22 -07:00
Igor Matuszewski
cb40a1c4c9 Update RLS and Rustfmt 2020-08-12 01:25:46 +02:00
Tyler Mandry
c18b64c866
Rollup merge of #75378 - petrochenkov:isident, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Introduce `rustc_lexer::is_ident` and use it in couple of places

Implements the suggestion from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74537#issuecomment-662261979.
2020-08-11 12:28:32 -07:00
Dylan DPC
992988bbc5
Rollup merge of #75315 - Mark-Simulacrum:save-temps, r=ecstatic-morse
Avoid deleting temporary files on error

Previously if the compiler error'd, fatally, then temporary directories which
should be preserved by -Csave-temps would be deleted due to fatal compiler
errors being implemented as panics.

cc @infinity0

(Hopefully) fixes #75275, but I haven't tested
2020-08-11 01:56:34 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
20c5044465 Introduce rustc_lexer::is_ident and use it in couple of places 2020-08-11 00:08:04 +03:00
Josh Stone
997a766b32 Upgrade indexmap to 1.5.1, now using hashbrown! 2020-08-09 12:25:21 -07:00
Mark Rousskov
2627eedde9 Avoid deleting temporary files on error
Previously if the compiler error'd, fatally, then temporary directories which
should be preserved by -Csave-temps would be deleted due to fatal compiler
errors being implemented as panics.
2020-08-09 08:28:15 -04:00
Amanieu d'Antras
99f0052151 Update hashbrown to 0.8.2 2020-08-08 15:03:47 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
3dc8a36958 Eliminate librustc_hir's dependency on librustc_session. 2020-08-08 12:03:44 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
e539dd65f8 Eliminate the SessionGlobals from librustc_ast.
By moving `{known,used}_attrs` from `SessionGlobals` to `Session`. This
means they are accessed via the `Session`, rather than via TLS. A few
`Attr` methods and `librustc_ast` functions are now methods of
`Session`.

All of this required passing a `Session` to lots of functions that didn't
already have one. Some of these functions also had arguments removed, because
those arguments could be accessed directly via the `Session` argument.

`contains_feature_attr()` was dead, and is removed.

Some functions were moved from `librustc_ast` elsewhere because they now need
to access `Session`, which isn't available in that crate.
- `entry_point_type()` --> `librustc_builtin_macros`
- `global_allocator_spans()` --> `librustc_metadata`
- `is_proc_macro_attr()` --> `Session`
2020-08-08 12:03:42 +10:00
Amanieu d'Antras
d51b7b229a Update hashbrown to 0.8.1 2020-08-07 07:03:12 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
d93277b915 Remove GCX_PTR.
We store an `ImplicitCtxt` pointer in a thread-local value (TLV). This allows
implicit access to a `GlobalCtxt` and some other things.

We also store a `GlobalCtxt` pointer in `GCX_PTR`. This is always the same
`GlobalCtxt` as the one within the `ImplicitCtxt` pointer in TLV. `GCX_PTR`
is only used in the parallel compiler's `handle_deadlock()` function.

This commit does the following.
- It removes `GCX_PTR`.
- It also adds `ImplicitCtxt::new()`, which constructs an `ImplicitCtxt` from a
  `GlobalCtxt`. `ImplicitCtxt::new()` + `tls::enter_context()` is now
  equivalent to the old `tls::enter_global()`.
- Makes `tls::get_tlv()` public for the parallel compiler, because it's
  now used in `handle_deadlock()`.
2020-08-03 09:40:41 +10:00
Yuki Okushi
21ebf6900d
Rollup merge of #75010 - Aaron1011:feature/remove-old-deps, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update elasticlunr-rs and ammonia transitive deps

This removes all dependencies on pre-1.0 proc-macro ecosystem crates
(syn, quote, and proc-macro2)
2020-08-03 01:05:22 +09:00
bors
12799ad60c Auto merge of #74899 - sajattack:libc_0.2.74_bump, r=jonas-schievink
bump libc version to 0.2.74
2020-08-02 07:23:14 +00:00
Aaron Hill
70ba491b78
Update elasticlunr-rs and ammonia transitive deps
This removes all dependencies on pre-1.0 proc-macro ecosystem crates
(syn, quote, and proc-macro2)
2020-08-01 21:15:53 -04:00
Aaron Hill
183947f6ba
Move 'probably equal' methods to librustc_parse
This is preparation for PR #73084
2020-08-01 21:12:49 -04:00
Oliver Scherer
c7290379be Remove chrono feature from tracing 2020-08-01 16:24:52 +02:00
Oliver Scherer
358e21ee78 Disable log support 2020-07-31 22:42:09 +02:00
Oliver Scherer
ec7230fea2 Move from log to tracing 2020-07-31 22:38:20 +02:00
bors
c058a8b8dc Auto merge of #74682 - alexcrichton:backtrace-gimli-round-2, r=Mark-Simulacrum
std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli (take 2)

This is the second attempt to land https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/73441 after being reverted in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74613. Will be gathering precise perf numbers here in this take.

Closes #71060
2020-07-30 23:22:09 +00:00
bors
6e50a225fd Auto merge of #74923 - ehuss:update-cargo, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update cargo

14 commits in aa6872140ab0fa10f641ab0b981d5330d419e927..974eb438da8ced6e3becda2bbf63d9b643eacdeb
2020-07-23 13:46:27 +0000 to 2020-07-29 16:15:05 +0000
- Fix O0 build scripts by default without `[profile.release]` (rust-lang/cargo#8560)
- Emphasize git dependency version locking behavior. (rust-lang/cargo#8561)
- Update lock file encodings on changes (rust-lang/cargo#8554)
- Fix sporadic lto test failures. (rust-lang/cargo#8559)
- build-std: Fix libraries paths following upstream (rust-lang/cargo#8558)
- Flag git http errors as maybe spurious (rust-lang/cargo#8553)
- Display builtin aliases with `cargo --list` (rust-lang/cargo#8542)
- Check manifest for requiring nonexistent features (rust-lang/cargo#7950)
- Clarify test name filter usage (rust-lang/cargo#8552)
- Revert Cargo Book changes for default edition (rust-lang/cargo#8551)
- Prepare for not defaulting to master branch for git deps (rust-lang/cargo#8522)
- Include `+` for crates.io feature requirements in the Cargo Book section on features (rust-lang/cargo#8547)
- Update termcolor and fwdansi versions (rust-lang/cargo#8540)
- Cargo book nitpick in Manifest section (rust-lang/cargo#8543)
2020-07-30 02:05:48 +00:00
Eric Huss
89d7906acd Update cargo 2020-07-29 11:02:05 -07:00
Xavier Denis
f07607f47a Move mir-opt tests to toplevel 2020-07-29 17:36:03 +02:00
Paul Sajna
7baa87fccf bump libc version to 0.2.74 2020-07-29 01:10:57 -07:00
Alex Crichton
06d565c967 std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli
This commit is a proof-of-concept for switching the standard library's
backtrace symbolication mechanism on most platforms from libbacktrace to
gimli. The standard library's support for `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` requires
in-process parsing of object files and DWARF debug information to
interpret it and print the filename/line number of stack frames as part
of a backtrace.

Historically this support in the standard library has come from a
library called "libbacktrace". The libbacktrace library seems to have
been extracted from gcc at some point and is written in C. We've had a
lot of issues with libbacktrace over time, unfortunately, though. The
library does not appear to be actively maintained since we've had
patches sit for months-to-years without comments. We have discovered a
good number of soundness issues with the library itself, both when
parsing valid DWARF as well as invalid DWARF. This is enough of an issue
that the libs team has previously decided that we cannot feed untrusted
inputs to libbacktrace. This also doesn't take into account the
portability of libbacktrace which has been difficult to manage and
maintain over time. While possible there are lots of exceptions and it's
the main C dependency of the standard library right now.

For years it's been the desire to switch over to a Rust-based solution
for symbolicating backtraces. It's been assumed that we'll be using the
Gimli family of crates for this purpose, which are targeted at safely
and efficiently parsing DWARF debug information. I've been working
recently to shore up the Gimli support in the `backtrace` crate. As of a
few weeks ago the `backtrace` crate, by default, uses Gimli when loaded
from crates.io. This transition has gone well enough that I figured it
was time to start talking seriously about this change to the standard
library.

This commit is a preview of what's probably the best way to integrate
the `backtrace` crate into the standard library with the Gimli feature
turned on. While today it's used as a crates.io dependency, this commit
switches the `backtrace` crate to a submodule of this repository which
will need to be updated manually. This is not done lightly, but is
thought to be the best solution. The primary reason for this is that the
`backtrace` crate needs to do some pretty nontrivial filesystem
interactions to locate debug information. Working without `std::fs` is
not an option, and while it might be possible to do some sort of
trait-based solution when prototyped it was found to be too unergonomic.
Using a submodule allows the `backtrace` crate to build as a submodule
of the `std` crate itself, enabling it to use `std::fs` and such.

Otherwise this adds new dependencies to the standard library. This step
requires extra attention because this means that these crates are now
going to be included with all Rust programs by default. It's important
to note, however, that we're already shipping libbacktrace with all Rust
programs by default and it has a bunch of C code implementing all of
this internally anyway, so we're basically already switching
already-shipping functionality to Rust from C.

* `object` - this crate is used to parse object file headers and
  contents. Very low-level support is used from this crate and almost
  all of it is disabled. Largely we're just using struct definitions as
  well as convenience methods internally to read bytes and such.

* `addr2line` - this is the main meat of the implementation for
  symbolication. This crate depends on `gimli` for DWARF parsing and
  then provides interfaces needed by the `backtrace` crate to turn an
  address into a filename / line number. This crate is actually pretty
  small (fits in a single file almost!) and mirrors most of what
  `dwarf.c` does for libbacktrace.

* `miniz_oxide` - the libbacktrace crate transparently handles
  compressed debug information which is compressed with zlib. This crate
  is used to decompress compressed debug sections.

* `gimli` - not actually used directly, but a dependency of `addr2line`.

* `adler32`- not used directly either, but a dependency of
  `miniz_oxide`.

The goal of this change is to improve the safety of backtrace
symbolication in the standard library, especially in the face of
possibly malformed DWARF debug information. Even to this day we're still
seeing segfaults in libbacktrace which could possibly become security
vulnerabilities. This change should almost entirely eliminate this
possibility whilc also paving the way forward to adding more features
like split debug information.

Some references for those interested are:

* Original addition of libbacktrace - #12602
* OOM with libbacktrace - #24231
* Backtrace failure due to use of uninitialized value - #28447
* Possibility to feed untrusted data to libbacktrace - #21889
* Soundness fix for libbacktrace - #33729
* Crash in libbacktrace - #39468
* Support for macOS, never merged - ianlancetaylor/libbacktrace#2
* Performance issues with libbacktrace - #29293, #37477
* Update procedure is quite complicated due to how many patches we
  need to carry - #50955
* Libbacktrace doesn't work on MinGW with dynamic libs - #71060
* Segfault in libbacktrace on macOS - #71397

Switching to Rust will not make us immune to all of these issues. The
crashes are expected to go away, but correctness and performance may
still have bugs arise. The gimli and `backtrace` crates, however, are
actively maintained unlike libbacktrace, so this should enable us to at
least efficiently apply fixes as situations come up.
2020-07-28 16:34:01 -07:00
Tyler Mandry
e193cb1fde Update Cargo.lock 2020-07-25 14:26:31 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
dfedb84462
Rollup merge of #72954 - hermitcore:rwlock, r=dtolnay
revise RwLock for HermitCore

- current version is derived from the wasm implementation
- increasing the readability of `Condvar`
- simplify the interface to the libos
2020-07-24 10:01:28 -07:00
Eric Huss
76103f1d15 Update cargo 2020-07-23 08:28:50 -07:00
bors
371917ab21 Auto merge of #74613 - Mark-Simulacrum:revert-gimli, r=nnethercote
Revert libbacktrace -> gimli

This reverts 4cbd265c11 028f8d7b85 13db3cc1e8 d7a36d8964 (and technically 79673d3009 but it's made empty by previous reverts).

The current plan is to land this PR as a temporary change, so that we can get a better handle on the regressions introduced by it. Trying to fix/examine them in master is difficult, and we want to be better able to evaluate them without impact to other PRs being landed in the mean time.

That said, it is currently *my* belief that gimli, in one form or another, will need to land sometime soon. I think it's quite likely that it may slip a week or two, but I would personally push for re-landing it then "regardless" of the regressions. We should try to focus efforts on understanding and removing as much of the performance impact as possible, as everyone pretty much agrees that it should be quite minimal (and entirely in the linker, basically).

r? @nnethercote
2020-07-23 11:14:48 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
cc4f547cf4 Revert "std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli"
This reverts commit 13db3cc1e8.
2020-07-22 07:16:45 -04:00
Jake Goulding
804241ea06 Update dependencies that have knowledge about aarch64-apple-darwin 2020-07-20 20:45:52 -04:00
bors
47ea6d90b0 Auto merge of #74091 - richkadel:llvm-coverage-map-gen-4, r=tmandry
Generating the coverage map

@tmandry @wesleywiser

rustc now generates the coverage map and can support (limited)
coverage report generation, at the function level.

Example commands to generate a coverage report:
```shell
$ BUILD=$HOME/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
$ $BUILD/stage1/bin/rustc -Zinstrument-coverage \
$HOME/rust/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/instrument-coverage/main.rs
$ LLVM_PROFILE_FILE="main.profraw" ./main
called
$ $BUILD/llvm/bin/llvm-profdata merge -sparse main.profraw -o main.profdata
$ $BUILD/llvm/bin/llvm-cov show --instr-profile=main.profdata main
```
![rust coverage report only 20200706](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3827298/86697299-1cbe8f80-bfc3-11ea-8955-451b48626991.png)

r? @wesleywiser

Rust compiler MCP rust-lang/compiler-team#278
Relevant issue: #34701 - Implement support for LLVMs code coverage instrumentation
2020-07-19 07:25:18 +00:00
bors
1fa54ad968 Auto merge of #73441 - alexcrichton:backtrace-gimli, r=Mark-Simulacrum
std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli

This commit is a proof-of-concept for switching the standard library's
backtrace symbolication mechanism on most platforms from libbacktrace to
gimli. The standard library's support for `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` requires
in-process parsing of object files and DWARF debug information to
interpret it and print the filename/line number of stack frames as part
of a backtrace.

Historically this support in the standard library has come from a
library called "libbacktrace". The libbacktrace library seems to have
been extracted from gcc at some point and is written in C. We've had a
lot of issues with libbacktrace over time, unfortunately, though. The
library does not appear to be actively maintained since we've had
patches sit for months-to-years without comments. We have discovered a
good number of soundness issues with the library itself, both when
parsing valid DWARF as well as invalid DWARF. This is enough of an issue
that the libs team has previously decided that we cannot feed untrusted
inputs to libbacktrace. This also doesn't take into account the
portability of libbacktrace which has been difficult to manage and
maintain over time. While possible there are lots of exceptions and it's
the main C dependency of the standard library right now.

For years it's been the desire to switch over to a Rust-based solution
for symbolicating backtraces. It's been assumed that we'll be using the
Gimli family of crates for this purpose, which are targeted at safely
and efficiently parsing DWARF debug information. I've been working
recently to shore up the Gimli support in the `backtrace` crate. As of a
few weeks ago the `backtrace` crate, by default, uses Gimli when loaded
from crates.io. This transition has gone well enough that I figured it
was time to start talking seriously about this change to the standard
library.

This commit is a preview of what's probably the best way to integrate
the `backtrace` crate into the standard library with the Gimli feature
turned on. While today it's used as a crates.io dependency, this commit
switches the `backtrace` crate to a submodule of this repository which
will need to be updated manually. This is not done lightly, but is
thought to be the best solution. The primary reason for this is that the
`backtrace` crate needs to do some pretty nontrivial filesystem
interactions to locate debug information. Working without `std::fs` is
not an option, and while it might be possible to do some sort of
trait-based solution when prototyped it was found to be too unergonomic.
Using a submodule allows the `backtrace` crate to build as a submodule
of the `std` crate itself, enabling it to use `std::fs` and such.

Otherwise this adds new dependencies to the standard library. This step
requires extra attention because this means that these crates are now
going to be included with all Rust programs by default. It's important
to note, however, that we're already shipping libbacktrace with all Rust
programs by default and it has a bunch of C code implementing all of
this internally anyway, so we're basically already switching
already-shipping functionality to Rust from C.

* `object` - this crate is used to parse object file headers and
  contents. Very low-level support is used from this crate and almost
  all of it is disabled. Largely we're just using struct definitions as
  well as convenience methods internally to read bytes and such.

* `addr2line` - this is the main meat of the implementation for
  symbolication. This crate depends on `gimli` for DWARF parsing and
  then provides interfaces needed by the `backtrace` crate to turn an
  address into a filename / line number. This crate is actually pretty
  small (fits in a single file almost!) and mirrors most of what
  `dwarf.c` does for libbacktrace.

* `miniz_oxide` - the libbacktrace crate transparently handles
  compressed debug information which is compressed with zlib. This crate
  is used to decompress compressed debug sections.

* `gimli` - not actually used directly, but a dependency of `addr2line`.

* `adler32`- not used directly either, but a dependency of
  `miniz_oxide`.

The goal of this change is to improve the safety of backtrace
symbolication in the standard library, especially in the face of
possibly malformed DWARF debug information. Even to this day we're still
seeing segfaults in libbacktrace which could possibly become security
vulnerabilities. This change should almost entirely eliminate this
possibility whilc also paving the way forward to adding more features
like split debug information.

Some references for those interested are:

* Original addition of libbacktrace - #12602
* OOM with libbacktrace - #24231
* Backtrace failure due to use of uninitialized value - #28447
* Possibility to feed untrusted data to libbacktrace - #21889
* Soundness fix for libbacktrace - #33729
* Crash in libbacktrace - #39468
* Support for macOS, never merged - ianlancetaylor/libbacktrace#2
* Performance issues with libbacktrace - #29293, #37477
* Update procedure is quite complicated due to how many patches we
  need to carry - #50955
* Libbacktrace doesn't work on MinGW with dynamic libs - #71060
* Segfault in libbacktrace on macOS - #71397

Switching to Rust will not make us immune to all of these issues. The
crashes are expected to go away, but correctness and performance may
still have bugs arise. The gimli and `backtrace` crates, however, are
actively maintained unlike libbacktrace, so this should enable us to at
least efficiently apply fixes as situations come up.

---

I want to note that my purpose for creating a PR here is to start a conversation about this. I think that all the various pieces are in place that this is compelling enough that I think this transition should be talked about seriously. There are a number of items which still need to be addressed before actually merging this PR, however:

* [ ] `gimli` needs to be published to crates.io
* [ ] `addr2line` needs a publish
* [ ] `miniz_oxide` needs a publish
* [ ] Tests probably shouldn't recommend the `gimli` crate's traits for implementing
* [ ] The `backtrace` crate's branch changes need to be merged to the master branch (https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/349)
* [ ] The support for `libbacktrace` on some platforms needs to be audited to see if we should support more strategies in the gimli implementation - https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/issues/325, https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/issues/326, https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/issues/350, https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/issues/351

Most of the merging/publishing I'm not actively pushing on right now. It's a bit wonky for crates to support libstd so I'm holding off on pulling the trigger everywhere until there's a bit more discussion about how to go through with this. Namely https://github.com/rust-lang/backtrace-rs/pull/349 I'm going to hold off merging until we decide to go through with the submodule strategy.

In any case this is a pretty major change, so I suspect that the compiler team is likely going to be interested in this. I don't mean to force changes by dumping a bunch of code by any means. Integration of external crates into the standard library is so difficult I wanted to have a proof-of-concept to review while talking about whether to do this at all (hence the PR), but I'm more than happy to follow any processes needed to merge this. I must admit though that I'm not entirely sure myself at this time what the process would be to decide to merge this, so I'm hoping others can help me figure that out!
2020-07-18 16:08:23 +00:00
Federico Ponzi
4b6a0278fe
fixes #67108 by using the external crate 2020-07-18 00:01:27 +02:00
Alex Crichton
13db3cc1e8 std: Switch from libbacktrace to gimli
This commit is a proof-of-concept for switching the standard library's
backtrace symbolication mechanism on most platforms from libbacktrace to
gimli. The standard library's support for `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` requires
in-process parsing of object files and DWARF debug information to
interpret it and print the filename/line number of stack frames as part
of a backtrace.

Historically this support in the standard library has come from a
library called "libbacktrace". The libbacktrace library seems to have
been extracted from gcc at some point and is written in C. We've had a
lot of issues with libbacktrace over time, unfortunately, though. The
library does not appear to be actively maintained since we've had
patches sit for months-to-years without comments. We have discovered a
good number of soundness issues with the library itself, both when
parsing valid DWARF as well as invalid DWARF. This is enough of an issue
that the libs team has previously decided that we cannot feed untrusted
inputs to libbacktrace. This also doesn't take into account the
portability of libbacktrace which has been difficult to manage and
maintain over time. While possible there are lots of exceptions and it's
the main C dependency of the standard library right now.

For years it's been the desire to switch over to a Rust-based solution
for symbolicating backtraces. It's been assumed that we'll be using the
Gimli family of crates for this purpose, which are targeted at safely
and efficiently parsing DWARF debug information. I've been working
recently to shore up the Gimli support in the `backtrace` crate. As of a
few weeks ago the `backtrace` crate, by default, uses Gimli when loaded
from crates.io. This transition has gone well enough that I figured it
was time to start talking seriously about this change to the standard
library.

This commit is a preview of what's probably the best way to integrate
the `backtrace` crate into the standard library with the Gimli feature
turned on. While today it's used as a crates.io dependency, this commit
switches the `backtrace` crate to a submodule of this repository which
will need to be updated manually. This is not done lightly, but is
thought to be the best solution. The primary reason for this is that the
`backtrace` crate needs to do some pretty nontrivial filesystem
interactions to locate debug information. Working without `std::fs` is
not an option, and while it might be possible to do some sort of
trait-based solution when prototyped it was found to be too unergonomic.
Using a submodule allows the `backtrace` crate to build as a submodule
of the `std` crate itself, enabling it to use `std::fs` and such.

Otherwise this adds new dependencies to the standard library. This step
requires extra attention because this means that these crates are now
going to be included with all Rust programs by default. It's important
to note, however, that we're already shipping libbacktrace with all Rust
programs by default and it has a bunch of C code implementing all of
this internally anyway, so we're basically already switching
already-shipping functionality to Rust from C.

* `object` - this crate is used to parse object file headers and
  contents. Very low-level support is used from this crate and almost
  all of it is disabled. Largely we're just using struct definitions as
  well as convenience methods internally to read bytes and such.

* `addr2line` - this is the main meat of the implementation for
  symbolication. This crate depends on `gimli` for DWARF parsing and
  then provides interfaces needed by the `backtrace` crate to turn an
  address into a filename / line number. This crate is actually pretty
  small (fits in a single file almost!) and mirrors most of what
  `dwarf.c` does for libbacktrace.

* `miniz_oxide` - the libbacktrace crate transparently handles
  compressed debug information which is compressed with zlib. This crate
  is used to decompress compressed debug sections.

* `gimli` - not actually used directly, but a dependency of `addr2line`.

* `adler32`- not used directly either, but a dependency of
  `miniz_oxide`.

The goal of this change is to improve the safety of backtrace
symbolication in the standard library, especially in the face of
possibly malformed DWARF debug information. Even to this day we're still
seeing segfaults in libbacktrace which could possibly become security
vulnerabilities. This change should almost entirely eliminate this
possibility whilc also paving the way forward to adding more features
like split debug information.

Some references for those interested are:

* Original addition of libbacktrace - #12602
* OOM with libbacktrace - #24231
* Backtrace failure due to use of uninitialized value - #28447
* Possibility to feed untrusted data to libbacktrace - #21889
* Soundness fix for libbacktrace - #33729
* Crash in libbacktrace - #39468
* Support for macOS, never merged - ianlancetaylor/libbacktrace#2
* Performance issues with libbacktrace - #29293, #37477
* Update procedure is quite complicated due to how many patches we
  need to carry - #50955
* Libbacktrace doesn't work on MinGW with dynamic libs - #71060
* Segfault in libbacktrace on macOS - #71397

Switching to Rust will not make us immune to all of these issues. The
crashes are expected to go away, but correctness and performance may
still have bugs arise. The gimli and `backtrace` crates, however, are
actively maintained unlike libbacktrace, so this should enable us to at
least efficiently apply fixes as situations come up.
2020-07-17 14:32:18 -07:00
Rich Kadel
a6f8b8a211 Generating the coverage map
rustc now generates the coverage map and can support (limited)
coverage report generation, at the function level.

Example:

$ BUILD=$HOME/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
$ $BUILD/stage1/bin/rustc -Zinstrument-coverage \
$HOME/rust/src/test/run-make-fulldeps/instrument-coverage/main.rs
$ LLVM_PROFILE_FILE="main.profraw" ./main
called
$ $BUILD/llvm/bin/llvm-profdata merge -sparse main.profraw -o main.profdata
$ $BUILD/llvm/bin/llvm-cov show --instr-profile=main.profdata main
    1|      1|pub fn will_be_called() {
    2|      1|    println!("called");
    3|      1|}
    4|       |
    5|      0|pub fn will_not_be_called() {
    6|      0|    println!("should not have been called");
    7|      0|}
    8|       |
    9|      1|fn main() {
   10|      1|    let less = 1;
   11|      1|    let more = 100;
   12|      1|
   13|      1|    if less < more {
   14|      1|        will_be_called();
   15|      1|    } else {
   16|      1|        will_not_be_called();
   17|      1|    }
   18|      1|}
2020-07-17 11:49:35 -07:00
Eric Huss
9e58908e27 Use cfg_if in libpanic_abort.
This allows setting a default abort using the core intrinsic.
2020-07-15 08:38:11 -07:00
Eric Huss
432b4c14aa Use cfg_if in libtest.
Simplifies some of the expressions, and provides a default.
2020-07-15 08:38:11 -07:00