rBreak Critical Edges and other MIR work
This PR is built on top of #32080.
This adds the basic depth-first traversals for MIR, preorder, postorder and reverse postorder. The MIR blocks are now translated using reverse postorder. There is also a transform for breaking critical edges, which includes the edges from `invoke`d calls (`Drop` and `Call`), to account for the fact that we can't add code after an `invoke`. It also stops generating the intermediate block (since the transform essentially does it if necessary already).
The kinds of cases this deals with are difficult to produce, so the test is the one I managed to get. However, it seems to bootstrap with `-Z orbit`, which it didn't before my changes.
mk: Add configure option for disabling codegen tests
Our `codegen` test suite requires the LLVM `FileCheck` utility but unfortunately
this isn't always available in all custom LLVM roots (e.g. those specified via
`--llvm-root`). This commit adds a `./configure` option called
`--disable-codegen-tests` which will manually disable running these tests. In
the case that this option is passed we can forgo the need for the `FileCheck`
executable. Note that we still require `FileCheck` by default as we will attempt
to run these tests.
Closes#28667
Our `codegen` test suite requires the LLVM `FileCheck` utility but unfortunately
this isn't always available in all custom LLVM roots (e.g. those specified via
`--llvm-root`). This commit adds a `./configure` option called
`--disable-codegen-tests` which will manually disable running these tests. In
the case that this option is passed we can forgo the need for the `FileCheck`
executable. Note that we still require `FileCheck` by default as we will attempt
to run these tests.
Closes#28667
The 64k capacity was picked by me a couple of years ago in the initial
implementation of buffered IO adaptors:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/9091/files#diff-b131eeef531ad098b32f49695a031008R62.
64K was picked for symmetry with libuv, which we no longer use.
64K is *way* larger than the default size of any other language that I
can find. C, C++, and Java default to 8K, and Go defaults to 4K. There
have been a variety of issues filed relating to this such as #31885.
Closes#31885
Stop accepting declarations when looking for definitions
eternally_available linkage isn't legal for declarations anyway, so the
check for an externally_available declaration should never succeed, so
let's remove it.
rustbuild: Fix compile on OSX for 10.7
This commit should help configure our OSX rustbuild builder for targeting 10.7.
A key part of this is using `libc++` instead of `libstdc++` as apparently it's
more filled out and otherwise LLVM's cmake configuration would fail.
(1) `x` can be used in main() after the call to spawn(). Because the variables follow normal move semantics, though the keyword `move` is used, and i32 implements `Copy`.
(2) I remove this sentence because the previous sentence gives the referrence to `move closures`, and more description of `move` may be redundant.
librustc: Add bug!(), bug_span!() macros as unified entry points for internal compiler errors
The macros pass `file!()`, `line!()` and `format_args!(...)` on to a cold, never-inlined function, ultimately calling `session::{span_,}bug_fmt` via the tcx in tls or, failing that, panicking directly.
cc @eddyb
r? @nikomatsakis
Like the comment on `Context` explains, `Context` is supposed to be
lightweight, so we're putting everything that's immutable after
creation of the Context behind an `Arc<SharedContext>`.
Instead of hardcoding knowledge about the strip-private pass into the
rendering process we represent (some) stripped items as `ItemEnum::StrippedItem`.
Rustdoc will, for example, generate redirect pages for public items
contained in private modules which have been re-exported to somewhere
externally reachable - this will now not only work for the `strip-private`
pass, but for other passes as well, such as the `strip-hidden` pass.
allow RUST_BACKTRACE=0 to act as if unset
**UPDATE:** `RUST_BACKTRACE=0` to act as if the env. var is unset! (now `0` is what `disabled` was for, below)
When RUST_BACKTRACE is set to "disabled" then this acts as if the env. var is unset. So, either make sure `RUST_BACKTRACE` is not set OR set it to `disabled` to achieve the same effect.
Sample usage:
```bash
$ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled /tmp/a.out
!! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63'
thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1
note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.
$ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && RUST_BACKTRACE=1 /tmp/a.out
!! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63'
thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1
stack backtrace:
1: 0x55709e8148c0 - sys::backtrace::tracing:👿:write::h140f24a0cfc189b98Ru
2: 0x55709e816a5b - panicking::default_hook::_$u7b$$u7b$closure$u7d$$u7d$::closure.45165
3: 0x55709e8166e8 - panicking::default_hook::hed419823688cb82aXoA
4: 0x55709e810fff - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind_inner::hbb9642f6e212d56fmHt
5: 0x55709e810513 - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind::h16232867470678019594
6: 0x55709e810489 - main::hb524f9576270962feaa
7: 0x55709e816314 - sys_common::unwind::try::try_fn::h1274188004693518534
8: 0x55709e813dfb - __rust_try
9: 0x55709e815dab - rt::lang_start::h712b1cd650781872ahA
10: 0x55709e810679 - main
11: 0x7efd1026859f - __libc_start_main
12: 0x55709e810348 - _start
13: 0x0 - <unknown>
```
Some programs(eg. [vim's syntactic](https://github.com/scrooloose/syntastic) used by [rust.vim](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust.vim)) cannot unset the env. var RUST_BACKTRACE if it's already set(eg. in .bashrc) but [they can set it to some value](cb5533e159/system/Z575/OSes/gentoo/on_baremetal/filesystem_now/gentoo/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust.vim/upd (L17)), and I needed to ensure the env. var is unset in order to avoid this issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29293
**EDIT:** Sample usage 2:
```bash
$ export RUST_BACKTRACE=1
$ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && /tmp/a.out
!! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63'
thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1
stack backtrace:
1: 0x55c2696738c0 - sys::backtrace::tracing:👿:write::h140f24a0cfc189b98Ru
2: 0x55c269675a5b - panicking::default_hook::_$u7b$$u7b$closure$u7d$$u7d$::closure.45165
3: 0x55c2696756e8 - panicking::default_hook::hed419823688cb82aXoA
4: 0x55c26966ffff - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind_inner::hbb9642f6e212d56fmHt
5: 0x55c26966f513 - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind::h16023941661074805588
6: 0x55c26966f489 - main::hb524f9576270962feaa
7: 0x55c269675314 - sys_common::unwind::try::try_fn::h1274188004693518534
8: 0x55c269672dfb - __rust_try
9: 0x55c269674dab - rt::lang_start::h712b1cd650781872ahA
10: 0x55c26966f679 - main
11: 0x7f593d58459f - __libc_start_main
12: 0x55c26966f348 - _start
13: 0x0 - <unknown>
$ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled /tmp/a.out
!! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63'
thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1
note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.
```
Added missing refcell ref/refmut coercions to unsized
Ref/RefMut should be coercible to unsized.
This commit adds a unit test and two missing CoerceUnsized implementations.
rustbuild: Fix dist for non-host targets
The `rust-std` package that we produce is expected to have not only the standard
library but also libtest for compiling unit tests. Unfortunately this does not
currently happen due to the way rustbuild is structured.
There are currently two main stages of compilation in rustbuild, one for the
standard library and one for the compiler. This is primarily done to allow us to
fill in the sysroot right after the standard library has finished compiling to
continue compiling the rest of the crates. Consequently the entire compiler does
not have to explicitly depend on the standard library, and this also should
allow us to pull in crates.io dependencies into the build in the future because
they'll just naturally build against the std we just produced.
These phases, however, do not represent a cross-compiled build. Target-only
builds also require libtest, and libtest is currently part of the
all-encompassing "compiler build". There's unfortunately no way to learn about
just libtest and its dependencies (in a great and robust fashion) so to ensure
that we can copy the right artifacts over this commit introduces a new build
step, libtest.
The new libtest build step has documentation, dist, and link steps as std/rustc
already do. The compiler now depends on libtest instead of libstd, and all
compiler crates can now assume that test and its dependencies are implicitly
part of the sysroot (hence explicit dependencies being removed). This makes the
build a tad less parallel as in theory many rustc crates can be compiled in
parallel with libtest, but this likely isn't where we really need parallelism
either (all the time is still spent in the compiler).
All in all this allows the `dist-std` step to depend on both libstd and libtest,
so `rust-std` packages produced by rustbuild should start having both the
standard library and libtest.
Closes#32523
The `rust-std` package that we produce is expected to have not only the standard
library but also libtest for compiling unit tests. Unfortunately this does not
currently happen due to the way rustbuild is structured.
There are currently two main stages of compilation in rustbuild, one for the
standard library and one for the compiler. This is primarily done to allow us to
fill in the sysroot right after the standard library has finished compiling to
continue compiling the rest of the crates. Consequently the entire compiler does
not have to explicitly depend on the standard library, and this also should
allow us to pull in crates.io dependencies into the build in the future because
they'll just naturally build against the std we just produced.
These phases, however, do not represent a cross-compiled build. Target-only
builds also require libtest, and libtest is currently part of the
all-encompassing "compiler build". There's unfortunately no way to learn about
just libtest and its dependencies (in a great and robust fashion) so to ensure
that we can copy the right artifacts over this commit introduces a new build
step, libtest.
The new libtest build step has documentation, dist, and link steps as std/rustc
already do. The compiler now depends on libtest instead of libstd, and all
compiler crates can now assume that test and its dependencies are implicitly
part of the sysroot (hence explicit dependencies being removed). This makes the
build a tad less parallel as in theory many rustc crates can be compiled in
parallel with libtest, but this likely isn't where we really need parallelism
either (all the time is still spent in the compiler).
All in all this allows the `dist-std` step to depend on both libstd and libtest,
so `rust-std` packages produced by rustbuild should start having both the
standard library and libtest.
Closes#32523
eternally_available linkage isn't legal for declarations anyway, so the
check for an externally_available declaration should never succeed, so
let's remove it.