rustbuild: Clean more on `make clean`
Be sure to not use the old build cache for the bootstrap build system nor the
old caches of the compiler/cargo extractions (in case something went wrong).
Closes#33986
Be sure to not use the old build cache for the bootstrap build system nor the
old caches of the compiler/cargo extractions (in case something went wrong).
Closes#33986
Currently rustbuild isn't detecting the `-O` flag for tests via the
`--disable-optimize-tests` or not command line flag to `./configure`, and this
commit patches up the support to pass `-O` by default.
After a comparison with the current set of tests run it was discovered that
rustbuild accidentally wasn't running a few test suites. This commit adds back a
few more test suites:
* rfail-full
* pretty-rpass
* pretty-rpass-full
* pretty-rpass-valgrind
* pretty-rfail
* pretty-rfail-full
* librustc_bitflags unit tests
This commit adds support to rustbuild to run crate unit tests (those defined by
`#[test]`) as well as documentation tests. All tests are powered by `cargo test`
under the hood.
Each step requires the `libtest` library is built for that corresponding stage.
Ideally the `test` crate would be a dev-dependency, but for now it's just easier
to ensure that we sequence everything in the right order.
Currently no filtering is implemented, so there's not actually a method of
testing *only* libstd or *only* libcore, but rather entire swaths of crates are
tested all at once.
A few points of note here are:
* The `coretest` and `collectionstest` crates are just listed as `[[test]]`
entires for `cargo test` to naturally pick up. This mean that `cargo test -p
core` actually runs all the tests for libcore.
* Libraries that aren't tested all mention `test = false` in their `Cargo.toml`
* Crates aren't currently allowed to have dev-dependencies due to
rust-lang/cargo#860, but we can likely alleviate this restriction once
workspaces are implemented.
cc #31590
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1513] which allows applications to
alter the behavior of panics at compile time. A new compiler flag, `-C panic`,
is added and accepts the values `unwind` or `panic`, with the default being
`unwind`. This model affects how code is generated for the local crate, skipping
generation of landing pads with `-C panic=abort`.
[RFC 1513]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1513-less-unwinding.md
Panic implementations are then provided by crates tagged with
`#![panic_runtime]` and lazily required by crates with
`#![needs_panic_runtime]`. The panic strategy (`-C panic` value) of the panic
runtime must match the final product, and if the panic strategy is not `abort`
then the entire DAG must have the same panic strategy.
With the `-C panic=abort` strategy, users can expect a stable method to disable
generation of landing pads, improving optimization in niche scenarios,
decreasing compile time, and decreasing output binary size. With the `-C
panic=unwind` strategy users can expect the existing ability to isolate failure
in Rust code from the outside world.
Organizationally, this commit dismantles the `sys_common::unwind` module in
favor of some bits moving part of it to `libpanic_unwind` and the rest into the
`panicking` module in libstd. The custom panic runtime support is pretty similar
to the custom allocator support with the only major difference being how the
panic runtime is injected (takes the `-C panic` flag into account).
rustbuild: Document many more parts of the build
This commit expands the bootstrap build system's `README.md` as well as ensuring
that all API documentation is present and up-to-date. Additionally a new
`config.toml.example` file is checked in with commented out versions of all
possible configuration values.
Get a file during bootstrap to a temp location first.
When downloading a file in the bootstrap phase - get it to a temp
location first. Verify it there and only if downloaded properly move it
to the `cache` directory.
This should prevent `make` being stuck if the download was interrupted
or otherwise corrupted, as per discussion in #32834
The temporary files are deleted in case of an exception.
I was looking for some unit/integration tests around this and couldn't find any - presumably because this is being tested by just Travis launching it ? Let me know if it would be good to try to write tests around this. Thanks !
Add armv7-linux-androideabi target
This PR adds `armv7-linux-androideabi` target that matches `armeabi-v7a` Android ABI, ~~downscales `arm-linux-androideabi` target to match `armeabi` Android ABI~~ (TBD later if needed).
This should allow us to get the best performance from every [Android ABI level](http://developer.android.com/ndk/guides/abis.html).
Currently existing target `arm-linux-androideabi` started gaining features out of the supported range of [android `armeabi`](http://developer.android.com/ndk/guides/abis.html). While android compiler does not use a different target for later supported `armv7` architecture, it has distinct ABI name `armeabi-v7a`. We decided to add rust target `armv7-linux-androideabi` to match it.
Note that `NEON`, `VFPv3-D32`, and `ThumbEE` instruction sets are not added, because not all android devices are guaranteed to support all or some of these, and [their availability should be checked at runtime](http://developer.android.com/ndk/guides/abis.html#v7a).
~~This reduces performance of existing `arm-linux-androideabi` and may make it _much_ slower (we are talking more than order of magnitude in some random ad-hoc fp benchmark that I did).~~
Part of #33278.
This commit expands the bootstrap build system's `README.md` as well as ensuring
that all API documentation is present and up-to-date. Additionally a new
`config.toml.example` file is checked in with commented out versions of all
possible configuration values.
When downloading a file in the bootstrap phase - get it to a temp
location first. Verify it there and only if downloaded properly move it
to the `cache` directory.
This should prevent `make` being stuck if the download was interrupted
or otherwise corrupted.
The temporary files are deleted in case of an exception.
Forcing them to be embedded in makefiles precludes being able to run them in
rustbuild, and adding them to compiletest gives us a great way to leverage
future enhancements to our "all encompassing test suite runner" as well as just
moving more things into Rust.
All tests are still Makefile-based in the sense that they rely on `make` being
available to run them, but there's no longer any Makefile-trickery to run them
and rustbuild can now run them out of the box as well.
rustbuild: Run all markdown documentation tests
This commit adds support to rustbuild to run all documentation tests, basically
running `rustdoc --test` over all our documentation.
Sanity check Python on OSX for LLDB tests
Two primary changes:
* Don't get past the configure stage if `python` isn't coming from `/usr/bin`
* Call `debugger.Terminate()` to prevent segfaults on newer versions of LLDB.
Closes#32994
rustbuild: Package librustc & co for cross-hosts
Currently the `rust-std` package produced by rustbuild only contains the
standard library plus libtest, but the makefiles actually produce a `rust-std`
package with all known target libraries (including libsyntax, librustc, etc).
Tweak the behavior so the dependencies of the `dist-docs` step in rustbuild
depend on the compiler libraries as well (so that they're all packaged).
Closes#32984
mk: Bootstrap from stable instead of snapshots
This commit removes all infrastructure from the repository for our so-called
snapshots to instead bootstrap the compiler from stable releases. Bootstrapping
from a previously stable release is a long-desired feature of distros because
they're not fans of downloading binary stage0 blobs from us. Additionally, this
makes our own CI easier as we can decommission all of the snapshot builders and
start having a regular cadence to when we update the stage0 compiler.
A new `src/etc/get-stage0.py` script was added which shares some code with
`src/bootstrap/bootstrap.py` to read a new file, `src/stage0.txt`, which lists
the current stage0 compiler as well as cargo that we bootstrap from. This script
will download the relevant `rustc` package an unpack it into `$target/stage0` as
we do today.
One problem of bootstrapping from stable releases is that we're not able to
compile unstable code (e.g. all the `#![feature]` directives in libcore/libstd).
To overcome this we employ two strategies:
* The bootstrap key of the previous compiler is hardcoded into `src/stage0.txt`
(enabled as a result of #32731) and exported by the build system. This enables
nightly features in the compiler we download.
* The standard library and compiler are pinned to a specific stage0, which
doesn't change, so we're guaranteed that we'll continue compiling as we start
from a known fixed source.
The process for making a release will also need to be tweaked now to continue to
cadence of bootstrapping from the previous release. This process looks like:
1. Merge `beta` to `stable`
2. Produce a new stable compiler.
3. Change `master` to bootstrap from this new stable compiler.
4. Merge `master` to `beta`
5. Produce a new beta compiler
6. Change `master` to bootstrap from this new beta compiler.
Step 3 above should involve very few changes as `master` was previously
bootstrapping from `beta` which is the same as `stable` at that point in time.
Step 6, however, is where we benefit from removing lots of `#[cfg(stage0)]` and
get to use new features. This also shouldn't slow the release too much as steps
1-5 requires little work other than waiting and step 6 just needs to happen at
some point during a release cycle, it's not time sensitive.
Closes#29555Closes#29557
rustbuild: Fix --enable-rpath usage
This commit fixes the `--enable-rpath` configure flag in rustbuild to work
despite the compile-time directories being different than the runtime
directories. This unfortunately means that we can't use `-C rpath` out of the
box but hopefully the portability story here isn't too bad as
`src/librustc_back/rpath.rs` isn't *too* complicated.
Closes#32886
This commit removes all infrastructure from the repository for our so-called
snapshots to instead bootstrap the compiler from stable releases. Bootstrapping
from a previously stable release is a long-desired feature of distros because
they're not fans of downloading binary stage0 blobs from us. Additionally, this
makes our own CI easier as we can decommission all of the snapshot builders and
start having a regular cadence to when we update the stage0 compiler.
A new `src/etc/get-stage0.py` script was added which shares some code with
`src/bootstrap/bootstrap.py` to read a new file, `src/stage0.txt`, which lists
the current stage0 compiler as well as cargo that we bootstrap from. This script
will download the relevant `rustc` package an unpack it into `$target/stage0` as
we do today.
One problem of bootstrapping from stable releases is that we're not able to
compile unstable code (e.g. all the `#![feature]` directives in libcore/libstd).
To overcome this we employ two strategies:
* The bootstrap key of the previous compiler is hardcoded into `src/stage0.txt`
(enabled as a result of #32731) and exported by the build system. This enables
nightly features in the compiler we download.
* The standard library and compiler are pinned to a specific stage0, which
doesn't change, so we're guaranteed that we'll continue compiling as we start
from a known fixed source.
The process for making a release will also need to be tweaked now to continue to
cadence of bootstrapping from the previous release. This process looks like:
1. Merge `beta` to `stable`
2. Produce a new stable compiler.
3. Change `master` to bootstrap from this new stable compiler.
4. Merge `master` to `beta`
5. Produce a new beta compiler
6. Change `master` to bootstrap from this new beta compiler.
Step 3 above should involve very few changes as `master` was previously
bootstrapping from `beta` which is the same as `stable` at that point in time.
Step 6, however, is where we benefit from removing lots of `#[cfg(stage0)]` and
get to use new features. This also shouldn't slow the release too much as steps
1-5 requires little work other than waiting and step 6 just needs to happen at
some point during a release cycle, it's not time sensitive.
Closes#29555Closes#29557
This commit adds support to rustbuild to run all documentation tests, basically
running `rustdoc --test` over all our documentation. This also includes support
for running the error index tests.
This commit adds support in rustbuild for running all of the compiletest test
suites as part of `make check`. The `compiletest` program was moved to
`src/tools` (like `rustbook` and others) and is now just compiled like any other
old tool. Each test suite has a pretty standard set of dependencies and just
tweaks various parameters to the final compiletest executable.
Note that full support is lacking in terms of:
* Once a test suite has passed, that's not remembered. When a test suite is
requested to be run, it's always run.
* The arguments to compiletest probably don't work for every possible
combination of platforms and testing environments just yet. There will likely
need to be future updates to tweak various pieces here and there.
* Cross compiled test suites probably don't work just yet, support for that will
come in a follow-up patch.
Clean out old documentation as well as the new test/tools directories. Should
prevent a problem that happened this morning where a PR bounced and then it left
docs with "broken links" so all future PRs bounced.
Currently the `rust-std` package produced by rustbuild only contains the
standard library plus libtest, but the makefiles actually produce a `rust-std`
package with all known target libraries (including libsyntax, librustc, etc).
Tweak the behavior so the dependencies of the `dist-docs` step in rustbuild
depend on the compiler libraries as well (so that they're all packaged).
Closes#32984
rustbuild: Verify sha256 of downloaded tarballs
Here's a quick first pass at this.
I don't use Python often enough to claim that this is totally Pythonic. I've left off some (almost certainly unnecessary) error handling regarding opening and processing files. The whole tarball is read into memory to calculate the hash, but the file isn't *so* large so that should be fine. I don't care for the output from `raise RuntimeError`, but that's how `run()` does it so I'm following precedent.
Tested by manually changing the value of `expected`, and by modifying the tarball then forcing `rustc_out_of_date()`. Both cases tripped the error.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32902
cargotest: Put output in build directory
Right now cargotest uses `TempDir` to place output into the system temp
directory, but unfortunately this means that if the process is interrupted then
it'll leak the directory and that'll never get cleaned up. One of our bots
filled up its disk space and there were 20 cargotest directories lying around so
seems prudent to clean them up!
By putting the output in the build directory it should ensure that we don't leak
too many extra builds.
Right now cargotest uses `TempDir` to place output into the system temp
directory, but unfortunately this means that if the process is interrupted then
it'll leak the directory and that'll never get cleaned up. One of our bots
filled up its disk space and there were 20 cargotest directories lying around so
seems prudent to clean them up!
By putting the output in the build directory it should ensure that we don't leak
too many extra builds.
rustbuild: Fix handling of the bootstrap key
Bring the calculation logic in line with the makefiles and also set the
RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP_KEY environment variable to enable the bootstrap on the stable
compiler.
Add rustbuild option to use Ninja for LLVM build
This change adds support for a `ninja` option in the `[llvm]` section of rustbuild's `config.toml`. When `true`, the option enables use of the Ninja build tool. Note that this change does not add support for Ninja to the old makefile based build system.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32809
r? @alexcrichton
It looks like before these config variables weren't actually taken
into account. This patch should make the build system skip over the
documentation steps correctly.