This commit furthers the previous one to ensure that we don't build an
extra stage of the compiler in CI. A test has been added to rustbuild to
ensure that this doesn't regress, and then in debugging this test it was
hunted down that the `dist::Std` target was the one erroneously pulling
in the wrong compiler.
The `dist::Std` step was updated to instead account for the "full
bootstrap" or not flag, ensuring that the correct compiler for compiling
the final standard library was used. This was another use of the
`force_use_stage1` function which was in theory supposed to be pretty
central, so existing users were all evaluated and a new function,
`Builder::compiler_for`, was introduced. All existing users of
`force_use_stage1` have been updated to use `compiler_for`, where the
semantics of `compiler_for` are similar to that of `compiler` except
that it doesn't guarantee the presence of a sysroot for the arguments
passed (as they may be modified).
Perhaps one day we can unify `compiler` and `compiler_for`, but the
usage of `Builder::compiler` is so ubiquitous it would take quite some
time to evaluate whether each one needs the sysroot or not, so it's
hoped that can be done in parallel.
Currently when we're preparing cross-compiled compilers it can take
quite some time because we have to build the compiler itself three
different times. The first is the normal bootstrap, the second is a
second build for the build platform, and the third is the actual target
architecture compiler. The second compiler was historically built
exclusively for procedural macros, and long ago we didn't actually need
it.
This commit tries out avoiding that second compiled compiler, meaning we
only compile rustc for the build platform only once. Some local testing
shows that this is promising, but bors is of course the ultimate test!
Remove `ObsoleteInPlace`
The in place syntax has been deprecated for over a year. As it is, this is accumulated cruft: the error messages are unlikely to be helpful any more and it conflicts with some useful syntax (e.g. const generics in some instances).
It may be that removing `Token::LArrow` is backwards-incompatible. We should do a crater run to check.
cc @eddyb
Borrowck error reporting cleanup
* Don't show variables created by desugarings in borrowck errors
* Move "conflict error" reporting to it's own module, so that `error_reporting` contains only common error reporting methods.
* Remove unused `ScopeTree` parameter.
r? @pnkfelix
Box::into_unique: do the reborrow-to-raw *after* destroying the Box
Currently we first "reborrow" the box to a raw pointer, and then `forget` it. When tracking raw pointers more strictly (something I am experimenting with locally in Miri), the "use" induced by passing the box to `forget` invalidates the previously created raw pointer.
So adjust my hack from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/58429 to reorder the two operations.
fix dangling reference in Vec::append
Turns out I forgot to enable Miri again for the Vec tests. And there was a dangling reference hiding in there! `get_unchecked_mut` is UB to call on an empty vector (there is no memory to get a reference to), and yet this code did it.
tweak discriminant on non-nullary enum diagnostic
Adds notes pointing at the non-nullary variants, and uses "custom
discriminant" language to be consistent with the Reference.
Fixes#61039.
r? @estebank
Use arenas to avoid Lrc in queries #2
The `Remove subtle Default impl for Value` makes the compilation stop due earlier due to cycle errors, since there's no longer a default value to continue the compilation with.
Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/59540.
Add basic CDB support to debuginfo compiletest s, to help catch `*.natvis` regressions, like those fixed in #60687.
First draft, feedback welcome.
Several Microsoft debuggers (VS, VS Code, WinDbg, CDB, ...) consume the `*.natvis` files we embed into rust `*.pdb` files. While this only tests CDB, that test coverage should help for all of them.
# Changes
## src\bootstrap
- test.rs: Run CDB debuginfo tests on MSVC targets
## src\test\debuginfo
- issue-13213.rs: CDB has trouble with this, skip for now (newly discovered regression?)
- pretty-std.rs: Was ignored, re-enable for CDB only to start with, add CDB tests.
- should-fail.rs: Add CDB tests.
## src\tools\compiletest:
- Added "-cdb" option
- Added Mode::DebugInfoCdb ("debuginfo-cdb")
- Added run_debuginfo_cdb_test[_no_opt]
- Renamed Mode::DebugInfoBoth -> DebugInfoGdbLldb ("debuginfo-gdb+lldb") since it's no longer clear what "Both" means.
- Find CDB at the default Win10 SDK install path "C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\Debugger\\*\cdb.exe"
- Ignore CDB tests if CDB not found.
# Issues
- `compute_stamp_hash`: not sure if there's any point in hashing `%ProgramFiles(x86)%`
- `OsString` lacks any `*.natvis` entries (would be nice to add in a followup changelist)
- DSTs (array/string slices) which work in VS & VS Code fail in CDB.
- I've avoided `Mode::DebugInfoAll` as 3 debuggers leads to pow(2,3)=8 possible combinations.
# Reference
CDB is not part of the base Visual Studio install, but can be added via the Windows 10 SDK:
https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/downloads/windows-10-sdk
Installing just "Debugging Tools for Windows" is sufficient.
CDB appears to already be installed on appveyor CI, where this changelist can find it, based on it's use here:
0ffc573110/appveyor.yml (L227)
CDB commands and command line reference:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/debugger/debugger-reference
syntax: Continue refactoring literals
A follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/60679.
a2fd002bd5: Similarly to `EscapeError`, literal parsing now produces a `LitError`.
This way we can get rid of `diag: Option<(Span, &Handler)>` in interfaces while leaving attr/mod alone.
d9516d1120: Gathers all components of a literal token in a single struct.