When docker-podman compat was set up in a way that causes "docker"
to be the argv[0] of podman, the previous detection did not work.
This was for example the case in the compat package from nixpkgs.
This checks the output and should work everywhere.
Fix a spot I wrote the wrong word
I was reading this comment while I was looking at #116505, and it garden-path-sentence'd me, so fix that for people in the future.
Make `try_exists` return `Ok(true)` for Windows Unix Sockets
This is a follow up to #109106 but for[ `fs::try_exists`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/fs/fn.try_exists.html), which doesn't need to get the metadata of a file (which can fail even if a file exists).
`fs::try_exists` currently fails on Windows if encountering a Unix Domain Socket (UDS). This PR fixes it by checking for an error code that's returned when there's a failure to use a reparse point.
## Reparse points
A reparse point is a way to invoke a filesystem filter on a file instead of the file being opened normally. This is used to implement symbolic links (by redirecting to a different path) but also to implement other types of special files such as Unix domain sockets. If the reparse point is not a link type then opening it with `CreateFileW` may fail with `ERROR_CANT_ACCESS_FILE` because the filesystem filter does not implement that operation. This differs from resolving links which may fail with errors such as `ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND` or `ERROR_CANT_RESOLVE_FILENAME`.
So `ERROR_CANT_ACCESS_FILE` means that the file exists but that we can't open it normally. Still, the file does exist on the filesystem so `try_exists` should report that as `Ok(true)`.
r? libs
optimize zipping over array iterators
Fixes#115339 (somewhat)
the new assembly:
```asm
zip_arrays:
.cfi_startproc
vmovups (%rdx), %ymm0
leaq 32(%rsi), %rcx
vxorps %xmm1, %xmm1, %xmm1
vmovups %xmm1, -24(%rsp)
movq $0, -8(%rsp)
movq %rsi, -88(%rsp)
movq %rdi, %rax
movq %rcx, -80(%rsp)
vmovups %ymm0, -72(%rsp)
movq $0, -40(%rsp)
movq $32, -32(%rsp)
movq -24(%rsp), %rcx
vmovups (%rsi,%rcx), %ymm0
vorps -72(%rsp,%rcx), %ymm0, %ymm0
vmovups %ymm0, (%rsi,%rcx)
vmovups (%rsi), %ymm0
vmovups %ymm0, (%rdi)
vzeroupper
retq
```
This is still longer than the slice version given in the issue but at least it eliminates the terrible `vpextrb`/`orb` chain. I guess this is due to excessive memcpys again (haven't looked at the llvmir)?
The `TrustedLen` specialization is a drive-by change since I had to do something for the default impl anyway to be able to specialize the `TrustedRandomAccessNoCoerce` impl.
Optimize `librustc_driver.so` with BOLT
This PR optimizes `librustc_driver.so` on 64-bit Linux CI with BOLT.
### Code
One thing that's not clear yet to me how to resolve is how to best pass a linker flag that we need for BOLT (the second commit). It is currently passed unconditionally, which is not a good idea. We somehow have to:
1) Only pass it when we actually plan to use BOLT. How to best do that? `config.toml` entry? Environment variable? CLI flag for bootstrap? BOLT optimization is done by `opt-dist`, therefore bootstrap doesn't know about it by default.
2) Only pass it to `librustc_driver.so` (see performance below).
Some discussion of this flag already happened on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/326414-t-infra.2Fbootstrap/topic/Adding.20a.20one-off.20linker.20flag).
### Performance
Latest perf. results can be found [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102487#issuecomment-1743469053). Note that instruction counts are not very interesting here, there are only regressions on hello world programs. Probably caused by a larger C++ libstd (?).
Summary:
- ✔️ `-1.8%` mean improvement in cycle counts across many primary benchmarks.
- ✔️ `-1.8%` mean Max-RSS improvement.
- ✖️ 34 MiB (+48%) artifact size regression of `librustc_driver.so`.
- This is caused by building `librustc_driver.so` with relocations (which are required for BOLT). Hopefully, it will be [fixed](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/bolt-rfc-a-new-mode-to-rewrite-entire-binary/68674) in the future with BOLT improvements, but now trying to reduce this size increase is [tricky](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114649).
- Note that the size of this file was recently reduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115554 by pretty much the same amount (33 MiB). So the size after this PR is basically the same as it was for the last ~year.
- ✖️ 1.4 MiB (+53%) artifact size regression of `rustc`.
- This is annoying and pretty much unnecessary. It is caused by the way relocations are currently applied in this PR, because they are applied both to `librustc_driver.so` (where they are needed) and for `rustc` (where they aren't needed), since both are built with a single cargo invocation. We might need e.g. some tricks in the bootstrap `rustc` shim to only apply the relocation flag for the shared library and not for `rustc`.
### CI time
CI (try build) got slower by ~5 minutes, which is fine, IMO. It can be further reduced by running LLVM and `librustc_driver` BOLT profile gathering at the same time (now they are gathered separately for LLVM and `librustc_driver`).
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Also CC `@onur-ozkan,` primarily for the bootstrap linker flag issue.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #115439 (rustdoc: hide `#[repr(transparent)]` if it isn't part of the public ABI)
- #116591 (Don't accidentally detect the commit hash as an `fadd` instruction)
- #116603 (Reorganize `bootstrap/Cargo.toml`)
- #116715 (Prevent more spurious unreachable pattern lints)
- #116723 (Fix broken build on ESP-IDF caused by #115108)
- #116730 (Add some unsoundness tests for opaques capturing hidden regions not in substs)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix broken build on ESP-IDF caused by #115108
`@ijackson` #115108 broke the build for ESP-IDF. I'm still checking whether this PR fixes everything - once I'm ready will remove the "Draft" status.
`@dtolnay` FYI
Prevent more spurious unreachable pattern lints
Continues the work of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115937 by introducing `PatKind::Error`, to be used instead of `PatKind::Wild` when an error was raised during pattern lowering. Most of match checking lints are skipped when a `PatKind::Error` is encountered. This avoids confusing extra warnings when a pattern is malformed. Now `PatKind::Wild` should indicate an actual wildcard pattern.
r? `@oli-obk`
Reorganize `bootstrap/Cargo.toml`
The information here
5b88d659f8/src/bootstrap/Cargo.toml (L55-L59)
was wrong. This PR fixes that and sorts the dependencies in ascending order.
Additionally, I moved the 'features' section above up to make it appear easier.
rustdoc: hide `#[repr(transparent)]` if it isn't part of the public ABI
Fixes#90435.
This hides `#[repr(transparent)]` when the non-1-ZST field the struct is "transparent" over is private.
CC `@RalfJung`
Tentatively nominating it for the release notes, feel free to remove the nomination.
`@rustbot` label needs-fcp relnotes A-rustdoc-ui
When bootstrapping from outside of the rust source,
instead of calling 'x' from the absolute path
(like /home/user/rust/x), we should be able to link 'x'
from the rust source to binary paths so it can be used easily.
Before this change, 'x' was not capable of finding 'x.py' when
called from the linked file.
Signed-off-by: onur-ozkan <work@onurozkan.dev>
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #115653 (Guarantee that Layout::align returns a non-zero power of two)
- #116577 (add `SAFETY` block on the usage of unsafe `getuid`)
- #116618 (Add the V (vector) extension to the riscv64-linux-android target spec)
- #116679 (Remove some unnecessary `unwrap`s)
- #116689 (explicitly handle auto trait leakage in coherence)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup