Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #98391 (Reimplement std's thread parker on top of events on SGX)
- #104019 (Compute generator sizes with `-Zprint_type_sizes`)
- #104512 (Set `download-ci-llvm = "if-available"` by default when `channel = dev`)
- #104901 (Implement masking in FileType comparison on Unix)
- #105082 (Fix Async Generator ABI)
- #105109 (Add LLVM KCFI support to the Rust compiler)
- #105505 (Don't warn about unused parens when they are used by yeet expr)
- #105514 (Introduce `Span::is_visible`)
- #105516 (Update cargo)
- #105522 (Remove wrong note for short circuiting operators)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add LLVM KCFI support to the Rust compiler
This PR adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)
Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the tracking issue #89653).
LLVM KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Thank you again, `@bjorn3,` `@eddyb,` `@nagisa,` and `@ojeda,` for all the help!
This commit adds LLVM Kernel Control Flow Integrity (KCFI) support to
the Rust compiler. It initially provides forward-edge control flow
protection for operating systems kernels for Rust-compiled code only by
aggregating function pointers in groups identified by their return and
parameter types. (See llvm/llvm-project@cff5bef.)
Forward-edge control flow protection for C or C++ and Rust -compiled
code "mixed binaries" (i.e., for when C or C++ and Rust -compiled code
share the same virtual address space) will be provided in later work as
part of this project by identifying C char and integer type uses at the
time types are encoded (see Type metadata in the design document in the
tracking issue #89653).
LLVM KCFI can be enabled with -Zsanitizer=kcfi.
Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <17426603+bjorn3@users.noreply.github.com>
Detect long types in E0308 and write them to disk
On type error with long types, print an abridged type and write the full type to disk.
Print the widest possible short type while still fitting in the terminal.
Add -Z maximal-hir-to-mir-coverage flag
This PR adds a new unstable flag `-Z maximal-hir-to-mir-coverage` that changes the behavior of `maybe_lint_level_root_bounded`, pursuant to [a discussion on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Mapping.20MIR.20to.20HIR). When enabled, this function will not search upwards for a lint root, but rather immediately return the provided HIR node ID. This change increases the granularity of the mapping between MIR locations and HIR nodes inside the `SourceScopeLocalData` data structures. This increase in granularity is useful for rustc consumers like [Flowistry](https://github.com/willcrichton/flowistry) that rely on getting source-mapping information about the MIR CFG that is as precise as possible.
A test `maximal_mir_to_hir_coverage.rs` has been added to verify that this flag does not break anything.
r? `@cjgillot`
cc `@gavinleroy`
Add StableOrd trait as proposed in MCP 533.
The `StableOrd` trait can be used to mark types as having a stable sort order across compilation sessions. Collections that sort their items in a stable way can safely implement HashStable by hashing items in sort order.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/533 for more information.
Remove useless borrows and derefs
They are nothing more than noise.
<sub>These are not all of them, but my clippy started crashing (stack overflow), so rip :(</sub>
The StableOrd trait can be used to mark types as having a stable
sort order across compilation sessions. Collections that sort their
items in a stable way can safely implement HashStable by
hashing items in sort order.
On type error with long types, print an abridged type and write the full
type to disk.
Print the widest possible short type while still fitting in the
terminal.
make `error_reported` check for delayed bugs
Fixes#104768
`error_reported()` was only checking if there were errors emitted, not for `delay_bug`s which can also be a source of `ErrorGuaranteed`. I assume the same is true of `lint_err_count` but i dont know
Use `as_deref` in compiler (but only where it makes sense)
This simplifies some code :3
(there are some changes that are not exacly `as_deref`, but more like "clever `Option`/`Result` method use")
Instead of `ast::Lit`.
Literal lowering now happens at two different times. Expression literals
are lowered when HIR is crated. Attribute literals are lowered during
parsing.
This commit changes the language very slightly. Some programs that used
to not compile now will compile. This is because some invalid literals
that are removed by `cfg` or attribute macros will no longer trigger
errors. See this comment for more details:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102944#issuecomment-1277476773
improve `filesearch::get_or_default_sysroot`
`fn get_or_default_sysroot` is now improved and used in `miri` and `clippy`, and tests are still passing as they should. So we no longer need to implement custom workarounds/hacks to find sysroot in tools like miri/clippy.
Resolves https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98832
re-opened from #103581
Allow use of `-Clto=thin` with `-Ccodegen-units=1` in general
The current logic to ignore ThinLTO when `-Ccodegen-units=1` makes sense for local ThinLTO but even in this scenario, a user may still want (non-local) ThinLTO for the purpose of optimizing dependencies into the final crate which is being compiled with 1 CGU.
The previous behavior was even more confusing because if you were generating a binary (`--emit=link`), then you would get ThinLTO but if you asked for LLVM IR or bytecode, then it would silently change to using regular LTO.
With this change, we only override the defaults for local ThinLTO if you ask for a single output such as LLVM IR or bytecode and in all other cases honor the requested LTO setting.
r? `@michaelwoerister`
Print valid `--print` requests if request is invalid
When someone makes a typo, it can be useful to see the valid options. This is also useful if someone wants to find out about all the options.
Track where diagnostics were created.
This implements the `-Ztrack-diagnostics` flag, which uses `#[track_caller]` to track where diagnostics are created. It is meant as a debugging tool much like `-Ztreat-err-as-bug`.
For example, the following code...
```rust
struct A;
struct B;
fn main(){
let _: A = B;
}
```
...now emits the following error message:
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src\main.rs:5:16
|
5 | let _: A = B;
| - ^ expected struct `A`, found struct `B`
| |
| expected due to this
-Ztrack-diagnostics: created at compiler\rustc_infer\src\infer\error_reporting\mod.rs:2275:31
```
The current logic to ignore ThinLTO when `-Ccodegen-units=1` makes sense
for local ThinLTO but even in this scenario, a user may still want
(non-local) ThinLTO for the purpose of optimizing dependencies into the
final crate which is being compiled with 1 CGU.
The previous behavior was even more confusing because if you were
generating a binary (`--emit=link`), then you would get ThinLTO but if
you asked for LLVM IR or bytecode, then it would silently change to
using regular LTO.
With this change, we only override the defaults for local ThinLTO if you
ask for a single output such as LLVM IR or bytecode and in all other
cases honor the requested LTO setting.
Get rid of native_library projection queries
They don't seem particularly useful as I don't expect native libraries to change frequently.
Maybe they do provide significant value of keeping incremental compilation green though, I'm not sure.
Change process spawning to inherit the parent's signal mask by default
Previously, the signal mask was always reset when a child process is
started. This breaks tools like `nohup` which expect `SIGHUP` to be
blocked for all transitive processes.
With this change, the default behavior changes to inherit the signal mask.
This also changes the signal disposition for `SIGPIPE` to only be changed if the `#[unix_sigpipe]` attribute isn't set.
translation: doc comments with derives, subdiagnostic-less enum variants, more derive use
- Adds support for `doc` attributes in the diagnostic derives so that documentation comments don't result in the derive failing.
- Adds support for enum variants in the subdiagnostic derive to not actually correspond to an addition to a diagnostic.
- Made use of the derive in more places in the `rustc_ast_lowering`, `rustc_ast_passes`, `rustc_lint`, `rustc_session`, `rustc_infer` - taking advantage of recent additions like eager subdiagnostics, multispan suggestions, etc.
cc #100717
Previously, the signal mask is always reset when a child process is
started. This breaks tools like `nohup` which expect `SIGHUP` to be
blocked.
With this change, the default behavior changes to inherit the signal mask.
This also changes the signal disposition for `SIGPIPE` to only be
changed if the `#[unix_sigpipe]` attribute isn't set.