bors afa9fef709 Auto merge of #112418 - ferrocene:pa-mir-opt-panic, r=ozkanonur,saethlin
Add support for targets without unwinding in `mir-opt`, and improve `--bless` for it

The main goal of this PR is to add support for targets without unwinding support in the `mir-opt` test suite, by adding the `EMIT_MIR_FOR_EACH_PANIC_STRATEGY` comment. Similarly to 32bit vs 64bit, when that comment is present, blessed output files will have the `.panic-unwind` or `.panic-abort` suffix, and the right one will be chosen depending on the target's panic strategy.

The `EMIT_MIR_FOR_EACH_PANIC_STRATEGY` comment replaced all the `ignore-wasm32` comments in the `mir-opt` test suite, as those comments were added due to `wasm32` being a target without unwinding support. The comment was also added on other tests that were only executed on x86 but were still panic strategy dependent.

The `mir-opt` suite was then blessed, which caused a ton of churn as most of the existing output files had to be renamed and (mostly) duplicated with the abort strategy.

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After [asking on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/mir-opt.20tests.20and.20panic.3Dabort), the main concern about this change is it'd make blessing the `mir-opt` suite even harder, as you'd need to both bless it with an unwinding target and an aborting target. This exacerbated the current situation, where you'd need to bless it with a 32bit and a 64bit target already.

Because of that, this PR also makes significant enhancements to `--bless` for the `mir-opt` suite, where it will automatically bless the suite four times with different targets, while requiring minimal cross-compilation.

To handle the 32bit vs 64bit blessing, there is now an hardcoded list of target mapping between 32bit and 64bit. The goal of the list is to find a related target that will *probably* work without requiring additional cross-compilation toolchains on the system. If a mapping is found, bootstrap will bless the suite with both targets, otherwise just with the current target.

To handle the panic strategy blessing (abort vs unwind), I had to resort to what I call "synthetic targets". For each of the target we're blessing (so either the current one, or a 32bit and a 64bit depending on the previous paragraph), bootstrap will extract the JSON spec of the target and change it to include `"panic-strategy": "abort"`. It will then build the standard library with this synthetic target, and bless the `mir-opt` suite with it.

As a result of these changes, blessing the `mir-opt` suite will actually bless it two or four times with different targets, ensuring all possible variants are actually blessed.

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This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.

r? `@jyn514`
cc `@saethlin` `@oli-obk`
2023-06-14 14:20:59 +00:00
..

This directory contains some source code for the Rust project, including:

  • The bootstrapping build system
  • Various submodules for tools, like cargo, tidy, etc.

For more information on how various parts of the compiler work, see the rustc dev guide.