Fix the invalidation of the MIR early exit cache
~~The #34307 introduced a cache for early exits in order to help with O(n*m) explosion of cleanup blocks but the cache is invalidated incorrectly and I can’t seem to figure out why (caching is hard!)~~
~~Remove the cache for now to fix the immediate correctness issue and worry about the performance later.~~
Cache invalidation got fixed.
Fixes#35737
r? @nikomatsakis
Update LLVM to include 4 backported commits by @majnemer.
Partial fix for rust-lang/rust#35662, should help at least loops on small arrays.
Nominated for backporting into the new beta (not the one that's being released as stable this week).
r? @alexcrichton
add mips-uclibc targets
These targets cover OpenWRT 15.05 devices, which use the soft float ABI
and the uclibc library. None of the other built-in mips targets covered
those devices (mips-gnu is hard float and glibc-based, mips-musl is
musl-based).
With this commit one can now build std for these devices using these
commands:
```
$ configure --enable-rustbuild --target=mips-unknown-linux-uclibc
$ make
```
cc #35673
---
r? @alexcrichton
cc @felixalias This is the target the rust-tessel project should be using.
Note that the libc crate doesn't support the uclibc library and will have to be updated. We are lucky that uclibc and glibc are somewhat similar and one can build std and even run the libc-test test suite with the current, unmodified libc. About that last part, I tried to run the libc-test and got a bunch of compile errors. I don't intend to fix them but I'll post some instruction about how to run libc-test in the rust-lang/libc issue tracker.
Currently most of the operator traits use trivial implementation
examples that only perform side effects. Honestly, that might not be too
bad for the sake of documentation; but anyway, here's a proposal to move
a slightly modified version of the module-level point-addition example
into the `Add` documentation, since it's more evocative of addition
semantics.
Part of #29365
wrap identifiers in backticks
minor rephrasing
fix module-level documentation to be more truthful
This branch changes the example for `Add` to no longer be a "minimum implementation that prints something to the screen".
The idea is that a `usize` is sort of ambiguous: in this case, it
represents indices that do not need tracking, but it could as easily be
some data read out from a tracked location, and hence represent tracked
data. Therefore, we add an `Untracked` type that lets user assert
that value is not tracked.
Also correct various typos.