Update the wasi-libc used for the wasm32-wasi target
This commit updates the wasi-libc revision used to build with the wasm32-wasi target. This notably pulls in WebAssembly/wasi-libc#377 which is needed to fix a use case I've been working on recently. This should be a relatively small update hopefully and is not expected to have any user impact.
This commit updates the wasi-libc revision used to build with the
wasm32-wasi target. This notably pulls in WebAssembly/wasi-libc#377
which is needed to fix a use case I've been working on recently. This
should be a relatively small update hopefully and is not expected to
have any user impact.
Use CI LLVM in `test-various` builder
It was disabled because it needs `lld`, but since #104748 was merged it is no longer needed.
This will speed this test, since it no longer needs to build LLVM.
Historically, Rust's Fuchsia targets have been labeled x86_64-fuchsia
and aarch64-fuchsia. However, they should technically contain vendor
information. This CL changes Fuchsia's target triples to include the
"unknown" vendor since Clang now does normalization and handles all
triple spellings.
This was previously attempted in #90510, which was closed due to
inactivity.
This duplicates mingw-check into two jobs where one job
runs `tidy` only while the other job does not. The tidy
job will not cancel other jobs on failure.
Run `x test tidy` sooner in mingw-check
It takes less time to run than the other tests and is more likely to fail. `expand-yaml-anchors` is still run first to make sure the CI files are internally consistent.
Note that changing to `--stage 0` doesn't actually do anything since bootstrap tools are always built with the bootstrap compiler, this just makes it less confusing.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105058/commits/83bab41b5b2d4752d187dd91b05c88ac74cf3783
It takes less time to run than the other tests and is more likely to fail.
`expand-yaml-anchors` is still run first to make sure the CI files are internally consistent.
Enable profiler in dist-powerpc64le-linux
Build the profiler runtime to allow using -C profile-generate and -C instrument-coverage on POWER little endian systems.
I have verified locally that the runtime builds and the profiler is working fine on the platform.
Similar pull request for a different system: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104304
Build the profiler runtime to allow using -C profile-generate and -C instrument-coverage on POWER systems.
I have verified locally that the runtime builds and the profiler is working fine on the platform.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104465 (Document more settings for building rustc for Fuchsia)
- #104951 (Simplify checking for `GeneratorKind::Async`)
- #104959 (Revert #104269 (to avoid spurious hang/test failure in CI))
- #104978 (notify the rust-analyzer team on changes to the rust-analyzer subtree)
- #105010 (Fix documentation of asymptotic complexity for rustc_data_structures::SortedMap)
- #105016 (Add sentence when rustdoc search is running)
- #105020 (rustdoc: merge background-image rules in rustdoc-toggle CSS)
- #105024 (rustdoc: remove `fnname` CSS class that's styled exactly like `fn`)
- #105027 (Rustdoc-Json: Add tests for linking to foreign variants.)
- #105038 (Clean up pr 104954)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Document more settings for building rustc for Fuchsia
This documents that you need to link for Fuchsia with `lld` and provides configuration settings for both `clang` and `lld`. It also adjusts the documentation for running the test suite to recommend installing to a prefix.
r? ``@tmandry``
Enable profiler in dist-riscv64-linux
Build the profiler runtime to allow using -C profile-generate and -C instrument-coverage on riscv64-linux.
Signed-off-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
Use clang for the UEFI targets
This fixes an issue where the C and asm sources built by compiler_builtins were being compiled as ELF objects instead of PE objects. This wasn't noticed before because it doesn't cause compiler_builtins or rustc to fail to build. You only see a failure when a program is built that references one of the symbols in an ELF object.
Compiling with clang fixes this because the cc crate converts the UEFI targets into Windows targets that clang understands, causing it to produce PE objects.
Also update compiler_builtins to 0.1.84 to pull in some necessary fixes for compiling the UEFI targets with clang.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104326
This fixes an issue where the C and asm sources built by
compiler_builtins were being compiled as ELF objects instead of PE
objects. This wasn't noticed before because it doesn't cause
compiler_builtins or rustc to fail to build. You only see a failure when
a program is built that references one of the symbols in an ELF object.
Compiling with clang fixes this because the `cc` crate converts the UEFI
targets into Windows targets that clang understands, causing it to
produce PE objects.
Note that this requires compiler_builtins >= 0.1.84.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104326
Don't focus on notable trait parent when hiding it
I clicked on a notable trait icon so the popup remained and then clicked on the settings menu. When the settings menu was blurred, it scrolled back to when the notable trait was, which isn't great.
r? `@notriddle`
Build the profiler runtime to allow using -C profile-generate
and -C instrument-coverage on riscv64-linux.
Signed-off-by: Alistair Francis <alistair.francis@wdc.com>
Enable profiler in dist-s390x-linux
Build the profiler runtime to allow using -C profile-generate and -C instrument-coverage on s390x-linux.
I've verified in a local build that the runtime builds and the profiler is working fine on the platform.
ci: Upgrade dist-x86_64-netbsd to NetBSD 9.0
This is another step in toolchain upgrades for LLVM 16, which will need at least GCC 7.1.
Our previous NetBSD 8.0 cross-toolchain used its system GCC 5.5. While there are newer versions available in pkgsrc, I could not get those working for cross-compilation. Upgrading to NetBSD 9.0 gets us GCC 7.4, which is sufficient for now.
This will affect the compatibility of the build we ship for `x86_64-unknown-netbsd`, but others may still build their own from source if that is needed. It is expected that NetBSD 8 will reach EOL soon anyway, approximately one month after 10 is released, but there is no firm date for that.
Build the profiler runtime to allow using -C profile-generate
and -C instrument-coverage on s390x-linux.
I've verified in a local build that the runtime builds and
the profiler is working fine on the platform.
Add check in GUI test for file loading failure
Since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101702, some resources location need to be updated in case their content changed because then their hash will change too. This will prevent errors like https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104114 to happen again.
The second commit is to prevent CORS errors: when a file is linked from a file itself imported, the web browser considers they come from a different domain and therefore triggers the error. The option tells the web browser to ignore this case.
cc ```@jsha```
r? ```@notriddle```
Add QEMU test for x86_64-unknown-uefi
The UEFI targets don't have std support yet, so the normal tests don't work. However, we can compile a simple no-std program and run it under QEMU to at least check that the target compiles, links, and runs.
Tested locally with: `src/ci/docker/run.sh x86_64-uefi`