Implement rust-lang/compiler-team#578.
When an ICE is encountered on nightly releases, the new rustc panic
handler will also write the contents of the backtrace to disk. If any
`delay_span_bug`s are encountered, their backtrace is also added to the
file. The platform and rustc version will also be collected.
Update cargo
10 commits in 45782b6b8afd1da042d45c2daeec9c0744f72cc7..694a579566a9a1482b20aff8a68f0e4edd99bd28
2023-07-05 16:54:51 +0000 to 2023-07-11 22:28:29 +0000
- fix(embedded): Always generate valid package names (rust-lang/cargo#12349)
- fix(embedded): Error on unsupported commands (rust-lang/cargo#12350)
- chore(ci): Automatically test new packages by using `--workspace` (rust-lang/cargo#12342)
- contrib docs: Add some more detail about how publishing works (rust-lang/cargo#12344)
- docs: Put cargo-add change under nightly (rust-lang/cargo#12343)
- Minor: Use "number" instead of "digit" when explaining Cargo's use of semver (rust-lang/cargo#12340)
- Update criterion (rust-lang/cargo#12338)
- Add profile strip to config docs. (rust-lang/cargo#12337)
- update re: multiple versions that differ only in the metadata tag (rust-lang/cargo#12335)
- doc: state `PackageId`/`SourceId` string is opaque (rust-lang/cargo#12313)
r? ``@ghost``
Implement selection for `Unsize` for better coercion behavior
In order for much of coercion to succeed, we need to be able to deal with partial ambiguity of `Unsize` traits during selection. However, I pessimistically implemented selection in the new trait solver to just bail out with ambiguity if it was a built-in impl:
9227ff28af/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/solve/eval_ctxt/select.rs (L126)
This implements a proper "rematch" procedure for dealing with built-in `Unsize` goals, so that even if the goal is ambiguous, we are able to get nested obligations which are used in the coercion selection-like loop:
9227ff28af/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/coercion.rs (L702)
Second commit just moves a `resolve_vars_if_possible` call to fix a bug where we weren't detecting a trait upcasting to occur.
r? ``@lcnr``
move pal cfgs in f32 and f64 to sys
I'd like to push forward on `sys` being a separate crate. To start with, most of these PAL exception cases are very simple little bits of code like this, so I thought I would try tidying them up.
Port PGO/LTO/BOLT optimized build pipeline to Rust
This PR ports the `stage-build.py` PGO/LTO/BOLT optimization script from Python to Rust, to make it easier to use dependencies, and make it a bit more robust. The PR switches both the Linux and Windows dist runners to the Rust script and removes the old Python script.
Funnily enough, the Rust port has less lines of code than the Python script :) I think that clearly shows that the Python script really lacked dependencies.
Revert the lexing of `c"…"` string literals
Fixes \[after beta-backport\] #113235.
Further progress is tracked in #113333.
This PR *manually* reverts parts of #108801 (since a git-revert would've been too coarse-grained & messy)
and git-reverts #111647.
CC `@fee1-dead` (#108801) `@klensy` (#111647)
r? `@compiler-errors`
`@rustbot` label F-c_str_literals beta-nominated
`hir`: Add `Become` expression kind (explicit tail calls experiment)
This adds `hir::ExprKind::Become` alongside ast lowering. During hir-thir lowering we currently lower `become` as `return`, so that we can partially test `become` without ICEing.
cc `@scottmcm`
r? `@Nilstrieb`
Update cargo
11 commits in 49b6d9e179a91cf7645142541c9563443f64bf2b..0c14026aa84ee2ec4c67460c0a18abc8519ca6b2
2023-06-09 17:21:19 +0000 to 2023-06-14 18:43:05 +0000
- fix(embedded): Don't append hash to bin names (rust-lang/cargo#12269)
- Fix version requirement example in Dependency Resolution, SemVer compatibility section (rust-lang/cargo#12267)
- Update triagebot links. (rust-lang/cargo#12265)
- Show a better error when container tests fail. (rust-lang/cargo#12264)
- chore: update dependencies (rust-lang/cargo#12261)
- refactor(embedded) (rust-lang/cargo#12262)
- docs: clarify the use of `default` branch instead of `main` by default (rust-lang/cargo#12251)
- docs: update changelog for 1.71 backport and 1.72 (rust-lang/cargo#12256)
- feat: Initial support for single-file packages (rust-lang/cargo#12245)
- test(z-flags): Verify `-Z` flags list is sorted (rust-lang/cargo#12224)
- refactor: registry data kinds cleanup (rust-lang/cargo#12248)
---
This commit also update LICENSE exceptions, as Cargo introduced a newer version of `dunce` and `blake3` as dependencies.
r? `@ghost`
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.
---
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.
---
This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.
r? `@jyn514`
cc `@saethlin` `@oli-obk`
Update dependencies with reported vulnerabilities
Vulnerable dependencies:
* bumpalo 3.12.1 (yanked)
* updated to 3.13.0
* tokio 1.8.4 - https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2023-0001
* updated to 1.28.2
* remove_dir_all 0.5.3 - https://rustsec.org/advisories/RUSTSEC-2023-0018
* removed by using the standard library function in `rust-installer` instead and updating to `tempfile@3.5.0` (which also removes the dependency).
The new dependencies come from `tempfile@3.5.0` which adds the dependency on `rustix`
use c literals in compiler and library
Use c literals #108801 in compiler and library
currently blocked on:
* <strike>rustfmt: don't know how to format c literals</strike> nope, nightly one works.
* <strike>bootstrap</strike>
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` blocked