Commit graph

7223 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
65398c46b8
Rollup merge of #123421 - taiki-e:netbsd-doc, r=Nilstrieb
Fix target name in NetBSD platform-support doc

NetBSD platform-support doc currently mentions `amd64-unknown-netbsd`, but it is not a valid target name (the correct name is `x86_64-unknown-netbsd`).

ceab6128fa/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/netbsd.md (L16)

```console
$ rustc --print target-list | grep netbsd
aarch64-unknown-netbsd
aarch64_be-unknown-netbsd
armv6-unknown-netbsd-eabihf
armv7-unknown-netbsd-eabihf
i586-unknown-netbsd
i686-unknown-netbsd
mipsel-unknown-netbsd
powerpc-unknown-netbsd
riscv64gc-unknown-netbsd
sparc64-unknown-netbsd
x86_64-unknown-netbsd
```
2024-04-03 22:11:02 +02:00
Taiki Endo
6edb021fd3 Fix target name in NetBSD platform-support doc 2024-04-04 01:31:04 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
1bde86b18b
Rollup merge of #123209 - ObsidianMinor:doc/external-clangrt, r=michaelwoerister
Add section to sanitizer doc for `-Zexternal-clangrt`

After spending a week looking for answers to how to do the very thing this flag lets me do, it felt appropriate to document it where I would've expected it to be.
2024-04-03 17:15:47 +02:00
Aaron Loyd
382459e047 Add section to sanitizer doc for -Zexternal-clangrt
After spending a week looking for answers to how to do the very thing
this flag lets me do, it felt appropriate to document it where I would've
expected it to be.
2024-04-02 19:51:20 -05:00
bors
2531d08e34 Auto merge of #123336 - workingjubilee:strip-the-trace-off-my-back, r=Nilstrieb
Note impact of `-Cstrip` on backtraces

It is not always clear to people what the impact of `-Cstrip` options are. They are a common question on sites like StackOverflow, and sometimes people even report bugs with "no backtrace" after deliberately mangling the symbol table. We cannot exhaustively document every permutation, but we should warn people about common effects.
2024-04-02 07:39:10 +00:00
Jubilee Young
1dcaf70c0e Note -Cstrip is not a security measure 2024-04-01 14:13:56 -07:00
Jubilee Young
4994f73a27 Revise strip-symbols paragraph 2024-04-01 14:07:59 -07:00
Jubilee Young
973663db9d Discourage stripping symbols in devtools 2024-04-01 13:50:29 -07:00
Jubilee Young
3896f07627 Note impact of -Cstrip on backtraces
It is not always clear to people what the impact of `-Cstrip` options are.
They are a common question on sites like StackOverflow, and sometimes
people even report bugs with "no backtrace" after deliberately mangling
the symbol table. We cannot exhaustively document every permutation, but
we should warn people about common effects.
2024-04-01 12:51:37 -07:00
Tom French
edb7aeafba
chore: fix footnotes/links in platform-support.md 2024-04-01 11:43:52 +01:00
Urgau
777c6b46cc Simplify trim-paths feature by merging all debuginfo options together 2024-03-28 18:47:26 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9162776c66
Rollup merge of #108675 - Shadlock0133:adt_const_params, r=compiler-errors
Document `adt_const_params` feature in Unstable Book
2024-03-26 21:23:47 +01:00
rustbot
95f268efa6 Update books 2024-03-25 13:00:21 -04:00
Adam Gastineau
fb09ddb1ea Added madsmtm as second maintainer 2024-03-24 07:01:39 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
783778c631
Rollup merge of #121619 - RossSmyth:pfix_match, r=petrochenkov
Experimental feature postfix match

This has a basic experimental implementation for the RFC postfix match (rust-lang/rfcs#3295, #121618). [Liaison is](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/213817-t-lang/topic/Postfix.20Match.20Liaison/near/423301844) ```@scottmcm``` with the lang team's [experimental feature gate process](https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/blob/master/src/how_to/experiment.md).

This feature has had an RFC for a while, and there has been discussion on it for a while. It would probably be valuable to see it out in the field rather than continue discussing it. This feature also allows to see how popular postfix expressions like this are for the postfix macros RFC, as those will take more time to implement.

It is entirely implemented in the parser, so it should be relatively easy to remove if needed.

This PR is split in to 5 commits to ease review.

1. The implementation of the feature & gating.
2. Add a MatchKind field, fix uses, fix pretty.
3. Basic rustfmt impl, as rustfmt crashes upon seeing this syntax without a fix.
4. Add new MatchSource to HIR for Clippy & other HIR consumers
2024-03-22 11:36:58 +01:00
Roy Buitenhuis
2fca27cd3b Add bare metal riscv32 target. 2024-03-20 16:02:10 +01:00
Michael Goulet
05116c5c30 Only split by-ref/by-move futures for async closures 2024-03-19 16:59:23 -04:00
Adam Gastineau
572d6cd322 Added note about LLVM 18 requirement 2024-03-19 13:06:10 -07:00
Adam Gastineau
4f7ac51372 Fixed incorrectly named sim target in platform-support.md 2024-03-19 07:34:03 -07:00
Adam Gastineau
4f6f433745 Support for visionOS 2024-03-18 20:45:45 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
af48242054
Rollup merge of #122700 - esp-rs:remove-old-files, r=workingjubilee
Remove redundant files, rename base riscv32 file

Fixes a mistake I made in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117874.
2024-03-18 22:24:41 +01:00
Scott Mabin
9b0cbe3772 Remove redundant files, rename base risc32 file 2024-03-18 19:23:21 +00:00
Eric Huss
39f2d25090 Fix heading anchors in doc pages. 2024-03-18 09:13:18 -07:00
Ayush Singh
c1cf422140
Mark UEFI std support as WIP
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushdevel1325@gmail.com>
2024-03-17 21:32:50 +05:30
Chris Denton
d5f92fc585
Remove Windows support note 2024-03-16 12:54:32 +00:00
bors
c03ea3dfd9 Auto merge of #121926 - tgross35:f16-f128-step3-feature-gate, r=compiler-errors,petrochenkov
`f16` and `f128` step 3: compiler support & feature gate

Continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121841, another portion of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114607

This PR exposes the new types to the world and adds a feature gate. Marking this as a draft because I need some feedback on where I did the feature gate check. It also does not yet catch type via suffixed literals (so the feature gate test will fail, probably some others too because I haven't belssed).

If there is a better place to check all types after resolution, I can do that. If not, I figure maybe I can add a second gate location in AST when it checks numeric suffixes.

Unfortunately I still don't think there is much testing to be done for correctness (codegen tests or parsed value checks) until we have basic library support. I think that will be the next step.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116909

r? `@compiler-errors`
cc `@Nilstrieb`
`@rustbot` label +F-f16_and_f128
2024-03-16 02:02:00 +00:00
Travis Finkenauer
d02e66ddf0 doc: add --test-builder/--test-builder-wrapper 2024-03-15 03:19:29 -07:00
Aurora
17ba73cfa0 Document adt_const_params feature in Unstable Book 2024-03-15 00:21:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
54a5a49af0
Rollup merge of #122322 - Zalathar:branch, r=oli-obk
coverage: Initial support for branch coverage instrumentation

(This is a review-ready version of the changes that were drafted in #118305.)

This PR adds support for branch coverage instrumentation, gated behind the unstable flag value `-Zcoverage-options=branch`. (Coverage instrumentation must also be enabled with `-Cinstrument-coverage`.)

During THIR-to-MIR lowering (MIR building), if branch coverage is enabled, we collect additional information about branch conditions and their corresponding then/else blocks. We inject special marker statements into those blocks, so that the `InstrumentCoverage` MIR pass can reliably identify them even after the initially-built MIR has been simplified and renumbered.

The rest of the changes are mostly just plumbing needed to gather up the information that was collected during MIR building, and include it in the coverage metadata that we embed in the final binary.

Note that `llvm-cov show` doesn't print branch coverage information in its source views by default; that needs to be explicitly enabled with `--show-branches=count` or similar.

---

The current implementation doesn't have any support for instrumenting `if let` or let-chains. I think it's still useful without that, and adding it would be non-trivial, so I'm happy to leave that for future work.
2024-03-14 20:00:19 +01:00
Trevor Gross
e782d27ec6 Add feature gates for f16 and f128
Includes related tests and documentation pages.

Michael Goulet: Don't issue feature error in resolver for f16/f128
unless finalize

Co-authored-by: Michael Goulet <michael@errs.io>
2024-03-14 13:32:54 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
02b1a91ee8
Rollup merge of #122490 - Amanieu:ohos-tier2-instructions, r=GuillaumeGomez
Update build instructions for OpenHarmony

The platform page now recommends using rustup since the target is now tier 2.
2024-03-14 15:44:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1dce191441
Rollup merge of #122368 - pavedroad:master, r=oli-obk
chore: remove repetitive words
2024-03-14 15:44:34 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
ec0b459ad2 Update build instructions for OpenHarmony
The platform page now recommends using rustup since the target is
now tier 2.
2024-03-14 12:53:57 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
6694918344
Rollup merge of #119676 - notriddle:notriddle/rustdoc-search-hof, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc-search: search types by higher-order functions

This feature extends rustdoc with syntax and search index information for searching function pointers and closures (Higher-Order Functions, or HOF). Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60485

This PR adds two syntaxes: a high-level one for finding any kind of HOF, and a direct implementation of the parenthesized path syntax that Rust itself uses.

## Preview pages

| Query | Results |
|-------|---------|
| [`option<T>, (fnonce (T) -> bool) -> option<T>`][optionfilter] | `Option::filter` |
| [`option<T>, (T -> bool) -> option<T>`][optionfilter2] | `Option::filter` |

Updated chapter of the book: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/rustdoc/read-documentation/search.html

[optionfilter]: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=option<T>%2C+(fnonce+(T)+->+bool)+->+option<T>&filter-crate=std
[optionfilter2]: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=option<T>%2C+(T+->+bool)+->+option<T>&filter-crate=std

## Motivation

When type-based search was first landed, it was directly [described as incomplete][a comment].

[a comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/23289#issuecomment-79437386

Filling out the missing functionality is going to mean adding support for more of Rust's [type expression] syntax, such as references, raw pointers, function pointers, and closures. This PR adds function pointers and closures.

[type expression]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/types.html#type-expressions

There's been demand for something "like Hoogle, but for Rust" expressed a few times [1](https://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/y8sbid/is_there_a_website_like_haskells_hoogle_for_rust/) [2](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/rust-equivalent-of-haskells-hoogle/102280) [3](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/std-library-inclusion-policy/6852/2) [4](https://discord.com/channels/442252698964721669/448238009733742612/1109502307495858216). Some of them just don't realize what functionality already exists ([`Duration -> u64`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/?search=duration%20-%3E%20u64) already works), but a lot of them specifically want to search for higher-order functions like option combinators.

## Guide-level explanation (from the Rustdoc book)

To search for a function that accepts a function as a parameter, like `Iterator::all`, wrap the nested signature in parenthesis, as in [`Iterator<T>, (T -> bool) -> bool`][iterator-all]. You can also search for a specific closure trait, such as `Iterator<T>, (FnMut(T) -> bool) -> bool`, but you need to know which one you want.

[iterator-all]: https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=Iterator<T>%2C+(T+->+bool)+->+bool&filter-crate=std

## Reference-level description (also from the Rustdoc book)

### Primitives with Special Syntax

<table>
<thead>
  <tr>
    <th>Shorthand</th>
    <th>Explicit names</th>
  </tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
  <tr><td colspan="2">Before this PR</td></tr>
  <tr>
    <td><code>[]</code></td>
    <td><code>primitive:slice</code> and/or <code>primitive:array</code></td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td><code>[T]</code></td>
    <td><code>primitive:slice&lt;T&gt;</code> and/or <code>primitive:array&lt;T&gt;</code></td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td><code>!</code></td>
    <td><code>primitive:never</code></td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td><code>()</code></td>
    <td><code>primitive:unit</code> and/or <code>primitive:tuple</code></td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td><code>(T)</code></td>
    <td><code>T</code></td>
  </tr>
  <tr>
    <td><code>(T,)</code></td>
    <td><code>primitive:tuple&lt;T&gt;</code></td>
  </tr>
  <tr><td colspan="2">After this PR</td></tr>
  <tr>
    <td><code>(T, U -> V, W)</code></td>
    <td><code>fn(T, U) -> (V, W)</code>, Fn, FnMut, and FnOnce</td>
  </tr>
</tbody>
</table>

The `->` operator has lower precedence than comma. If it's not wrapped in brackets, it delimits the return value for the function being searched for. To search for functions that take functions as parameters, use parenthesis.

### Search query grammar

```ebnf
ident = *(ALPHA / DIGIT / "_")
path = ident *(DOUBLE-COLON ident) [BANG]
slice-like = OPEN-SQUARE-BRACKET [ nonempty-arg-list ] CLOSE-SQUARE-BRACKET
tuple-like = OPEN-PAREN [ nonempty-arg-list ] CLOSE-PAREN
arg = [type-filter *WS COLON *WS] (path [generics] / slice-like / tuple-like)
type-sep = COMMA/WS *(COMMA/WS)
nonempty-arg-list = *(type-sep) arg *(type-sep arg) *(type-sep) [ return-args ]
generic-arg-list = *(type-sep) arg [ EQUAL arg ] *(type-sep arg [ EQUAL arg ]) *(type-sep)
normal-generics = OPEN-ANGLE-BRACKET [ generic-arg-list ] *(type-sep)
            CLOSE-ANGLE-BRACKET
fn-like-generics = OPEN-PAREN [ nonempty-arg-list ] CLOSE-PAREN [ RETURN-ARROW arg ]
generics = normal-generics / fn-like-generics
return-args = RETURN-ARROW *(type-sep) nonempty-arg-list

exact-search = [type-filter *WS COLON] [ RETURN-ARROW ] *WS QUOTE ident QUOTE [ generics ]
type-search = [ nonempty-arg-list ]

query = *WS (exact-search / type-search) *WS

; unchanged parts of the grammar, like the full list of type filters, are omitted
```

## Future direction

### The remaining type expression grammar

As described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118194, this is another step in the type expression grammar: BareFunction, and the function-like mode of TypePath, are now supported.

* RawPointerType and ReferenceType actually are a priority.
* ImplTraitType and TraitObjectType (and ImplTraitTypeOneBound and TraitObjectTypeOneBound) aren't as much of a priority, since they desugar pretty easily.

### Search subtyping and traits

This is the other major factor that makes it less useful than it should be.

* `iterator<result<t>> -> result<t>` doesn't find `Result::from_iter`. You have to search [`intoiterator<result<t>> -> result<t>`](https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=intoiterator%3Cresult%3Ct%3E%3E%20-%3E%20result%3Ct%3E&filter-crate=std). Nobody's going to search for IntoIterator unless they basically already know about it and don't need the search engine anyway.

* Iterator combinators are usually structs that happen to implement Iterator, like `std::iter::Map`.

To solve these cases, it needs to look at trait implementations, knowing that Iterator is a "subtype of" IntoIterator, and Map is a "subtype of" Iterator, so `iterator -> result` is a subtype of `intoiterator -> result` and `iterator<t>, (t -> u) -> iterator<u>` is a subtype of [`iterator<t>, (t -> u) -> map<t -> u>`](https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-9/search-hof/std/vec/struct.Vec.html?search=iterator%3Ct%3E%2C%20(t%20-%3E%20u)%20-%3E%20map%3Ct%20-%3E%20u%3E&filter-crate=std).
2024-03-14 11:09:56 +01:00
Zalathar
060c7ce7e9 coverage: -Zcoverage-options=branch is no longer a placeholder 2024-03-14 17:19:06 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
8b9ef3b996
Rollup merge of #122226 - Zalathar:zcoverage-options, r=nnethercote
coverage: Remove or migrate all unstable values of `-Cinstrument-coverage`

(This PR was substantially overhauled from its original version, which migrated all of the existing unstable values intact.)

This PR takes the three nightly-only values that are currently accepted by `-Cinstrument-coverage`, completely removes two of them (`except-unused-functions` and `except-unused-generics`), and migrates the third (`branch`) over to a newly-introduced unstable flag `-Zcoverage-options`.

I have a few motivations for wanting to do this:

- It's unclear whether anyone actually uses the `except-unused-*` values, so this serves as an opportunity to either remove them, or prompt existing users to object to their removal.
- After #117199, the stable values of `-Cinstrument-coverage` treat it as a boolean-valued flag, so having nightly-only extra values feels out-of-place.
  - Nightly-only values also require extra ad-hoc code to make sure they aren't accidentally exposed to stable users.
- The new system allows multiple different settings to be toggled independently, which isn't possible in the current single-value system.
- The new system makes it easier to introduce new behaviour behind an unstable toggle, and then gather nightly-user feedback before possibly making it the default behaviour for all users.
- The new system also gives us a convenient place to put relatively-narrow options that won't ever be the default, but that nightly users might still want access to.
- It's likely that we will eventually want to give stable users more fine-grained control over coverage instrumentation. The new flag serves as a prototype of what that stable UI might eventually look like.

The `branch` option is a placeholder that currently does nothing. It will be used by #122322 to opt into branch coverage instrumentation.

---

I see `-Zcoverage-options` as something that will exist more-or-less indefinitely, though individual sub-options might come and go as appropriate. I think there will always be some demand for nightly-only toggles, so I don't see `-Zcoverage-options` itself ever being stable, though we might eventually stabilize something similar to it.
2024-03-13 06:41:22 +01:00
Zalathar
3407fcc12e coverage: Add -Zcoverage-options for fine control of coverage
This new nightly-only flag can be used to toggle fine-grained flags that
control the details of coverage instrumentation.

Currently the only supported flag value is `branch` (or `no-branch`), which is
a placeholder for upcoming support for branch coverage. Other flag values can
be added in the future, to prototype proposed new behaviour, or to enable
special non-default behaviour.
2024-03-13 11:14:10 +11:00
Zalathar
1f544ce305 coverage: Remove all unstable values of -Cinstrument-coverage 2024-03-13 11:14:09 +11:00
David Wood
420c58fb11
sess: stabilize relro-level
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2024-03-12 13:40:40 +00:00
pavedroad
6b082b5e66 chore: remove repetitive words
Signed-off-by: pavedroad <qcqs@outlook.com>

chore: remove repetitive words

Signed-off-by: pavedroad <qcqs@outlook.com>
2024-03-12 20:09:33 +08:00
bors
5b7343b966 Auto merge of #122170 - alexcrichton:rename-wasi-threads, r=petrochenkov
Rename `wasm32-wasi-preview1-threads` to `wasm32-wasip1-threads`

This commit renames the current `wasm32-wasi-preview1-threads` target to `wasm32-wasip1-threads`. The need for this rename is a bit unfortunate as the previous name was chosen in an attempt to be future-compatible with other WASI targets. Originally this target was proposed to be `wasm32-wasi-threads`, and that's what was originally implemented in wasi-sdk as well. After discussion though and with the plans for the upcoming component-model target (now named `wasm32-wasip2`) the "preview1" naming was chosen for the threads-based target. The WASI subgroup later decided that it was time to drop the "preview" terminology and recommends "pX" instead, hence previous PRs to add `wasm32-wasip2` and rename `wasm32-wasi` to `wasm32-wasip1`.

So, with all that history, the "proper name" for this target is different than its current name, so one way or another a rename is required. This PR proposes renaming this target cold-turkey, unlike `wasm32-wasi` which is having a long transition period to change its name. The threads-based target is predicted to see only a fraction of the traffic of `wasm32-wasi` due to the unstable nature of the WASI threads proposal itself.

While I was here I updated the in-tree documentation in the target spec file itself as most of the documentation was copied from the original WASI target and wasn't as applicable to this target.

Also, as an aside, I can at least try to apologize for all the naming confusion here, but this is hopefully the last WASI-related rename.
2024-03-12 08:30:46 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
3d5d83911f
Rollup merge of #122339 - rustbot:docs-update, r=ehuss
Update books

## rust-lang/reference

3 commits in 3417f866932cb1c09c6be0f31d2a02ee01b4b95d..5afb503a4c1ea3c84370f8f4c08a1cddd1cdf6ad
2024-03-06 21:29:54 UTC to 2024-02-28 04:06:45 UTC

- Input format (rust-lang/reference#1459)
- Lexer: say that lifetime-like tokens can't be immediately followed by ' (rust-lang/reference#1479)
- Patterns and enums (rust-lang/reference#1460)

## rust-lang/rust-by-example

2 commits in 57f1e708f5d5850562bc385aaf610e6af14d6ec8..e093099709456e6fd74fecd2505fdf49a2471c10
2024-03-08 23:30:57 UTC to 2024-02-26 21:10:20 UTC

- While-Let Unable to compile code example on page (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1819)
- Update new_types.md wording (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1823)

## rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide

14 commits in 7b0ef5b0bea5e3ce3b9764aa5754a60e2cc05c52..8a5d647f19b08998612146b1cb2ca47083db63e0
2024-03-11 10:37:18 UTC to 2024-02-29 09:46:28 UTC

- update rustc-driver-interacting-with-the-ast.md (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1930)
- Update rustc-driver-getting-diagnostics.md (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1931)
- Document that test names cannot contain dots (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1927)
- Update overview.md (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1898)
- actually need to fix two occurances (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1925)
- fix broken links (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1924)
- next-solver: document caching (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1923)
- Add compiletest docs for FileCheck prefixes and `//@ filecheck-flags:` (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1914)
- Use different type in an example (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1908)
- Update run-make test description (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1920)
- Add some more details on feature gating (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1891)
- make shell.nix better (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1858)
- opaque types in new solver (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1918)
- add implied bounds doc (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1915)
2024-03-12 06:29:04 +01:00
Michael Howell
7b926555b7 rustdoc-search: add search query syntax Fn(T) -> U
This is implemented, in addition to the ML-style one,
because Rust does it. If we don't, we'll never hear the end of it.

This commit also refactors some duplicate parts of the parser
into a dedicated function.
2024-03-11 22:27:22 -07:00
Michael Howell
7f427f86bd rustdoc-search: parse and search with ML-style HOF
Option::map, for example, looks like this:

    option<t>, (t -> u) -> option<u>

This syntax searches all of the HOFs in Rust: traits Fn, FnOnce,
and FnMut, and bare fn primitives.
2024-03-11 21:22:03 -07:00
Chris Denton
779ac6951f
Update Windows platform support 2024-03-11 17:50:33 +00:00
rustbot
b66d7f5827 Update books 2024-03-11 13:00:45 -04:00
Alex Crichton
e1e9d38f58 Rename wasm32-wasi-preview1-threads to wasm32-wasip1-threads
This commit renames the current `wasm32-wasi-preview1-threads` target to
`wasm32-wasip1-threads`. The need for this rename is a bit unfortunate
as the previous name was chosen in an attempt to be future-compatible
with other WASI targets. Originally this target was proposed to be
`wasm32-wasi-threads`, and that's what was originally implemented in
wasi-sdk as well. After discussion though and with the plans for the
upcoming component-model target (now named `wasm32-wasip2`) the
"preview1" naming was chosen for the threads-based target. The WASI
subgroup later decided that it was time to drop the "preview"
terminology and recommends "pX" instead, hence previous PRs to add
`wasm32-wasip2` and rename `wasm32-wasi` to `wasm32-wasip1`.

So, with all that history, the "proper name" for this target is
different than its current name, so one way or another a rename is
required. This PR proposes renaming this target cold-turkey, unlike
`wasm32-wasi` which is having a long transition period to change its
name. The threads-based target is predicted to see only a fraction of
the traffic of `wasm32-wasi` due to the unstable nature of the WASI
threads proposal itself.

While I was here I updated the in-tree documentation in the target spec
file itself as most of the documentation was copied from the original
WASI target and wasn't as applicable to this target.

Also, as an aside, I can at least try to apologize for all the naming
confusion here, but this is hopefully the last WASI-related rename.
2024-03-11 09:31:41 -07:00
daxpedda
f09c19ac3a
Introduce perma-unstable wasm-c-abi flag 2024-03-10 09:00:01 +01:00
WANG Rui
1bad698b27 doc/rustc: Move loongarch64-unknown-linux-musl to Tier 3
Fixes #122266
2024-03-10 14:01:05 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
7e6a6d0779
Rollup merge of #121832 - heiher:loongarch64-musl, r=wesleywiser
Add new Tier-3 target: `loongarch64-unknown-linux-musl`

MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/518
2024-03-08 08:19:18 +01:00