Revert PR 81473 to resolve (on mainline) issues 81626 and 81658.
This is a nightly-targetted variant of PR #83171
The intent is to just address issue #81658 on all release channels, rather that keep repeatedly reverting PR #83171 on beta.
However, our intent is *also* to reland PR #83171 after we have addressed issue #81658 , most likely by coupling the re-landing of PR #83171 with an enhancement like PR #83004
We have a logo in svg that scales nicely to large sizes, but by default
is only 5px large, i.e. very small. With the change the logo expands to
the full size. By only setting the height to 100% we ensure that the
width-height ratio isn't changed.
Update cargo
2 commits in 4e143fd131e0c16cefd008456e974236ca54e62e..cebef2951ee69617852844894164b54ed478a7da
2021-07-20 21:55:45 +0000 to 2021-07-22 13:01:52 +0000
- Changes rustc argument from `--force-warns` to `--force-warn` (rust-lang/cargo#9714)
- Display registry name instead of registry URL when possible (rust-lang/cargo#9632)
Allow combining -Cprofile-generate and -Cpanic=unwind when targeting MSVC.
The LLVM limitation that previously prevented this has been fixed in LLVM 9 which is older than the oldest LLVM version we currently support.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/61002.
r? ``@nagisa`` (or anyone else from ``@rust-lang/wg-llvm)``
rustdoc: Restore --default-theme, etc, by restoring varname escaping
In #86157cd0f93193c
Use Tera templates for rustdoc.
dropped the following transformation from the keys of the default settings element's `data-` attribute names:
.map(|(k, v)| format!(r#" data-{}="{}""#, k.replace('-', "_"), Escape(v)))
The `Escape` part is indeed no longer needed, because Tera does that for us. But the massaging of `-` to `_` is needed, for the (bizarre) reasons explained in the new comments.
I have tested that the default theme function works again for me. I have also verified that passing (in shell syntax)
'--default-theme="zork&"'
escapes the value in the HTML.
Closes#87263
Support HIR wf checking for function signatures
During function type-checking, we normalize any associated types in
the function signature (argument types + return type), and then
create WF obligations for each of the normalized types. The HIR wf code
does not currently support this case, so any errors that we get have
imprecise spans.
This commit extends `ObligationCauseCode::WellFormed` to support
recording a function parameter, allowing us to get the corresponding
HIR type if an error occurs. Function typechecking is modified to
pass this information during signature normalization and WF checking.
The resulting code is fairly verbose, due to the fact that we can
no longer normalize the entire signature with a single function call.
As part of the refactoring, we now perform HIR-based WF checking
for several other 'typed items' (statics, consts, and inherent impls).
As a result, WF and projection errors in a function signature now
have a precise span, which points directly at the responsible type.
If a function signature is constructed via a macro, this will allow
the error message to point at the code 'most responsible' for the error
(e.g. a user-supplied macro argument).
Fix implicit Sized relaxation when attempting to relax other, unsupported trait
Fixes#87199.
Do note that this bug fix causes code like the `ref_arg::<[i32]>(&[5]);` line in the test case in combination with an affected function to no longer compile.
Previously it would error out:
```
$ x check --dry-run
thread 'main' panicked at 'std::fs::read_to_string(ci_llvm.join("link-type.txt")) failed with No such file or directory (os error 2) ("CI llvm missing: /home/joshua/rustc3/build/tmp-dry-run/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/ci-llvm")', src/bootstrap/config.rs:795:33
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Build completed unsuccessfully in 0:00:10
```
When pretty printing, name placeholders as bound regions
Split from #85499
When we see a placeholder that we are going to print, treat it as a bound var (and add it to a `for<...>`
In #86157cd0f93193c
Use Tera templates for rustdoc.
dropped the following transformation from the keys of the default
settings element's `data-` attribute names:
.map(|(k, v)| format!(r#" data-{}="{}""#, k.replace('-', "_"), Escape(v)))
The `Escape` part is indeed no longer needed, because Tera does that
for us. But the massaging of `-` to `_` is needed, for the (bizarre)
reasons explained in the new comments.
I have tested that the default theme function works again for me. I
have also verified that passing
--default-theme="zork&"
escapes the value in the HTML.
Closes#87263.
CC: Jacob Hoffman-Andrews <github@hoffman-andrews.com>
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
Rename force-warns to force-warn
The renames the `--force-warns` option to `--force-warn`. This mirrors other lint options like `--warn` and `--deny` which are in the singular.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
cc `@ehuss` - this option is being used by Cargo. How do we make sure the transition to using the new name is as smooth as possible?
Get back the more precise suggestion spans of old regionck
I noticed that when you turn on nll, the structured suggestion replaces a snippet instead of appending a snippet. It seems clearer to the user to only highlight the newly added characters instead of the entire `impl Trait` (and old regionck already does it this way).
r? ``@estebank``
Background:
Over the last year, pidfd support was added to the Linux kernel. This
allows interacting with other processes. In particular, this allows
waiting on a child process with a timeout in a race-free way, bypassing
all of the awful signal-handler tricks that are usually required.
Pidfds can be obtained for a child process (as well as any other
process) via the `pidfd_open` syscall. Unfortunately, this requires
several conditions to hold in order to be race-free (i.e. the pid is not
reused).
Per `man pidfd_open`:
```
· the disposition of SIGCHLD has not been explicitly set to SIG_IGN
(see sigaction(2));
· the SA_NOCLDWAIT flag was not specified while establishing a han‐
dler for SIGCHLD or while setting the disposition of that signal to
SIG_DFL (see sigaction(2)); and
· the zombie process was not reaped elsewhere in the program (e.g.,
either by an asynchronously executed signal handler or by wait(2)
or similar in another thread).
If any of these conditions does not hold, then the child process
(along with a PID file descriptor that refers to it) should instead
be created using clone(2) with the CLONE_PIDFD flag.
```
Sadly, these conditions are impossible to guarantee once any libraries
are used. For example, C code runnng in a different thread could call
`wait()`, which is impossible to detect from Rust code trying to open a
pidfd.
While pid reuse issues should (hopefully) be rare in practice, we can do
better. By passing the `CLONE_PIDFD` flag to `clone()` or `clone3()`, we
can obtain a pidfd for the child process in a guaranteed race-free
manner.
This PR:
This PR adds Linux-specific process extension methods to allow obtaining
pidfds for processes spawned via the standard `Command` API. Other than
being made available to user code, the standard library does not make
use of these pidfds in any way. In particular, the implementation of
`Child::wait` is completely unchanged.
Two Linux-specific helper methods are added: `CommandExt::create_pidfd`
and `ChildExt::pidfd`. These methods are intended to serve as a building
block for libraries to build higher-level abstractions - in particular,
waiting on a process with a timeout.
I've included a basic test, which verifies that pidfds are created iff
the `create_pidfd` method is used. This test is somewhat special - it
should always succeed on systems with the `clone3` system call
available, and always fail on systems without `clone3` available. I'm
not sure how to best ensure this programatically.
This PR relies on the newer `clone3` system call to pass the `CLONE_FD`,
rather than the older `clone` system call. `clone3` was added to Linux
in the same release as pidfds, so this shouldn't unnecessarily limit the
kernel versions that this code supports.
Unresolved questions:
* What should the name of the feature gate be for these newly added
methods?
* Should the `pidfd` method distinguish between an error occurring
and `create_pidfd` not being called?
Update all submodules that rustbuild doesn't depend on lazily
This only updates the submodules the first time they're needed, instead
of unconditionally the first time you run x.py.
Ideally, this would move *all* submodules to rustbuild and not exclude some tools and
backtrace. Unfortunately, cargo requires all `Cargo.toml` files in the
whole workspace to be present to build any crate.
On my machine, this takes the time for an initial submodule clone (for
`x.py --help`) from 55.70 to 15.87 seconds.
Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76653. Builds on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86015 and should not be merged before (only the last commit is relevant).
This only updates the submodules the first time they're needed, instead
of unconditionally the first time you run x.py.
Ideally, this would move *all* submodules and not exclude some tools and
backtrace. Unfortunately, cargo requires all `Cargo.toml` files in the
whole workspace to be present to build any crate.
On my machine, this takes the time for an initial submodule clone (for
`x.py --help`) from 55.70 to 15.87 seconds.
This uses exactly the same logic as the LLVM update used, modulo some
minor cleanups:
- Use a local variable for `src.join(relative_path)`
- Remove unnecessary arrays for `book!` macro and make the macro simpler to use
- Add more comments