Bump Fuchsia toolchain for testing
This updates the Fuchsia SDK used to test rust on Fuchsia to 26.20241211.7.1, and clang to the development version 20 from 388d7f144880dcd85ff31f06793304405a9f44b6.
```@steven807``` asked me to take over the PR. Since I don't have commit access to his repo, I just cherry picked his patch here.
try-job: dist-various-2
r? lqd
This updates the Fuchsia SDK used to test rust on Fuchsia to
26.20241211.7.1, and clang to the development version 20 from
388d7f144880dcd85ff31f06793304405a9f44b6.
Move the dist-aarch64-linux CI job to an aarch64 runner instead of
cross-compiling it from an x86 one. This will make it possible to
perform optimisations such as LTO, PGO and BOLT later on.
Promote powerpc64le-unknown-linux-musl to tier 2 with host tools
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/803
I'm using crosstool-ng for building a toolchain because GCC 9 from `musl-toolchain.sh` has float ABI issues (?) and can't compile LLVM, and writing a crosstool-ng config for a target feels less hacky than yet another target specific shell script. I also defined a kernel version, since there wasn't one specified before. If a lower version is desired, just let me know. I also tried to match the rust configure args with the loongarch64 musl tier 2 target.
The resulting compiler works fine, built with `DEPLOY=1 ./src/ci/docker/run.sh dist-powerpc64le-linux` and tested on Alpine Linux in a VM and on a bare metal POWER8 machine:
```
qemu-ppc64le:/tmp/rust-nightly-powerpc64le-unknown-linux-musl$ ash install.sh
install: creating uninstall script at /usr/local/lib/rustlib/uninstall.sh
install: installing component 'rustc'
install: installing component 'rust-std-powerpc64le-unknown-linux-musl'
install: installing component 'cargo'
install: installing component 'rustfmt-preview'
install: installing component 'rls-preview'
install: installing component 'rust-analyzer-preview'
install: installing component 'llvm-tools-preview'
install: installing component 'clippy-preview'
install: installing component 'miri-preview'
install: installing component 'rust-analysis-powerpc64le-unknown-linux-musl'
install: installing component 'llvm-bitcode-linker-preview'
install: WARNING: failed to run ldconfig. this may happen when not installing as root. run with --verbose to see the error
rust installed.
qemu-ppc64le:~$ echo 'fn main() { println!("hello world"); }' > test.rs
qemu-ppc64le:~$ rustc test.rs
qemu-ppc64le:~$ ./test
hello world
qemu-ppc64le:~$ file test
test: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, 64-bit PowerPC or cisco 7500, OpenPOWER ELF V2 ABI, version 1 (SYSV), statically linked, BuildID[sha1]=596ee6abf9add487ebc54fb71c2076fb6faea013, with debug_info, not stripped
```
try-job: dist-powerpc64le-linux
CI: move `dist-arm-linux` to an ARM runner
First, I want to test whether we could actually move this to a free runner, vs moving to the 8-core ARM runner.
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/infra-team/issues/181
r? `@MarcoIeni`
try-job: dist-arm-linux
CI: rfl: move job forward to Linux v6.13-rc1
Linux v6.13-rc1 contains commit 28e848386b92 ("rust: block: fix formatting of `kernel::block::mq::request` module"), which in turn contains commit c95bbb59a9b2 ("rust: enable arbitrary_self_types and remove `Receiver`"), which is why we had a hash rather than a tag.
r? ```@Kobzol``` ```@lqd```
try-job: x86_64-rust-for-linux
```@rustbot``` label A-rust-for-linux
```@bors``` try
Replace black with ruff in `tidy`
`ruff` can both lint and format Python code (in fact, it should be a mostly drop-in replacement for `black` in terms of formatting), so it's not needed to use `black` anymore. This PR removes `black` and replaces it with `ruff`, to get rid of one Python dependency, and also to make Python formatting faster (although that's a small thing).
If we decide to merge this, we'll need to "reformat the world" - `ruff` is not perfectly compatible with `black`, and it also looks like `black` was actually ignoring some files before. I tried it locally (`./x test tidy --extra-checks=py:fmt --bless`) and it also reformatted some code in subtrees (e.g. `clippy` or `rustc_codegen_gcc`) - I'm not sure how to handle that.