Commit graph

223 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
999f1767ca add -Z mir-opt-level to disable MIR optimizations
setting -Z mir-opt-level=0 will disable all MIR optimizations
for easier debugging
2016-02-20 01:38:27 +02:00
Johan Lorenzo
39c2d8534e Fix wrong help message left in #31368 2016-02-16 04:10:31 +05:30
Dirk Gadsden
b122064a33 Stricter matching of --cfg options on rustc
Includes compile-fail test to check that it fails on incomplete
`--cfg` matches.

Fixes #31497.
2016-02-14 16:44:39 -08:00
bors
97842f54c9 Auto merge of #31358 - japaric:print-targets, r=alexcrichton
that prints a list of all the triples supported by the `--target` flag

r? @alexcrichton
2016-02-13 03:21:49 +00:00
bors
0c4d81f9bc Auto merge of #31550 - Stebalien:fix-color, r=nrc
Fixes #31546
2016-02-12 16:42:03 +00:00
Jorge Aparicio
0bb4209b88 rustc: add a --print target-list command 2016-02-12 10:39:19 -05:00
bors
77f9231818 Auto merge of #31368 - JohanLorenzo:dont-strip-if-test-build, r=alexcrichton
Tools which rely on DWARF for generating code coverage report, don't generate accurate numbers on test builds. For instance, [this sample main](757bdbf388/src/main.rs) returns [100% coverage](https://coveralls.io/builds/4940156/source?filename=main.rs) when [kcov](https://github.com/SimonKagstrom/kcov/) runs.

With @pnkfelix 's great help, we could narrow down the issue: The linker strips unused function during phase 6. Here's a patch which stops stripping when someone calls `rustc --test $ARGS`. @pnkfelix wasn't sure if we should add a new flag, or just use --test. What do you think @alexcrichton ?

Also, I'm not too sure: where is the best place to add a test for this addition?

Thanks for the help!
2016-02-12 05:53:18 +00:00
Oliver Schneider
625e78b700 [breaking-change] don't glob export ast::{UintTy, IntTy} variants 2016-02-11 12:34:48 +01:00
Johan Lorenzo
274f27a476 Add -C link-dead-code option r=alexcrichton
Turning gc-sections off improves code coverage based for tools which
use DWARF debugging information (like kcov). Otherwise dead code is
stripped and kcov returns a coverage percentage that doesn't reflect
reality.
2016-02-11 11:14:32 +01:00
Steven Allen
03ef55b1c8 Don't assume color=always when explicitally specified
Fixes #31546
2016-02-10 20:18:38 -05:00
Oliver Schneider
4b067183ba Allow registering MIR-passes through compiler plugins 2016-02-09 16:53:43 +01:00
Alex Crichton
a1ffe6b6bb rustc: Implement a new --print cfg flag
This commit is an implementation of the new compiler flags required by [RFC
1361][rfc]. This specifically adds a new `cfg` option to the `--print` flag to
the compiler. This new directive will print the defined `#[cfg]` directives by
the compiler for the target in question.

[rfc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1361-cargo-cfg-dependencies.md
2016-02-08 14:28:46 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
d09fd1a529 Instrument the AST map so that it registers reads when data is
acccessed.
2016-02-05 13:19:55 -05:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
c5c756bf14 Improve wording of --target help 2016-02-03 12:04:17 +02:00
bors
a4a249fcab Auto merge of #31279 - DanielJCampbell:MacroReferencing, r=nrc
r? @nrc
2016-02-02 01:35:39 +00:00
Nick Cameron
185a0e51bf Reviewer requested changes and test fixes 2016-02-02 09:00:35 +13:00
Daniel Campbell
1d326419a1 Implemented macro referencing for save analysis 2016-02-01 19:09:18 +13:00
Nick Cameron
b6e4f18e55 Replace some aborts with Results
Fixes #31207

by removing abort_if_new_errors
2016-02-01 08:42:27 +13:00
bors
53c2933d44 Auto merge of #30900 - michaelwoerister:trans_item_collect, r=nikomatsakis
The purpose of the translation item collector is to find all monomorphic instances of functions, methods and statics that need to be translated into LLVM IR in order to compile the current crate.

So far these instances have been discovered lazily during the trans path. For incremental compilation we want to know the set of these instances in advance, and that is what the trans::collect module provides.
In the future, incremental and regular translation will be driven by the collector implemented here.

r? @nikomatsakis
cc @rust-lang/compiler

Translation Item Collection
===========================

This module is responsible for discovering all items that will contribute to
to code generation of the crate. The important part here is that it not only
needs to find syntax-level items (functions, structs, etc) but also all
their monomorphized instantiations. Every non-generic, non-const function
maps to one LLVM artifact. Every generic function can produce
from zero to N artifacts, depending on the sets of type arguments it
is instantiated with.
This also applies to generic items from other crates: A generic definition
in crate X might produce monomorphizations that are compiled into crate Y.
We also have to collect these here.

The following kinds of "translation items" are handled here:

 - Functions
 - Methods
 - Closures
 - Statics
 - Drop glue

The following things also result in LLVM artifacts, but are not collected
here, since we instantiate them locally on demand when needed in a given
codegen unit:

 - Constants
 - Vtables
 - Object Shims

General Algorithm
-----------------
Let's define some terms first:

 - A "translation item" is something that results in a function or global in
   the LLVM IR of a codegen unit. Translation items do not stand on their
   own, they can reference other translation items. For example, if function
   `foo()` calls function `bar()` then the translation item for `foo()`
   references the translation item for function `bar()`. In general, the
   definition for translation item A referencing a translation item B is that
   the LLVM artifact produced for A references the LLVM artifact produced
   for B.

 - Translation items and the references between them for a directed graph,
   where the translation items are the nodes and references form the edges.
   Let's call this graph the "translation item graph".

 - The translation item graph for a program contains all translation items
   that are needed in order to produce the complete LLVM IR of the program.

The purpose of the algorithm implemented in this module is to build the
translation item graph for the current crate. It runs in two phases:

 1. Discover the roots of the graph by traversing the HIR of the crate.
 2. Starting from the roots, find neighboring nodes by inspecting the MIR
    representation of the item corresponding to a given node, until no more
    new nodes are found.

The roots of the translation item graph correspond to the non-generic
syntactic items in the source code. We find them by walking the HIR of the
crate, and whenever we hit upon a function, method, or static item, we
create a translation item consisting of the items DefId and, since we only
consider non-generic items, an empty type-substitution set.

Given a translation item node, we can discover neighbors by inspecting its
MIR. We walk the MIR and any time we hit upon something that signifies a
reference to another translation item, we have found a neighbor. Since the
translation item we are currently at is always monomorphic, we also know the
concrete type arguments of its neighbors, and so all neighbors again will be
monomorphic. The specific forms a reference to a neighboring node can take
in MIR are quite diverse. Here is an overview:

The most obvious form of one translation item referencing another is a
function or method call (represented by a CALL terminator in MIR). But
calls are not the only thing that might introduce a reference between two
function translation items, and as we will see below, they are just a
specialized of the form described next, and consequently will don't get any
special treatment in the algorithm.

A function does not need to actually be called in order to be a neighbor of
another function. It suffices to just take a reference in order to introduce
an edge. Consider the following example:

```rust
fn print_val<T: Display>(x: T) {
    println!("{}", x);
}

fn call_fn(f: &Fn(i32), x: i32) {
    f(x);
}

fn main() {
    let print_i32 = print_val::<i32>;
    call_fn(&print_i32, 0);
}
```
The MIR of none of these functions will contain an explicit call to
`print_val::<i32>`. Nonetheless, in order to translate this program, we need
an instance of this function. Thus, whenever we encounter a function or
method in operand position, we treat it as a neighbor of the current
translation item. Calls are just a special case of that.

In a way, closures are a simple case. Since every closure object needs to be
constructed somewhere, we can reliably discover them by observing
`RValue::Aggregate` expressions with `AggregateKind::Closure`. This is also
true for closures inlined from other crates.

Drop glue translation items are introduced by MIR drop-statements. The
generated translation item will again have drop-glue item neighbors if the
type to be dropped contains nested values that also need to be dropped. It
might also have a function item neighbor for the explicit `Drop::drop`
implementation of its type.

A subtle way of introducing neighbor edges is by casting to a trait object.
Since the resulting fat-pointer contains a reference to a vtable, we need to
instantiate all object-save methods of the trait, as we need to store
pointers to these functions even if they never get called anywhere. This can
be seen as a special case of taking a function reference.

Since `Box` expression have special compiler support, no explicit calls to
`exchange_malloc()` and `exchange_free()` may show up in MIR, even if the
compiler will generate them. We have to observe `Rvalue::Box` expressions
and Box-typed drop-statements for that purpose.

Interaction with Cross-Crate Inlining
-------------------------------------
The binary of a crate will not only contain machine code for the items
defined in the source code of that crate. It will also contain monomorphic
instantiations of any extern generic functions and of functions marked with
The collection algorithm handles this more or less transparently. When
constructing a neighbor node for an item, the algorithm will always call
`inline::get_local_instance()` before proceeding. If no local instance can
be acquired (e.g. for a function that is just linked to) no node is created;
which is exactly what we want, since no machine code should be generated in
the current crate for such an item. On the other hand, if we can
successfully inline the function, we subsequently can just treat it like a
local item, walking it's MIR et cetera.

Eager and Lazy Collection Mode
------------------------------
Translation item collection can be performed in one of two modes:

 - Lazy mode means that items will only be instantiated when actually
   referenced. The goal is to produce the least amount of machine code
   possible.

 - Eager mode is meant to be used in conjunction with incremental compilation
   where a stable set of translation items is more important than a minimal
   one. Thus, eager mode will instantiate drop-glue for every drop-able type
   in the crate, even of no drop call for that type exists (yet). It will
   also instantiate default implementations of trait methods, something that
   otherwise is only done on demand.

Open Issues
-----------
Some things are not yet fully implemented in the current version of this
module.

Since no MIR is constructed yet for initializer expressions of constants and
statics we cannot inspect these properly.

Ideally, no translation item should be generated for const fns unless there
is a call to them that cannot be evaluated at compile time. At the moment
this is not implemented however: a translation item will be produced
regardless of whether it is actually needed or not.

<!-- Reviewable:start -->
[<img src="https://reviewable.io/review_button.png" height=40 alt="Review on Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.io/reviews/rust-lang/rust/30900)
<!-- Reviewable:end -->
2016-01-29 03:41:44 +00:00
bors
142214d1f2 Auto merge of #30411 - mitaa:multispan, r=nrc
This allows to render multiple spans on one line, or to splice multiple replacements into a code suggestion.

fixes #28124
2016-01-28 22:13:25 +00:00
mitaa
727f959095 Implement MultiSpan error reporting
This allows to render multiple spans on one line,
or to splice multiple replacements into a code suggestion.
2016-01-28 20:51:06 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
b3e30b5fc3 Fix checking if there have been new errors. 2016-01-28 14:35:00 +01:00
Michael Woerister
862911df9a Implement the translation item collector.
The purpose of the translation item collector is to find all monomorphic instances of functions, methods and statics that need to be translated into LLVM IR in order to compile the current crate.
So far these instances have been discovered lazily during the trans path. For incremental compilation we want to know the set of these instances in advance, and that is what the trans::collect module provides.
In the future, incremental and regular translation will be driven by the collector implemented here.
2016-01-26 10:17:45 -05:00
Nick Cameron
0b511e82ab Initial work towards abort-free compilation
The goal is that the compiler will pass `Result`s around rather than using abort_if_errors. To preserve behaviour we currently abort at the top level. I've removed all other aborts from the driver, but haven't touched any of the nested aborts.
2016-01-26 17:51:11 +13:00
Nick Cameron
0ac8915875 The war on abort_if_errors 2016-01-22 08:19:27 +13:00
bors
d8869d3487 Auto merge of #30711 - nrc:json-errs, r=huonw
The compiler can emit errors and warning in JSON format. This is a more easily machine readable form then the usual error output.

Closes #10492, closes #14863.
2016-01-15 01:52:01 +00:00
Nick Cameron
82f8e5ce84 Address reviewer comments
[breaking-change]

`OptLevel` variants are no longer `pub use`ed by rust::session::config. If you are using these variants, you must change your code to prefix the variant name with `OptLevel`.
2016-01-15 14:49:25 +13:00
Nick Cameron
b976d9e666 Implement JSON error emission
[breaking-change]

syntax::errors::Handler::new has been renamed to with_tty_emitter

Many functions which used to take a syntax::errors::ColorConfig, now take a rustc::session::config::ErrorOutputType. If you previously used ColorConfig::Auto as a default, you should now use ErrorOutputType::default().
2016-01-15 10:24:12 +13:00
Nick Cameron
fd46c78f8f Add an --output option for specifying an error emitter 2016-01-15 10:24:12 +13:00
Brian Anderson
4bcca8bcf7 Revert "Link with ld.gold by default"
This reverts commit 34dc0e0739.
2016-01-14 19:20:11 +00:00
Matt Kraai
5fb15d0237 Replace --show-span with -Z show-span 2016-01-11 20:44:24 -08:00
Niko Matsakis
005fa14358 Annotate the compiler with information about what it is doing when. 2016-01-05 21:05:50 -05:00
bors
176ee349a7 Auto merge of #30542 - nrc:errs-base, r=nagisa
As discussed [here](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/more-structured-errors/3005)

r? @nikomatsakis or anyone else on the @rust-lang/compiler team
2015-12-30 12:27:10 +00:00
Nick Cameron
95dc7efad0 use structured errors 2015-12-30 14:27:59 +13:00
Nick Cameron
253a1cefd8 Structured diagnostics 2015-12-30 14:27:59 +13:00
Brian Anderson
34dc0e0739 Link with ld.gold by default
To disable, pass `-C disable-gold`
2015-12-28 18:08:16 +00:00
Jonas Schievink
389e8e3b81 Delete the AST after lowering 2015-12-25 17:17:45 +01:00
Alex Crichton
b67b5a8d01 rustc: Add feature-gated cfg(target_thread_local)
Currently the standard library has some pretty complicated logic to detect
whether #[thread_local] should be used or whether it's supported. This is also
unfortunately not quite true for OSX where not all versions support
the #[thread_local] attribute (only 10.7+ does). Compiling code for OSX 10.6 is
typically requested via the MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET environment variable (e.g.
the linker recognizes this), but the standard library unfortunately does not
respect this.

This commit updates the compiler to add a `target_thread_local` cfg annotation
if the platform being targeted supports the `#[thread_local]` attribute. This is
feature gated for now, and it is only true on non-aarch64 Linux and 10.7+ OSX
(e.g. what the module already does today). Logic has also been added to parse
the deployment target environment variable.
2015-12-21 22:05:37 -08:00
bors
5dd29cc310 Auto merge of #30389 - nikomatsakis:rfc1214-error, r=arielb1
Make RFC 1214 warnings into errors, and rip out the "warn or err"
associated machinery. Future such attempts should go through lints
anyhow.

There is a fair amount of fallout in the compile-fail tests, as WF
checking now occurs earlier in the process.

r? @arielb1
2015-12-18 20:44:33 +00:00
Niko Matsakis
dbf994bbaf Make RFC 1214 warnings into errors, and rip out the "warn or err"
associated machinery. Future such attempts should go through lints
anyhow.

There is a fair amount of fallout in the compile-fail tests, as WF
checking now occurs earlier in the process.
2015-12-18 12:41:02 -05:00
Nick Cameron
ff0c74f7d4 test errors 2015-12-17 10:00:16 +13:00
Nick Cameron
a478811822 Move a bunch of stuff from Session to syntax::errors
The intention here is that Session is a very thin wrapper over the error handling infra.
2015-12-17 09:35:51 +13:00
Nick Cameron
6309b0f5bb move error handling from libsyntax/diagnostics.rs to libsyntax/errors/*
Also split out emitters into their own module.
2015-12-17 09:35:50 +13:00
Nick Cameron
18b4fe0e3e Make name resolution errors non-fatal 2015-12-11 21:00:15 +13:00
bors
56a1f51ef0 Auto merge of #30208 - pnkfelix:fix-issue-30063, r=alexcrichton
When given `rustc -C codegen-units=4 --emit=obj`, reset units back to 1.

Fix #30063

Note: while this code is careful to handle the case of mutliple emit types (e.g. `--emit=asm,obj`) by reporting all the emit types that conflict with codegen units in its warnings, an invocation with multiple emit types *and* `-o PATH` will continue to ignore the requested target path (with a warning), as it already does today, since the code that checks for that is further downstream.  (Multiple emit types without `-o PATH` will "work", though it will downgrade codegen-units to 1 just like all the other cases.)

r? @alexcrichton
2015-12-09 02:38:57 +00:00
Felix S. Klock II
f90c21a417 When given rustc -C codegen-units=4 -o output --emit=obj, reset units back to 1.
Fix #30063

Note: while this code is careful to handle the case of mutliple emit
types (e.g. `--emit=asm,obj`) by reporting all the emit types that
conflict with codegen units in its warnings, an invocation with
multiple emit types *and* `-o PATH` will continue to ignore the
requested target path (with a warning), as it already does today,
since the code that checks for that is further downstream.
2015-12-08 05:37:04 +01:00
Alex Crichton
464cdff102 std: Stabilize APIs for the 1.6 release
This commit is the standard API stabilization commit for the 1.6 release cycle.
The list of issues and APIs below have all been through their cycle-long FCP and
the libs team decisions are listed below

Stabilized APIs

* `Read::read_exact`
* `ErrorKind::UnexpectedEof` (renamed from `UnexpectedEOF`)
* libcore -- this was a bit of a nuanced stabilization, the crate itself is now
  marked as `#[stable]` and the methods appearing via traits for primitives like
  `char` and `str` are now also marked as stable. Note that the extension traits
  themeselves are marked as unstable as they're imported via the prelude. The
  `try!` macro was also moved from the standard library into libcore to have the
  same interface. Otherwise the functions all have copied stability from the
  standard library now.
* The `#![no_std]` attribute
* `fs::DirBuilder`
* `fs::DirBuilder::new`
* `fs::DirBuilder::recursive`
* `fs::DirBuilder::create`
* `os::unix::fs::DirBuilderExt`
* `os::unix::fs::DirBuilderExt::mode`
* `vec::Drain`
* `vec::Vec::drain`
* `string::Drain`
* `string::String::drain`
* `vec_deque::Drain`
* `vec_deque::VecDeque::drain`
* `collections::hash_map::Drain`
* `collections::hash_map::HashMap::drain`
* `collections::hash_set::Drain`
* `collections::hash_set::HashSet::drain`
* `collections::binary_heap::Drain`
* `collections::binary_heap::BinaryHeap::drain`
* `Vec::extend_from_slice` (renamed from `push_all`)
* `Mutex::get_mut`
* `Mutex::into_inner`
* `RwLock::get_mut`
* `RwLock::into_inner`
* `Iterator::min_by_key` (renamed from `min_by`)
* `Iterator::max_by_key` (renamed from `max_by`)

Deprecated APIs

* `ErrorKind::UnexpectedEOF` (renamed to `UnexpectedEof`)
* `OsString::from_bytes`
* `OsStr::to_cstring`
* `OsStr::to_bytes`
* `fs::walk_dir` and `fs::WalkDir`
* `path::Components::peek`
* `slice::bytes::MutableByteVector`
* `slice::bytes::copy_memory`
* `Vec::push_all` (renamed to `extend_from_slice`)
* `Duration::span`
* `IpAddr`
* `SocketAddr::ip`
* `Read::tee`
* `io::Tee`
* `Write::broadcast`
* `io::Broadcast`
* `Iterator::min_by` (renamed to `min_by_key`)
* `Iterator::max_by` (renamed to `max_by_key`)
* `net::lookup_addr`

New APIs (still unstable)

* `<[T]>::sort_by_key` (added to mirror `min_by_key`)

Closes #27585
Closes #27704
Closes #27707
Closes #27710
Closes #27711
Closes #27727
Closes #27740
Closes #27744
Closes #27799
Closes #27801
cc #27801 (doesn't close as `Chars` is still unstable)
Closes #28968
2015-12-05 15:09:44 -08:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
43a6deb95f fix rustc-test 2015-11-26 19:19:54 +02:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
0a8bb4c509 split the metadata code into rustc_metadata
tests & rustdoc still broken
2015-11-26 18:22:40 +02:00
Ariel Ben-Yehuda
d45dd9423e make CrateStore a trait object
rustdoc still broken
2015-11-26 18:21:17 +02:00