Apply LTO config to rustdoc
Before, the LTO configuration from `config.toml` was not applied to `rustdoc`. This provides a small perf. and binary size [win](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112049#issuecomment-2605131041) for doc builds.
Since this is configured with Cargo profiles and not rustflags, it should not break tool build cache (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131155). I tried to run `x test miri`, `x test rustdoc` and `x test miri` and nothing was rebuilt.
r? `@onur-ozkan`
Flip the `rustc-rayon`/`indexmap` dependency order
[`rustc-rayon v0.5.1`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-rayon/pull/14) added `indexmap` implementations that will allow `indexmap` to drop its own "internal-only" implementations.
(This is separate from `indexmap`'s implementation for normal `rayon`.)
Arbitrary self types v2: explain test.
The purpose of this test wasn't obvious, as ```@traviscross``` noted. Add a comment.
Confession: although this test was added to demonstrate this particular corner-case, I can no longer reproduce the original problem, even if I adjust `rustc` to do the "wrong" thing. I have spent several hours trying to adjust the case to trigger the "faulty" behavior with no success. This test may therefore not be as useful as it originally was. But it still seems worthwhile retaining as a regression test that we don't break things in these quirky circumstances. Ideally we'd find a new test which tests this behavior but I've failed to come up with one.
r? ```@traviscross```
Pass spans to `perform_locally_in_new_solver`
Nothing changes yet, but we may be able to use these spans in the future once we start dealing w the response region constraints better.
r? lcnr
-Znext-solver: "normalize" signature before checking it mentions self in `deduce_closure_signature`
Fixesrust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative#138
r? ``@lcnr``
Tbh I wrote so much comments I don't feel like writing it all again but as a description.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #133151 (Trim extra whitespace in fn ptr suggestion span)
- #133829 (Implement `AtomicT::update` & `AtomicT::try_update`)
- #135367 (Enable `unreachable_pub` lint in `alloc`)
- #135748 (Lower index bounds checking to `PtrMetadata`, this time with the right fake borrow semantics 😸)
- #135805 (Add missing allocator safety in alloc crate)
- #135886 (Document purpose of closure in from_fn.rs more clearly)
- #135961 (Fix 2/4 tests skipped by opt-dist)
- #136012 (Document powf and powi values that are always 1.0)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix 2/4 tests skipped by opt-dist
The linker errors were because this one test, strangely, wants itself compiled with `-Ctarget-features=+crt-static`, and yet it looks like the runner image is simply missing static libraries for libc and libm.
Eyeballing the output of
```
rustc +nightly --target=x86_64-pc-windows-msvc -O tests/codegen/vec-shrink-panik.rs --emit=llvm-ir
```
suggests that vec-shrink-panik should pass on Windows. And it's quite disturbing that such a test would have failed only on Windows to start with. Exactly why that was would require some advanced digging, but it looks clean now.
Add missing allocator safety in alloc crate
### PR Description
In the previous PR [#135009](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135009), PR [#134496](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134496), some incomplete API documentation issues have been fixed.
Based on these changes, other inconsistencies related to the allocator have also been identified, including:
- `Box::from_non_null`
- `Box::from_non_null_in`
- `Weak::from_raw`
Lower index bounds checking to `PtrMetadata`, this time with the right fake borrow semantics 😸
Change `Rvalue::RawRef` to take a `RawRefKind` instead of just a `Mutability`. Then introduce `RawRefKind::FakeForPtrMetadata` and use that for lowering index bounds checking to a `PtrMetadata`. This new `RawRefKind::FakeForPtrMetadata` acts like a shallow fake borrow in borrowck, which mimics the semantics of the old `Rvalue::Len` operation we're replacing.
We can then use this `RawRefKind` instead of using a span desugaring hack in CTFE.
cc ``@scottmcm`` ``@RalfJung``
Enable `unreachable_pub` lint in `alloc`
This PR enables the [`unreachable_pub`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/lints/listing/allowed-by-default.html#unreachable-pub) lint as warn in the `alloc` crate.
Most of changes are in the btree implementation and in tests.
*The diff was mostly generated with `./x.py fix --stage 1 library/alloc/ -- --broken-code`, as well as manual edits for code in macros and in tests.*
Continuation of #134286 and #135366
r? libs
Trim extra whitespace in fn ptr suggestion span
Trim extra whitespace when suggesting removal of invalid qualifiers when parsing function pointer type.
Fixes: #133083
---
I made a comment about the format of the diagnostic error message in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133083#issuecomment-2480047875. I think the `.label` may be a little redundant if the diagnostic only highlights the bad qualifier instead of the entire `TyKind::BareFn` span. If it makes sense, I can include it in this PR.
Remove -Zinline-in-all-cgus and clean up tests/codegen-units/
Implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/814
I've taken some liberties with cleaning up the CGU partitioning tests, because that's the only place this flag was used and also mattered. I've often fought a lot with the contents of `tests/codegen-units` and it has never been clear to me when a test failure indicates a problem with my changes as opposed to a test just needing to be manually blessed. Hopefully the combination of the new README, new comments, and using `-Zprint-mono-items=lazy` in the partitioning tests improves that.
I've also deleted some of the `tests/run-make/sepcomp` tests. I think all the "sepcomp" tests have been obviated for years by better-designed (less flaky, clearer failures) test suites, but here I'm just deleting the ones I'm confident in.
Windows x86: Change i128 to return via the vector ABI
Clang and GCC both return `i128` in xmm0 on windows-msvc and windows-gnu. Currently, Rust returns the type on the stack. Add a calling convention adjustment so we also return scalar `i128`s using the vector ABI, which makes our `i128` compatible with C.
In the future, Clang may change to return `i128` on the stack for its `-msvc` targets (more at [1]). If this happens, the change here will need to be adjusted to only affect MinGW.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134288 (does not fix) [1]
try-job: x86_64-msvc
try-job: x86_64-msvc-ext1
try-job: x86_64-mingw-1
try-job: x86_64-mingw-2
[`rustc-rayon v0.5.1`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-rayon/pull/14)
added `indexmap` implementations that will allow `indexmap` to drop its
own "internal-only" implementations.
(This is separate from `indexmap`'s implementation for normal `rayon`.)
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #135773 (Clarify WindowsMut (Lending)Iterator)
- #135807 (Implement phantom variance markers)
- #135876 (fix doc for std::sync::mpmc)
- #135988 (Add a workaround for parallel rustc crashing when there are delayed bugs)
- #136037 (Mark all NuttX targets as tier 3 target and support the standard library)
- #136064 (Add a suggestion to cast target_feature fn items to fn pointers.)
- #136082 (Incorporate `iter_nodes` into `graph::DirectedGraph`)
- #136112 (Clean up all dead files inside `tests/ui/`)
- #136114 (Use identifiers more in diagnostics code)
- #136118 (Change `collect_and_partition_mono_items` tuple return type to a struct)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Trim extra whitespace when suggesting removal of invalid qualifiers when
parsing function pointer type.
Fixes: #133083
Signed-off-by: Tyrone Wu <wudevelops@gmail.com>
Change `collect_and_partition_mono_items` tuple return type to a struct
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133429 will add a new field to this tuple, so it seems prudent to turn it into a struct first to avoid confusion about what the tuple elements mean.
Use identifiers more in diagnostics code
This should make the diagnostics code slightly more correct when rendering idents in mixed crate edition situations. Kinda a no-op, but a cleanup regardless.
r? oli-obk or reassign
Clean up all dead files inside `tests/ui/`
While rebasing #135860 I noticed that there are several dead `*.stderr` files inside `tests/ui/`.
When I checked thoroughly, I found 69 dead `*.$revision.stderr` files, 3 other dead `*.stderr` files and one dead `*.rs` file.
Prior to #134808, compiletest's `--bless` didn't remove dead `*.stderr` files when the set of revisions changed in any way (renamings, removals, additions, …) which explains their existence.
Regarding the dead `*.rs` file, that one was located inside an `auxiliary/` directory (together with a `*.stderr` file) despite not being meant to be an auxiliary file (it's not referenced by any `//@ aux-*`, it has an accompanying `*.stderr` file and it's obvious from looking at #111056 which added it). Ideally compiletest or tidy would forbid `*.std{out,err}` files inside `auxiliary/` dirs, that would've caught it. I moved it, updated it and turned it into a proper UI test.
---
How to reproduce:
1. Run `rm tests/ui/**/*.stderr`
2. Run `./x test tests/ui --bless` (or similar)
3. Manually / semi-automatically go through all tests that were ignored (likely due to your OS etc. not matching) and restore any stderr files that were overzealously removed
---
r? compiler
Incorporate `iter_nodes` into `graph::DirectedGraph`
This helper method iterates over all node IDs in the dense range `0..num_nodes`.
In practice, we have a lot of graph-algorithm code that already assumes that nodes are densely numbered, by using `num_nodes` to allocate per-node indexed data structures. So I don't think this is actually a substantial change to the de-facto semantics of `graph::DirectedGraph`.
---
Resolves a FIXME from #135481.
Add a workaround for parallel rustc crashing when there are delayed bugs
This doesn't fix the root cause of this crash, but at least stops it from happening for the time being.
Workaround for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135870
Clang and GCC both return `i128` in xmm0 on windows-msvc and
windows-gnu. Currently, Rust returns the type on the stack. Add a
calling convention adjustment so we also return scalar `i128`s using the
vector ABI, which makes our `i128` compatible with C.
In the future, Clang may change to return `i128` on the stack for its
`-msvc` targets (more at [1]). If this happens, the change here will
need to be adjusted to only affect MinGW.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/134288