When the LoongArch targets were first introduced, the LLVM support was
still immature and various tools were not supported on LoongArch.
Nowadays most infra is in place, so it is time to enable them on
LoongArch to provide a better experience for users of these targets.
Plus, the profiler support is needed by Chromium, so better provide it
in the official artifacts.
Tighten `fn_decl_span` for async blocks
Tightens the span of `async {}` blocks in diagnostics, and subsequently async closures and async fns, by actually setting the `fn_decl_span` correctly. This is kinda a follow-up on #125078, but it fixes the problem in a more general way.
I think the diagnostics are significantly improved, since we no longer have a bunch of overlapping spans. I'll point out one caveat where I think the diagnostic may get a bit more confusing, but where I don't think it matters.
r? ````@estebank```` or ````@oli-obk```` or someone else on wg-diag or compiler i dont really care lol
Support fetching `Attribute` of items.
Fixes [https://github.com/rust-lang/project-stable-mir/issues/83](https://github.com/rust-lang/project-stable-mir/issues/83)
`rustc_ast::ast::Attribute` doesn't impl `Hash` and `Eq`. Thus it cannot be directly used as key of `IndexMap` in `rustc_smir::rustc_smir::Tables` and we cannot define stable `Attribute` as index to `rustc_ast::ast::Attribute` like `Span` and many other stable definitions.
Since an string (or tokens) and its span contain all info about an attribute, I defined a simple `Attribute` struct on stable side.
I choose to fetch attributes via `tcx::get_attrs_by_path()` due to `get_attrs()` is marked as deprecated and `get_attrs_by_name()` cannot handle name of multiple segments like `rustfmt::skip`.
r? `@celinval`
core: avoid `extern type`s in formatting infrastructure
```@RalfJung``` [said](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Use.20of.20.60extern.20type.60.20in.20formatting.20machinery/near/446552837):
>How attached are y'all to using `extern type` in the formatting machinery?
Seems like this was introduced a [long time ago](34ef8f5441). However, it's also [not really compatible with Stacked Borrows](https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/256), and only works currently because we effectively treat references-to-extern-type almost like raw pointers in Stacked Borrows -- which of course is unsound, it's not how LLVM works. I was planning to make Miri emit a warning when this happens to avoid cases like [this](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/126814#issuecomment-2183816373) where people use extern type specifically to silence Miri without realizing what happens. but with the formatting machinery using extern type, this warning would just show up everywhere...
>
> The "proper" way to do this in Stacked Borrows is to use raw pointers (or `NonNull`).
This PR does just that.
r? ```@RalfJung```
patchable-function-entry: Add unstable compiler flag and attribute
Tracking issue: #123115
Add the -Z patchable-function-entry compiler flag and the #[patchable_function_entry(prefix_nops = m, entry_nops = n)] attribute.
Rebased and adjusted the canditate implementation to match changes in the RFC.
bump strip-ansi-escapes
This bumps `strip-ansi-escapes` to remove arrayvec from it's deps (https://github.com/luser/strip-ansi-escapes/pull/8)
Should Cargo.lock be commited too to track it's working state?
changelog: none
ast: Standardize visiting order
Order: ID, attributes, inner nodes in source order if possible, tokens, span.
Also always use exhaustive matching in visiting infra, and visit some discovered missing nodes.
Unlike https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125741 this shouldn't affect anything serious like `macro_rules` scopes.
Currently bootstrap doesn't use any inner paths from rust-analyzer and
bootstrap with `ShouldRun::create_or_deps`.
Signed-off-by: onur-ozkan <work@onurozkan.dev>
Fix doc_markdown DevOps false positive
This fixes an issue where the word "DevOps" ends up as a false positive for the `doc_markdown` lint.
In a doc comment like this
```rust
/// Call the Azure DevOps REST API.
pub fn example() {}
```
the word "DevOps" is highlighted as something which should be in backticks.
```
warning: item in documentation is missing backticks
--> src/lib.rs:1:20
|
1 | /// Call the Azure DevOps REST API.
| ^^^^^^
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#doc_markdown
= note: requested on the command line with `-W clippy::doc-markdown`
help: try
|
1 | /// Call the Azure `DevOps` REST API.
| ~~~~~~~~
warning: `example` (lib) generated 1 warning (run `cargo clippy --fix --lib -p example` to apply 1 suggestion)
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.00s
```
This could be overriden with the `doc-valid-idents` configuration parameter as noted by the [documentation](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/doc_markdown), but I believe the word "DevOps" is sufficiently common to belong alongside exceptions like "GitHub" and "GitLab".
changelog: [`doc_markdown`]: Fix DevOps false positive.
rustdoc: use current stage if download-rustc enabled
When using download-rustc, using stage 1 rustdoc results in the wrong librustc_driver being used.
```sh
$ ./build/host/stage1/bin/rustdoc --version
./build/host/stage1/bin/rustdoc: error while loading shared libraries: librustc_driver-7ff02ed05016d515.so: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
```
This change fixes that by not cutting the stage if download-rustc is enabled.
Remove `__rust_force_expr`.
This was added (with a different name) to improve an error message. It is no longer needed -- removing it changes the error message, but overall I think the new message is no worse:
- the mention of `#` in the first line is a little worse,
- but the extra context makes it very clear what the problem is, perhaps even clearer than the old message,
- and the removal of the note about the `expr` fragment (an internal detail of `__rust_force_expr`) is an improvement.
Overall I think the error is quite clear and still far better than the old message that prompted #61933, which didn't even mention patterns.
The motivation for this is #124141, which will cause pasted metavariables to be tokenized and reparsed instead of the AST node being cached. This change in behaviour occasionally has a non-zero perf cost, and `__rust_force_expr` causes the tokenize/reparse step to occur twice. Removing `__rust_force_expr` greatly reduces the extra overhead for the `deep-vector` benchmark.
r? ```@oli-obk```
coverage: Make `#[coverage(..)]` apply recursively to nested functions
This PR makes the (currently-unstable) `#[coverage(off)]` and `#[coverage(on)]` attributes apply recursively to all nested functions/closures, instead of just the function they are directly attached to.
Those attributes can now also be applied to modules and to impl/impl-trait blocks, where they have no direct effect, but will be inherited by all enclosed functions/closures/methods that don't override the inherited value.
---
Fixes#126625.
Fixes for 32-bit SPARC on Linux
This PR fixes a number of issues which previously prevented `rustc` from being built
successfully for 32-bit SPARC using the `sparc-unknown-linux-gnu` triplet.
In particular, it adds linking against `libatomic` where necessary, uses portable `AtomicU64`
for `rustc_data_structures` and rewrites the spec for `sparc_unknown_linux_gnu` to use
`TargetOptions` and replaces the previously used `-mv8plus` with the more portable
`-mcpu=v9 -m32`.
To make `rustc` build successfully, support for 32-bit SPARC needs to be added to the `object`
crate as well as the `nix` crate which I will be sending out later as well.
r? nagisa
patch `rust-lld` and `ld.lld` on NixOS
When `rustc` uses its self-contained lld, we also need to patch `rust-lld` and `ld.lld`.
The `rpath` for `rust-lld` is `$ORIGIN/../../../:$ORIGIN/../lib`, so I use `--add-rpath` instead of `--set-rpath`, which should be easier to maintain.
I also changed `src/bootstrap/src/core/download.rs`, even this doesn't fix any known issues.
For the `lld-wrapper.sh` of lld, refer to: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/1999.
Id, attributes, inner nodes in source order if possible, tokens, span.
Also always use exhaustive matching in visiting infra, and visit some missing nodes.
Remove more `PtrToPtr` casts in GVN
This addresses two things I noticed in MIR:
1. `NonNull::<T>::eq` does `(a as *mut T) == (b as *mut T)`, but it could just compare the `*const T`s, so this removes `PtrToPtr` casts that are on both sides of a pointer comparison, so long as they're not fat-to-thin casts.
2. `NonNull::<T>::addr` does `transmute::<_, usize>(p as *const ())`, but so long as `T: Thin` that cast doesn't do anything, and thus we can directly transmute the `*const T` instead.
r? mir-opt
Add more constants, functions, and tests for `f16` and `f128`
This adds everything that was in some way blocked on const eval, since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126429 landed. There is a lot of `cfg(bootstrap)` since that is a fairly recent change.
`f128` tests are disabled on everything except x86_64 and Linux aarch64, which are two platforms I know have "good" support for these types - meaning basic math symbols are available and LLVM doesn't hit selection crashes. `f16` tests are enabled on almost everything except for known LLVM crashes. Doctests are only enabled on x86_64.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116909
fix broken build cache caused by rustdoc builds
Currently rustdoc breaks the build cache (due to having different rustflags) when building rustdoc before building another tool (e.g., `x test miri && x test rustdoc && x test miri`).
This change fixes that by moving `on-broken-pipe` into `prepare_cargo_tool` so it is set for all tools.
cc `@RalfJung`
Fixes#123177