Avoid more allocations when compiling html5ever
These three commits reduce the number of allocations performed when compiling html5ever from 13.2M to 10.8M, which speeds up compilation by about 2%.
r? @nrc
Fix bad error message with `::<` in types
Fix#36116.
Before:
```rust
error: expected identifier, found `<`
--> src/test/compile-fail/issue-36116.rs:16:52
|
16 | let f = Some(Foo { _a: 42 }).map(|a| a as Foo::<i32>);
| ^
error: chained comparison operators require parentheses
--> src/test/compile-fail/issue-36116.rs:16:52
|
16 | let f = Some(Foo { _a: 42 }).map(|a| a as Foo::<i32>);
| ^^^^^^
|
= help: use `::<...>` instead of `<...>` if you meant to specify type arguments
error: expected expression, found `)`
--> src/test/compile-fail/issue-36116.rs:16:57
|
16 | let f = Some(Foo { _a: 42 }).map(|a| a as Foo::<i32>);
| ^
error: expected identifier, found `<`
--> src/test/compile-fail/issue-36116.rs:20:17
|
20 | let g: Foo::<i32> = Foo { _a: 42 };
| ^
error: aborting due to 5 previous errors
```
After:
```rust
error: unexpected token: `::`
--> src/test/compile-fail/issue-36116.rs:16:50
|
16 | let f = Some(Foo { _a: 42 }).map(|a| a as Foo::<i32>);
| ^^
|
= help: use `<...>` instead of `::<...>` if you meant to specify type arguments
error: unexpected token: `::`
--> src/test/compile-fail/issue-36116.rs:20:15
|
20 | let g: Foo::<i32> = Foo { _a: 42 };
| ^^
|
= help: use `<...>` instead of `::<...>` if you meant to specify type arguments
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
```
Recover out of an enum or struct's braced block.
If we encounter a syntax error inside of a braced block, then we should
fail by consuming the rest of the block if possible.
This implements such recovery for enums and structs.
Fixes#37113.
Implement field shorthands in struct literal expressions.
Implements #37340 in a straight-forward way: `Foo { x, y: f() }` parses as `Foo { x: x, y: f() }`.
Because of the added `is_shorthand` to `ast::Field`, this is `[syntax-breaking]` (cc @Manishearth).
* [x] Mark the fields as being a shorthand (the exact same way we do it in patterns), for pretty-printing.
* [x] Gate the shorthand syntax with `#![feature(field_init_shorthand)]`.
* [x] Don't parse numeric field as identifiers.
* [x] Arbitrary field order tests.
If we encounter a syntax error inside of a braced block, then we should
fail by consuming the rest of the block if possible.
This implements such recovery for enums and structs.
Fixes#37113.
check target abi support
This PR checks for each extern function / block whether the ABI / calling convention used is supported by the current target.
This was achieved by adding an `abi_blacklist` field to the target specifications, listing the calling conventions unsupported for that target.
Avoid some allocations in the macro parser
These three commits reduce the number of heap allocations done when compiling rustc-benchmarks/html5ever-2016-08-25 by 20%, from 16.5M to 13.3M. This speeds up (debug) compilation of it with a stage1 compiler by about 7%.
prefer `if let` to match with `None => { }` arm in some places
In #34268 (8531d581), we replaced matches of None to the unit value `()`
with `if let`s in places where it was deemed that this made the code
unambiguously clearer and more idiomatic. In #34638 (d37edef9), we did
the same for matches of None to the empty block `{}`.
A casual observer, upon seeing these commits fly by, might suppose that
the matter was then settled, that no further pull requests on this
utterly trivial point of style could or would be made. Unless ...
It turns out that sometimes people write the empty block with a space in
between the braces. Who knew?
Allow bootstrapping without a key. Fixes#36548
This will make it easier for packagers to bootstrap rustc when they happen
to have a bootstrap compiler with a slightly different version number.
It's not ok for anything other than the build system to set this environment variable.
r? @alexcrichton
macros: fix partially consumed tokens in macro matchers
Fixes#37175.
This PR also avoids re-transcribing the tokens consumed by a matcher (and cloning the `TtReader` once per matcher), which improves expansion performance of the test case from #34630 by ~8%.
r? @nrc
Fix some pretty printing tests
Many pretty-printing tests are un-ignored.
Some issues in classification of comments (trailing/isolated) and blank line counting are fixed.
Some comments are printed more carefully.
Some minor refactoring in pprust.rs
`no-pretty-expanded` annotations are removed because this is the default now.
`pretty-expanded` annotations are removed from compile-fail tests, they are not tested with pretty-printer.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/23623 in favor of more specific https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/37201 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/37199
r? @nrc
macros 1.1: future proofing and cleanup
This PR
- uses the macro namespace for custom derives (instead of a dedicated custom derive namespace),
- relaxes the shadowing rules for `#[macro_use]`-imported custom derives to match the shadowing rules for ordinary `#[macro_use]`-imported macros, and
- treats custom derive `extern crate`s like empty modules so that we can eventually allow, for example, `extern crate serde_derive; use serde_derive::Serialize;` backwards compatibly.
r? @alexcrichton
Avoid many CrateConfig clones.
This commit changes `ExtCtx::cfg()` so it returns a `CrateConfig`
reference instead of a clone. As a result, it also changes all of the
`cfg()` callsites to explicitly clone... except one, because the commit
also changes `macro_parser::parse()` to take `&CrateConfig`. This is
good, because that function can be hot, and `CrateConfig` is expensive
to clone.
This change almost halves the number of heap allocations done by rustc
for `html5ever` in rustc-benchmarks suite, which makes compilation 1.20x
faster.
r? @nrc
`#[may_dangle]` attribute
`#[may_dangle]` attribute
Second step of #34761. Last big hurdle before we can work in earnest towards Allocator integration (#32838)
Note: I am not clear if this is *also* a syntax-breaking change that needs to be part of a breaking-batch.
This will make it easier for packagers to bootstrap rustc when they happen
to have a bootstrap compiler with a slightly different version number.
It's not ok for anything other than the build system to set this environment variable.
Clarify the positions of the lexer and parser
The lexer and parser use unclear names to indicate their positions in the
source code. I propose the following renamings.
Lexer:
```
pos -> next_pos # it's actually the next pos!
last_pos -> pos # it's actually the current pos!
curr -> ch # the current char
curr_is -> ch_is # tests the current char
col (unchanged) # the current column
```
parser
```
- last_span -> prev_span # the previous token's span
- last_token_kind -> prev_token_kind # the previous token's kind
- LastTokenKind -> PrevTokenKind # ditto (but the type)
- token (unchanged) # the current token
- span (unchanged) # the current span
```
Things to note:
- This proposal removes all uses of "last", which is an unclear word because it
could mean (a) previous, (b) final, or (c) most recent, i.e. current.
- The "current" things (ch, col, token, span) consistently lack a prefix. The
"previous" and "next" things consistently have a prefix.
In #34268 (8531d581), we replaced matches of None to the unit value `()`
with `if let`s in places where it was deemed that this made the code
unambiguously clearer and more idiomatic. In #34638 (d37edef9), we did
the same for matches of None to the empty block `{}`.
A casual observer, upon seeing these commits fly by, might suppose that
the matter was then settled, that no further pull requests on this
utterly trivial point of style could or would be made. Unless ...
It turns out that sometimes people write the empty block with a space in
between the braces. Who knew?
This commit changes `ExtCtx::cfg()` so it returns a `CrateConfig`
reference instead of a clone. As a result, it also changes all of the
`cfg()` callsites to explicitly clone... except one, because the commit
also changes `macro_parser::parse()` to take `&CrateConfig`. This is
good, because that function can be hot, and `CrateConfig` is expensive
to clone.
This change almost halves the number of heap allocations done by rustc
for `html5ever` in rustc-benchmarks suite, which makes compilation 1.20x
faster.
macros: clean up scopes of expanded `#[macro_use]` imports
This PR changes the scope of macro-expanded `#[macro_use]` imports to match that of unexpanded `#[macro_use]` imports. For example, this would be allowed:
```rust
example!();
macro_rules! m { () => { #[macro_use(example)] extern crate example_crate; } }
m!();
```
This PR also enforces the full shadowing restrictions from RFC 1560 on `#[macro_use]` imports (currently, we only enforce the weakened restrictions from #36767).
This is a [breaking-change], but I believe it is highly unlikely to cause breakage in practice.
r? @nrc
Avoid allocations in `Decoder::read_str`.
`opaque::Decoder::read_str` is very hot within `rustc` due to its use in
the reading of crate metadata, and it currently returns a `String`. This
commit changes it to instead return a `Cow<str>`, which avoids a heap
allocation.
This change reduces the number of calls to `malloc` by almost 10% in
some benchmarks.
This is a [breaking-change] to libserialize.