Commit graph

52 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bjorn3
42de015549 Mark imports of #[rustc_std_internal_symbol] items with this attribute
This ensures that they will be correctly mangled in a future commit.
2025-03-17 14:06:56 +00:00
Josh Stone
3c45324e67 update cfg(bootstrap) 2025-02-18 09:32:44 -08:00
Eric Huss
331911e699 panic_unwind: Apply unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn 2025-02-14 07:36:17 -08:00
Michael Goulet
a4e7f8f9bf Mark extern blocks as unsafe 2025-02-09 17:11:13 +00:00
Urgau
477ef65121 panic_unwind: add #![warn(unreachable_pub)] 2025-01-20 18:35:32 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
4e4a93c2dd
Rollup merge of #131830 - hoodmane:emscripten-wasm-eh, r=workingjubilee
Add support for wasm exception handling to Emscripten target

This is a draft because we need some additional setting for the Emscripten target to select between the old exception handling and the new exception handling. I don't know how to add a setting like that, would appreciate advice from Rust folks. We could maybe choose to use the new exception handling if `Ctarget-feature=+exception-handling` is passed? I tried this but I get errors from llvm so I'm not doing it right.
2025-01-06 22:04:13 -05:00
Hood Chatham
49c74234a7 Add support for wasm exception handling to Emscripten target
Gated behind an unstable `-Z emscripten-wasm-eh` flag
2025-01-06 10:29:54 +01:00
Jan Sommer
3f94047d8c Switch rtems target to panic unwind 2024-11-30 21:16:05 +01:00
Ralf Jung
56ee492a6e move strict provenance lints to new feature gate, remove old feature gates 2024-10-21 15:22:17 +01:00
Huang Qi
24f622cf80 Initial std library support for NuttX
Signed-off-by: Huang Qi <huangqi3@xiaomi.com>
2024-09-24 15:35:40 +08:00
Jan Sommer
6f435cb07f Port std library to RTEMS 2024-09-03 09:19:29 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
5eca36d27a step cfg(bootstrap) 2024-07-28 14:46:29 -04:00
bjorn3
45b0f68e34 Use the native unwind function in miri where possible 2024-07-01 18:02:40 +00:00
Gary Guo
ebdfcd93a3 Stabilise c_unwind 2024-06-19 13:54:51 +01:00
niluxv
f63d5d1dcd
Refactor panic_unwind/seh.rs pointer use; x86 now conforms to strict-provenance 2024-04-11 20:47:52 +02:00
Noa
125b26acf6
Use Itanium ABI for thrown exceptions 2024-02-22 17:39:49 -06:00
Noa
658a0a20ea
Unconditionally pass -wasm-enable-eh 2024-02-22 16:52:48 -06:00
Noa
3908a935ef
std support for wasm32 panic=unwind 2024-02-22 16:45:26 -06:00
Sean Cross
28203172de panic_unwind: support unwinding on xous
Now that `unwind` supports Xous, enable unwinding panics on Xous.

Signed-off-by: Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io>
2023-11-16 15:23:09 +08:00
Mara Bos
76d9b3689c Rename BoxMeUp to PanicPayload. 2023-09-20 19:24:52 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
0a916062aa Bump cfg(bootstrap) 2023-08-23 20:05:14 -04:00
Benedikt Radtke
3f3262e592 stabilize abi_thiscall 2023-08-07 14:11:03 +02:00
Nilstrieb
5830ca216d Add internal_features lint
It lints against features that are inteded to be internal to the
compiler and standard library. Implements MCP #596.

We allow `internal_features` in the standard library and compiler as those
use many features and this _is_ the standard library from the "internal to the compiler and
standard library" after all.

Marking some features as internal wasn't exactly the most scientific approach, I just marked some
mostly obvious features. While there is a categorization in the macro,
it's not very well upheld (should probably be fixed in another PR).

We always pass `-Ainternal_features` in the testsuite
About 400 UI tests and several other tests use internal features.
Instead of throwing the attribute on each one, just always allow them.
There's nothing wrong with testing internal features^^
2023-08-03 14:50:50 +02:00
bjorn3
b874502a20 Remove unnecessary raw pointer in __rust_start_panic arg
It is no longer necessary as __rust_start_panic switched to the Rust abi.
2023-03-26 16:40:18 +00:00
jonathanCogan
72067c77bd Replace libstd, libcore, liballoc in docs. 2022-12-30 14:00:40 +01:00
Arlo Siemsen
7c60236036 Fix build of thumbv7a-pc-windows-msvc 2022-11-04 14:35:56 -07:00
Amanieu d'Antras
c110329f25 Remove custom frame info registration on i686-pc-windows-gnu
The indirection is no longer needed since we always link to libgcc
even when the panic_abort runtime is used. Instead we can just call
the libgcc functions directly.
2022-08-23 16:12:58 +08:00
Amanieu d'Antras
5ff0876694 Move personality functions to std
These were previously in the panic_unwind crate with dummy stubs in the
panic_abort crate. However it turns out that this is insufficient: we
still need a proper personality function even with -C panic=abort to
handle the following cases:

1) `extern "C-unwind"` still needs to catch foreign exceptions with -C
panic=abort to turn them into aborts. This requires landing pads and a
personality function.

2) ARM EHABI uses the personality function when creating backtraces.
The dummy personality function in panic_abort was causing backtrace
generation to get stuck in a loop since the personality function is
responsible for advancing the unwind state to the next frame.
2022-08-23 16:12:58 +08:00
Jack Huey
410dcc9674 Fully stabilize NLL 2022-06-03 17:16:41 -04:00
Gary Guo
68f063bf3f Use Rust ABI for __rust_start_panic and _{rdl,rg}_oom 2022-05-14 02:53:59 +01:00
Benjamin Lamowski
660d993c64 adapt L4Bender implementation
- Fix style errors.

- L4-bender does not yet support dynamic linking.

- Stack unwinding is not yet supported for x86_64-unknown-l4re-uclibc.
  For now, just abort on panics.

- Use GNU-style linker options where possible. As suggested by review:
    - Use standard GNU-style ld syntax for relro flags.
    - Use standard GNU-style optimization flags and logic.
    - Use standard GNU-style ld syntax for --subsystem.

- Don't read environment variables in L4Bender linker. Thanks to
  CARGO_ENCODED_RUSTFLAGS introduced in #9601, l4-bender's arguments can
  now be passed from the L4Re build system without resorting to custom
  parsing of environment variables.
2022-01-21 16:50:33 +01:00
Alex Crichton
caa9e4a2d0 Review comments 2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7f3ffbc8c2 std: Get the standard library compiling for wasm64
This commit goes through and updates various `#[cfg]` as appropriate to
get the wasm64-unknown-unknown target behaving similarly to the
wasm32-unknown-unknown target. Most of this is just updating various
conditions for `target_arch = "wasm32"` to also account for `target_arch
= "wasm64"` where appropriate. This commit also lists `wasm64` as an
allow-listed architecture to not have the `restricted_std` feature
enabled, enabling experimentation with `-Z build-std` externally.

The main goal of this commit is to enable playing around with
`wasm64-unknown-unknown` externally via `-Z build-std` in a way that's
similar to the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target. These targets are
effectively the same and only differ in their pointer size, but wasm64
is much newer and has much less ecosystem/library support so it'll still
take time to get wasm64 fully-fledged.
2021-11-10 08:35:42 -08:00
Tomoaki Kawada
da9ca41c31 Add SOLID targets
SOLID[1] is an embedded development platform provided by Kyoto
Microcomputer Co., Ltd. This commit introduces a basic Tier 3 support
for SOLID.

# New Targets

The following targets are added:

 - `aarch64-kmc-solid_asp3`
 - `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabi`
 - `armv7a-kmc-solid_asp3-eabihf`

SOLID's target software system can be divided into two parts: an
RTOS kernel, which is responsible for threading and synchronization,
and Core Services, which provides filesystems, networking, and other
things. The RTOS kernel is a μITRON4.0[2][3]-derived kernel based on
the open-source TOPPERS RTOS kernels[4]. For uniprocessor systems
(more precisely, systems where only one processor core is allocated for
SOLID), this will be the TOPPERS/ASP3 kernel. As μITRON is
traditionally only specified at the source-code level, the ABI is
unique to each implementation, which is why `asp3` is included in the
target names.

More targets could be added later, as we support other base kernels
(there are at least three at the point of writing) and are interested
in supporting other processor architectures in the future.

# C Compiler

Although SOLID provides its own supported C/C++ build toolchain, GNU Arm
Embedded Toolchain seems to work for the purpose of building Rust.

# Unresolved Questions

A μITRON4 kernel can support `Thread::unpark` natively, but it's not
used by this commit's implementation because the underlying kernel
feature is also used to implement `Condvar`, and it's unclear whether
`std` should guarantee that parking tokens are not clobbered by other
synchronization primitives.

# Unsupported or Unimplemented Features

Most features are implemented. The following features are not
implemented due to the lack of native support:

- `fs::File::{file_attr, truncate, duplicate, set_permissions}`
- `fs::{symlink, link, canonicalize}`
- Process creation
- Command-line arguments

Backtrace generation is not really a good fit for embedded targets, so
it's intentionally left unimplemented. Unwinding is functional, however.

## Dynamic Linking

Dynamic linking is not supported. The target platform supports dynamic
linking, but enabling this in Rust causes several problems.

 - The linker invocation used to build the shared object of `std` is
   too long for the platform-provided linker to handle.

 - A linker script with specific requirements is required for the
   compiled shared object to be actually loadable.

As such, we decided to disable dynamic linking for now. Regardless, the
users can try to create shared objects by manually invoking the linker.

## Executable

Building an executable is not supported as the notion of "executable
files" isn't well-defined for these targets.

[1] https://solid.kmckk.com/SOLID/
[2] http://ertl.jp/ITRON/SPEC/mitron4-e.html
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITRON_project
[4] https://toppers.jp/
2021-09-28 11:31:47 +09:00
ivmarkov
459eaa6bae STD support for the ESP-IDF framework 2021-08-10 12:09:00 +03:00
Alex Crichton
1c07096a45 rustc: Fill out remaining parts of C-unwind ABI
This commit intends to fill out some of the remaining pieces of the
C-unwind ABI. This has a number of other changes with it though to move
this design space forward a bit. Notably contained within here is:

* On `panic=unwind`, the `extern "C"` ABI is now considered as "may
  unwind". This fixes a longstanding soundness issue where if you
  `panic!()` in an `extern "C"` function defined in Rust that's actually
  UB because the LLVM representation for the function has the `nounwind`
  attribute, but then you unwind.

* Whether or not a function unwinds now mainly considers the ABI of the
  function instead of first checking the panic strategy. This fixes a
  miscompile of `extern "C-unwind"` with `panic=abort` because that ABI
  can still unwind.

* The aborting stub for non-unwinding ABIs with `panic=unwind` has been
  reimplemented. Previously this was done as a small tweak during MIR
  generation, but this has been moved to a separate and dedicated MIR
  pass. This new pass will, for appropriate functions and function
  calls, insert a `cleanup` landing pad for any function call that may
  unwind within a function that is itself not allowed to unwind. Note
  that this subtly changes some behavior from before where previously on
  an unwind which was caught-to-abort it would run active destructors in
  the function, and now it simply immediately aborts the process.

* The `#[unwind]` attribute has been removed and all users in tests and
  such are now using `C-unwind` and `#![feature(c_unwind)]`.

I think this is largely the last piece of the RFC to implement.
Unfortunately I believe this is still not stabilizable as-is because
activating the feature gate changes the behavior of the existing `extern
"C"` ABI in a way that has no replacement. My thinking for how to enable
this is that we add support for the `C-unwind` ABI on stable Rust first,
and then after it hits stable we change the behavior of the `C` ABI.
That way anyone straddling stable/beta/nightly can switch to `C-unwind`
safely.
2021-08-03 07:06:19 -07:00
Charles Lew
0d1919c7ab Remove the deprecated core::raw and std::raw module. 2021-07-03 14:03:27 +08:00
Joshua Nelson
7411a9e7cc rustdoc: link to stable/beta docs consistently in documentation
## User-facing changes

- Intra-doc links to primitives that currently go to rust-lang.org/nightly/std/primitive.x.html will start going to channel that rustdoc was built with. Nightly will continue going to /nightly; Beta will link to /beta; stable compilers will link to /1.52.1 (or whatever version they were built as).
- Cross-crate links from std to core currently go to /nightly unconditionally. They will start going to /1.52.0 on stable channels (but remain the same on nightly channels).
- Intra-crate links from std to std (or core to core) currently go to the same URL they are hosted at; they will continue to do so. Notably, this is different from everything else because it can preserve the distinction between /stable and /1.52.0 by using relative links.

Note that "links" includes both intra-doc links and rustdoc's own
automatically generated hyperlinks.

 ## Implementation changes

- Update the testsuite to allow linking to /beta and /1.52.1 in docs
- Use an html_root_url for the standard library that's dependent on the channel

  This avoids linking to nightly docs on stable.

- Update rustdoc to use channel-dependent links for primitives from an
  unknown crate

- Set DOC_RUST_LANG_ORG_CHANNEL from bootstrap to ensure it's in sync
- Include doc.rust-lang.org in the channel
2021-06-04 14:18:21 -04:00
Mara Bos
81932be5e7 Revert "Revert stabilizing integer::BITS." 2021-03-24 22:34:36 +01:00
Mara Bos
89882388d9 Revert stabilizing integer::BITS. 2021-02-03 22:23:58 +01:00
Ashley Mannix
8940a2652e stabilize int_bits_const 2021-01-31 21:50:47 +10:00
Ralf Jung
1600f7d693 fix another comment, and make __rust_start_panic code a bit more semantically clear 2020-12-25 23:37:27 +01:00
Ralf Jung
29bed26036 slightly more typed interface to panic implementation 2020-12-21 13:37:59 +01:00
Lzu Tao
6bfe27a3e0 Drop support for cloudabi targets 2020-11-22 17:11:41 -05:00
Ralf Jung
bea0ae700e
Rollup merge of #76866 - est31:master, r=lcnr
Remove unused feature gates from library/ crates

Removes some unused feature gates from library crates. It's likely not a complete list as I only tested a subset for which it's more likely that it is unused.
2020-09-20 15:51:50 +02:00
Mara Bos
1e2dba1e7c Use T::BITS instead of size_of::<T> * 8. 2020-09-19 06:54:42 +02:00
est31
baafc71f1f Remove unused libc feature gate
Libc isn't used by alloc.
And std and panic_* use libc from crates.io now,
which isn't feature gated.
2020-09-18 08:59:43 +02:00
bors
41aaa90c67 Auto merge of #70212 - Amanieu:catch_foreign, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Abort when foreign exceptions are caught by catch_unwind

Prior to this PR, foreign exceptions were not caught by catch_unwind, and instead passed through invisibly. This represented a painful soundness hole in some libraries ([take_mut](https://github.com/Sgeo/take_mut/blob/master/src/lib.rs#L37)), which relied on `catch_unwind` to handle all possible exit paths from a closure.

With this PR, foreign exceptions are now caught by `catch_unwind` and will trigger an abort since catching foreign exceptions is currently UB according to the latest proposals by the FFI unwind project group.

cc @rust-lang/wg-ffi-unwind
2020-08-28 01:20:17 +00:00
Amanieu d'Antras
239f833ed1 Abort when catch_unwind catches a foreign exception 2020-08-27 21:08:30 +01:00
Dylan McKay
a0905ceff9 [AVR] Rename the last few remaining references from 'avr-unknown-unknown' to 'avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328' 2020-08-24 18:45:24 +12:00