Commit graph

610 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
5225225
eee29b0b95 Increase tidy limit for parser by 1 2021-11-16 08:08:31 +00:00
Caio
ab5434f9b8 Move some tests to more reasonable directories 2021-11-14 14:38:42 -03:00
bors
032dfe4360 Auto merge of #89167 - workingjubilee:use-simd, r=MarkSimulacrum
pub use core::simd;

A portable abstraction over SIMD has been a major pursuit in recent years for several programming languages. In Rust, `std::arch` offers explicit SIMD acceleration via compiler intrinsics, but it does so at the cost of having to individually maintain each and every single such API, and is almost completely `unsafe` to use.  `core::simd` offers safe abstractions that are resolved to the appropriate SIMD instructions by LLVM during compilation, including scalar instructions if that is all that is available.

`core::simd` is enabled by the `#![portable_simd]` nightly feature tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/86656 and is introduced here by pulling in the https://github.com/rust-lang/portable-simd repository as a subtree. We built the repository out-of-tree to allow faster compilation and a stochastic test suite backed by the proptest crate to verify that different targets, features, and optimizations produce the same result, so that using this library does not introduce any surprises. As these tests are technically non-deterministic, and thus can introduce overly interesting Heisenbugs if included in the rustc CI, they are visible in the commit history of the subtree but do nothing here. Some tests **are** introduced via the documentation, but these use deterministic asserts.

There are multiple unsolved problems with the library at the current moment, including a want for better documentation, technical issues with LLVM scalarizing and lowering to libm, room for improvement for the APIs, and so far I have not added the necessary plumbing for allowing the more experimental or libm-dependent APIs to be used. However, I thought it would be prudent to open this for review in its current condition, as it is both usable and it is likely I am going to learn something else needs to be fixed when bors tries this out.

The major types are
- `core::simd::Simd<T, N>`
- `core::simd::Mask<T, N>`

There is also the `LaneCount` struct, which, together with the SimdElement and SupportedLaneCount traits, limit the implementation's maximum support to vectors we know will actually compile and provide supporting logic for bitmasks. I'm hoping to simplify at least some of these out of the way as the compiler and library evolve.
2021-11-13 02:17:20 +00:00
Jubilee Young
39cb863253 Expose portable-simd as core::simd
This enables programmers to use a safe alternative to the current
`extern "platform-intrinsics"` API for writing portable SIMD code.
This is `#![feature(portable_simd)]` as tracked in #86656
2021-11-12 16:58:39 -08:00
Caio
7fd15f0900 Move some tests to more reasonable directories 2021-11-06 15:35:20 -03:00
Guillaume Gomez
d7afbf61d8 Also check for feature gates in "src/test/rustdoc" 2021-11-02 17:15:11 +01:00
Noah Lev
f410bc7dc1 tidy: Remove submodules from edition exception list
Both style-check and date-check are now on the 2021 edition, and this
commit also updates their repositories' submodules.
2021-10-24 14:07:46 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
396a4f4984
Increase ROOT_ENTRY_LIMIT to 1331 2021-10-20 11:28:11 +09:00
Noah Lev
cc6a09009d Add long explanation for E0464
The test is copied from `src/test/ui/crate-loading/crateresolve1.rs` and
its auxiliary tests. I added it to the `compile_fail` code example check
exemption list since it's hard if not impossible to reproduce this error
in a standalone code example.
2021-10-12 13:10:12 -07:00
Noah Lev
642a43a9cd Test crate loading error stderr
And remove E0464 from test-exemption list, since it now has a full test.
2021-10-12 13:10:10 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
57504aafe8
Rollup merge of #89710 - sireliah:e0482, r=GuillaumeGomez
Add long explanation for error E0482

This is longer explanation for error E0482 in the #61137.

Please take a look and leave some feedback!
2021-10-11 23:45:50 +02:00
sireliah
14aae67bbc Allow the E0482 to be tested 2021-10-09 21:54:02 +02:00
Chase Wilson
09f1542418
Implemented -Z randomize-layout 2021-09-30 14:50:06 -05:00
Guillaume Gomez
864290472f
Rollup merge of #87260 - antoyo:libgccjit-codegen, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Libgccjit codegen

This PR introduces a subtree for a gcc-based codegen backend to the repository, per decision in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/442. We do not yet expect to ship this backend on nightly or run tests in CI, but we do verify that the backend checks (i.e., `cargo check`) successfully.

Work is expected to progress primarily in https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_gcc, with semi-regular upstreaming, like with other subtrees.
2021-09-28 20:00:12 +02:00
Noah Lev
662daee658 Adjust tidy edition lint to force 2021
This has a few exceptions today (library crates, a few submodules), but is
mostly accurate.
2021-09-20 22:21:42 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
c746be2219 Migrate to 2021 2021-09-20 22:21:42 -04:00
bors
d6cd2c6c87 Auto merge of #82183 - michaelwoerister:lazier-defpathhash-loading2, r=wesleywiser
Simplify lazy DefPathHash decoding by using an on-disk hash table.

This PR simplifies the logic around mapping `DefPathHash` values encountered during incremental compilation to valid `DefId`s in the current session. It is able to do so by using an on-disk hash table encoding that allows for looking up values directly, i.e. without deserializing the entire table.

The main simplification comes from not having to keep track of `DefPathHashes` being used during the compilation session.
2021-09-18 14:37:39 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
5e910373f1
Rollup merge of #88883 - c410-f3r:tests, r=petrochenkov
Move some tests to more reasonable directories - 7

cc #73494
r? ``@petrochenkov``
2021-09-17 14:09:48 +09:00
Caio
1b0186e9ec Move some tests to more reasonable directories 2021-09-15 14:03:27 -03:00
Michael Woerister
d0be27c8ec Use on-disk-hash-table format for DefPathHashMap in hir::definitions. 2021-09-14 13:54:41 +02:00
Joshua Nelson
69fe39e8a8 Add primitive documentation to libcore
This works by doing two things:
- Adding links that are specific to the crate. Since not all primitive
  items are defined in `core` (due to lang_items), these need to use
  relative links and not intra-doc links.
- Duplicating `primitive_docs` in both core and std. This allows not needing CARGO_PKG_NAME to build the standard library. It also adds a tidy check to make sure they stay the same.
2021-09-12 02:23:08 +00:00
Frank Steffahn
2f9ddf3bc7 Fix typos “an”→“a” and a few different ones that appeared in the same search 2021-08-22 18:15:49 +02:00
bors
92f3753b07 Auto merge of #84039 - jyn514:uplift-atomic-ordering, r=wesleywiser
Uplift the invalid_atomic_ordering lint from clippy to rustc

This is mostly just a rebase of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79654; I've copy/pasted the text from that PR below.

r? `@lcnr` since you reviewed the last one, but feel free to reassign.

---

This is an implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/390.

As mentioned, in general this turns an unconditional runtime panic into a (compile time) lint failure. It has no false positives, and the only false negatives I'm aware of are if `Ordering` isn't specified directly and is comes from an argument/constant/whatever.

As a result of it having no false positives, and the alternative always being strictly wrong, it's on as deny by default. This seems right.

In the [zulip stream](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/233931-t-compiler.2Fmajor-changes/topic/Uplift.20the.20.60invalid_atomic_ordering.60.20lint.20from.20clippy/near/218483957) `@joshtriplett` suggested that lang team should FCP this before landing it. Perhaps libs team cares too?

---

Some notes on the code for reviewers / others below

## Changes from clippy

The code is changed from [the implementation in clippy](68cf94f6a6/clippy_lints/src/atomic_ordering.rs) in the following ways:

1. Uses `Symbols` and `rustc_diagnostic_item`s instead of string literals.
    - It's possible I should have just invoked Symbol::intern for some of these instead? Seems better to use symbol, but it did require adding several.
2. The functions are moved to static methods inside the lint struct, as a way to namespace them.
    - There's a lot of other code in that file — which I picked as the location for this lint because `@jyn514` told me that seemed reasonable.
3. Supports unstable AtomicU128/AtomicI128.
    - I did this because it was almost easier to support them than not — not supporting them would have (ideally) required finding a way not to give them a `rustc_diagnostic_item`, which would have complicated an already big macro.
    - These don't have tests since I wasn't sure if/how I should make tests conditional on whether or not the target has the atomic... This is to a certain extent an issue of 64bit atomics too, but 128-bit atomics are much less common. Regardless, the existing tests should be *more* than thorough enough here.
4. Minor changes like:
    - grammar tweaks ("loads cannot have `Release` **and** `AcqRel` ordering" => "loads cannot have `Release` **or** `AcqRel` ordering")
    - function renames (`match_ordering_def_path` => `matches_ordering_def_path`),
    - avoiding clippy-specific helper methods that don't exist in rustc_lint and didn't seem worth adding for this case (for example `cx.struct_span_lint` vs clippy's `span_lint_and_help` helper).

## Potential issues

(This is just about the code in this PR, not conceptual issues with the lint or anything)

1. I'm not sure if I should have used a diagnostic item for `Ordering` and its variants (I couldn't figure out how really, so if I should do this some pointers would be appreciated).
    - It seems possible that failing to do this might possibly mean there are more cases this lint would miss, but I don't really know how `match_def_path` works and if it has any pitfalls like that, so maybe not.

2. I *think* I deprecated the lint in clippy (CC `@flip1995` who asked to be notified about clippy changes in the future in [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75671#issuecomment-718731659)) but I'm not sure if I need to do anything else there.
    - I'm kind of hoping CI will catch if I missed anything, since `x.py test src/tools/clippy` fails with a lot of errors with and without my changes (and is probably a nonsense command regardless). Running `cargo test` from src/tools/clippy also fails with unrelated errors that seem like refactorings that didnt update clippy? So, honestly no clue.

3. I wasn't sure if the description/example I gave good. Hopefully it is. The example is less thorough than the one from clippy here: https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#invalid_atomic_ordering. Let me know if/how I should change it if it needs changing.

4. It pulls in the `if_chain` crate. This crate was already used in clippy, and seems like it's used elsewhere in rustc, but I'm willing to rewrite it to not use this if needed (I'd prefer not to, all things being equal).
2021-08-16 06:36:13 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni
402a9c9f5e Uplift the invalid_atomic_ordering lint from clippy to rustc
- Deprecate clippy::invalid_atomic_ordering
- Use rustc_diagnostic_item for the orderings in the invalid_atomic_ordering lint
- Reduce code duplication
- Give up on making enum variants diagnostic items and just look for
`Ordering` instead

  I ran into tons of trouble with this because apparently the change to
  store HIR attrs in a side table also gave the DefIds of the
  constructor instead of the variant itself. So I had to change
  `matches_ordering` to also check the grandparent of the defid as well.

- Rename `atomic_ordering_x` symbols to just the name of the variant
- Fix typos in checks - there were a few places that said "may not be
  Release" in the diagnostic but actually checked for SeqCst in the lint.
- Make constant items const
- Use fewer diagnostic items
- Only look at arguments after making sure the method matches

  This prevents an ICE when there aren't enough arguments.

- Ignore trait methods
- Only check Ctors instead of going through `qpath_res`

  The functions take values, so this couldn't ever be anything else.

- Add if_chain to allowed dependencies
- Fix grammar
- Remove unnecessary allow
2021-08-16 03:55:27 +00:00
Antoni Boucher
8841e9e632 Fix tidy 2021-08-12 21:56:23 -04:00
Yuki Okushi
b7b0291147
Move some UI tests to more suitable subdirs 2021-08-10 13:34:05 +09:00
bors
7129033b42 Auto merge of #87462 - ibraheemdev:tidy-file-length-ignore-comment, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Ignore comments in tidy-filelength

Ref https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60302#issuecomment-652402127
2021-08-06 02:07:01 +00:00
Jade
3cf820e17d rfc3052: Remove authors field from Cargo manifests
Since RFC 3052 soft deprecated the authors field anyway, hiding it from
crates.io, docs.rs, and making Cargo not add it by default, and it is
not generally up to date/useful information, we should remove it from
crates in this repo.
2021-07-29 14:56:05 -07:00
ibraheemdev
3171bd5bf5 ignore comments in tidy-filelength 2021-07-25 17:10:51 -04:00
Igor Matuszewski
5fcb726f6c Fix formatting in tidy exception list 2021-07-21 21:08:39 +02:00
Igor Matuszewski
bf12f340ee Clean up now unused deps from the exceptions list 2021-07-21 20:37:50 +02:00
bors
ca99e3eb3a Auto merge of #86922 - joshtriplett:target-abi, r=oli-obk
target abi

Implement cfg(target_abi) (RFC 2992)

Add an `abi` field to `TargetOptions`, defaulting to "". Support using
`cfg(target_abi = "...")` for conditional compilation on that field.

Gated by `feature(cfg_target_abi)`.

Add a test for `target_abi`, and a test for the feature gate.

Add `target_abi` to tidy as a platform-specific cfg.

Update targets to use `target_abi`

All eabi targets have `target_abi = "eabi".`
All eabihf targets have `target_abi = "eabihf"`.
`armv6_unknown_freebsd` and `armv7_unknown_freebsd` have `target_abi = "eabihf"`.
All abi64 targets have `target_abi = "abi64"`.
All ilp32 targets have `target_abi = "ilp32"`.
All softfloat targets have `target_abi = "softfloat"`.
All *-uwp-windows-* targets have `target_abi = "uwp"`.
All spe targets have `target_abi = "spe"`.
All macabi targets have `target_abi = "macabi"`.
aarch64-apple-ios-sim has `target_abi = "sim"`.
`x86_64-fortanix-unknown-sgx` has `target_abi = "fortanix"`.
`x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32` has `target_abi = "x32"`.

Add FIXME entries for targets for which existing values need to change
once `cfg_target_abi` becomes stable. (All of them are tier 3 targets.)

Add a test for `target_abi` in `--print cfg`.
2021-07-13 12:25:10 +00:00
Josh Triplett
84d6e8aed3 Implement cfg(target_abi) (RFC 2992)
Add an `abi` field to `TargetOptions`, defaulting to "". Support using
`cfg(target_abi = "...")` for conditional compilation on that field.

Gated by `feature(cfg_target_abi)`.

Add a test for `target_abi`, and a test for the feature gate.

Add `target_abi` to tidy as a platform-specific cfg.

This does not add an abi to any existing target.
2021-07-07 08:52:35 -07:00
bjorn3
00b2f56bc6 Add memchr to list of permitted cg_clif deps
Object started depending on it
2021-07-07 11:39:29 +02:00
bors
b09dad3edd Auto merge of #86231 - nagisa:nagisa/abi-allowlist, r=petrochenkov
Replace per-target ABI denylist with an allowlist

It makes very little sense to maintain denylists of ABIs when, as far as
non-generic ABIs are concerned, targets usually only support a small
subset of the available ABIs.

This has historically been a cause of bugs such as us allowing use of
the platform-specific ABIs on x86 targets – these in turn would cause
LLVM errors or assertions to fire.

In this PR we got rid of the per-target ABI denylists, and instead compute
which ABIs are supported with a simple match based on, mostly, the
`Target::arch` field. Among other things, this makes it impossible to
forget to consider this problem (in either direction) and forces one to
consider what the ABI support looks like when adding an ABI (rarely)
rather than target (often), which should hopefully also reduce the
cognitive load on both contributors as well as reviewers.

Fixes #57182

Sponsored by: standard.ai

---

## Summary for teams

One significant user-facing change after this PR is that there's now a future compat warning when building…

* `stdcall`, `fastcall`, `thiscall` using code with targets other than 32-bit x86 (i386...i686) or *-windows-*;
* `vectorcall` using code when building for targets other than x86 (either 32 or 64 bit) or *-windows-*.

Previously these ABIs have been accepted much more broadly, even for architectures and targets where this made no sense (e.g. on wasm32) and would fall back to the C ABI. In practice this doesn't seem to be used too widely and the [breakages in crater](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86231#issuecomment-866300943) that we see are mostly about Windows-specific code that was missing relevant `cfg`s and just happened to successfully `check` on Linux for one reason or another.

The intention is that this warning becomes a hard error after some time.
2021-07-06 14:02:19 +00:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
8240e7aa10 Replace per-target ABI denylist with an allowlist
It makes very little sense to maintain denylists of ABIs when, as far as
non-generic ABIs are concerned, targets usually only support a small
subset of the available ABIs.

This has historically been a cause of bugs such as us allowing use of
the platform-specific ABIs on x86 targets – these in turn would cause
LLVM errors or assertions to fire.

Fixes #57182

Sponsored by: standard.ai
2021-07-06 13:12:15 +03:00
klensy
f6146081ba tidy: update cargo_metadata to 0.12 2021-07-04 19:58:04 +03:00
Daniel Paoliello
aac8a88552 Improve debug symbol names to avoid ambiguity and work better with MSVC's debugger
There are several cases where names of types and functions in the debug info are either ambiguous, or not helpful, such as including ambiguous placeholders (e.g., `{{impl}}`, `{{closure}}` or `dyn _'`) or dropping qualifications (e.g., for dynamic types).

Instead, each debug symbol name should be unique and useful:
* Include disambiguators for anonymous `DefPathDataName` (closures and generators), and unify their formatting when used as a path-qualifier vs item being qualified.
* Qualify the principal trait for dynamic types.
* If there is no principal trait for a dynamic type, emit all other traits instead.
* Respect the `qualified` argument when emitting ref and pointer types.
* For implementations, emit the disambiguator.
* Print const generics when emitting generic parameters or arguments.

Additionally, when targeting MSVC, its debugger treats many command arguments as C++ expressions, even when the argument is defined to be a symbol name. As such names in the debug info need to be more C++-like to be parsed correctly:
* Avoid characters with special meaning (`#`, `[`, `"`, `+`).
* Never start a name with `<` or `{` as this is treated as an operator.
* `>>` is always treated as a right-shift, even when parsing generic arguments (so add a space to avoid this).
* Emit function declarations using C/C++ style syntax (e.g., leading return type).
* Emit arrays as a synthetic `array$<type, size>` type.
* Include a `$` in all synthetic types as this is a legal character for C++, but not Rust (thus we avoid collisions with user types).
2021-06-30 11:10:29 -07:00
Yuki Okushi
2c6268678d
Move some UI tests to more suitable subdirs 2021-06-30 06:41:10 +09:00
Smitty
11ebd80fe7 Make incomplete features part of delcaration
This prevents mistakes where the feature is in the list of incomplete
features but not actually a feature by making the incompleteness a part
of the declaration.
2021-06-28 14:39:20 -04:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
a8e6a2cd9e tidy: tests with --target need llvm components
Herein we verify that all of the tests that specify a `--target`
compile-flag, are also annotated with the minimal set of required llvm
components necessary to run that test.
2021-06-24 23:13:08 +03:00
Guillaume Gomez
0ab9d01dbd Handle windows paths as well 2021-06-23 23:56:16 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
20f1b1cc0a Greatly improve code 2021-06-23 21:32:37 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
12b6d32387 Remove unused error codes from error_codes.rs and from EXEMPTED_FROM_TEST constant 2021-06-23 21:32:37 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
22a702d016 Add check on constant to ensure it's up to date 2021-06-23 21:32:37 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
23e5ed1288 Check if error code is used 2021-06-23 21:32:37 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
7f1a4a287f
Rollup merge of #85182 - CDirkx:available_concurrency, r=JohnTitor
Move `available_concurrency` implementation to `sys`

This splits out the platform-specific implementation of `available_concurrency` to the corresponding platforms under `sys`. No changes are made to the implementation.

Tidy didn't lint against this code being originally added outside of `sys` because of a bug (see #84677), this PR also reverts the exclusion that was introduced in that bugfix.

Tracking issue of `available_concurrency`: #74479
2021-06-22 07:37:46 +09:00
Christiaan Dirkx
05ec710c80 Remove tidy exception for available_concurrency 2021-06-21 11:28:53 +02:00
Eric Huss
35bf1becaa tidy: Check that cargo and compiletest share the same rustfix. 2021-06-20 16:36:26 -07:00
bors
d93b6a4598 Auto merge of #85786 - GuillaumeGomez:error-code-checker-improvement, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Error code checker improvement

Just realized that some error codes shouldn't be ignored anymore. So I updated the script to ensure that if an error code is tested and ignored, it will trigger an error.
2021-05-30 07:25:38 +00:00