trans: Disambiguate generic instance symbol names by instantiating crate.
Two crates will often instantiate the same generic functions. Since
we don't make any attempt to re-use these instances cross-crate, we
would run into symbol conflicts for anything with external linkage.
In order to avoid this, this commit makes the compiler incorporate
the ID of the instantiating crate into the symbol hash. This way
equal generic instances will have different symbols names when
used in different crates.
bors [Mon, 9 Jan 2017 10:58:08 +0000 (10:58 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38929 - Manishearth:compiler-docs, r=alexcrichton
Don't restrict docs in compiler-docs mode
Search is broken without this. We want all crates to be included in compiler-docs mode. This was changed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/38858, this PR brings that functionality back in compiler-docs mode.
bors [Mon, 9 Jan 2017 07:01:10 +0000 (07:01 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38866 - alexcrichton:try-wait, r=aturon
std: Add a nonblocking `Child::try_wait` method
This commit adds a new method to the `Child` type in the `std::process` module
called `try_wait`. This method is the same as `wait` except that it will not
block the calling thread and instead only attempt to collect the exit status. On
Unix this means that we call `waitpid` with the `WNOHANG` flag and on Windows it
just means that we pass a 0 timeout to `WaitForSingleObject`.
Currently it's possible to build this method out of tree, but it's unfortunately
tricky to do so. Specifically on Unix you essentially lose ownership of the pid
for the process once a call to `waitpid` has succeeded. Although `Child` tracks
this state internally to be resilient to multiple calls to `wait` or a `kill`
after a successful wait, if the child is waited on externally then the state
inside of `Child` is not updated. This means that external implementations of
this method must be extra careful to essentially not use a `Child`'s methods
after a call to `waitpid` has succeeded (even in a nonblocking fashion).
By adding this functionality to the standard library it should help canonicalize
these external implementations and ensure they can continue to robustly reuse
the `Child` type from the standard library without worrying about pid ownership.
bors [Sun, 8 Jan 2017 17:48:14 +0000 (17:48 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38853 - alexcrichton:better-dist, r=brson
rustbuild: Don't build target compilers in stage0
The `doc-book` and `doc-nomicon` steps accidentally depended on a rustbook
compiled by a cross-compiled compiler, which isn't necessary. Be sure to set the
`host` on these dependency edges to the build compiler to ensure that we're
always using a tool compiled for the host platform.
This was discovered trawling the build logs for the new dist bots and
discovering that they're building one too many compilers in stage0.
bors [Sun, 8 Jan 2017 15:51:49 +0000 (15:51 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38837 - eddyb:issue-38074, r=nikomatsakis
Allow projections to be promoted to constants in MIR.
This employs the `LvalueContext` additions by @pcwalton to properly extend the MIR promotion of temporaries to allow projections (field accesses, indexing and dereferences) on said temporaries.
It's needed both parity with the old constant qualification logic (for current borrowck) and it fixes #38074.
The former is *required for soundness* if we accept the RFC for promoting rvalues to `'static` constants.
That is, until we get MIR borrowck and the same source of truth will be used for both checks and codegen.
bors [Sun, 8 Jan 2017 11:36:52 +0000 (11:36 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38813 - eddyb:lazy-11, r=nikomatsakis
[11/n] Separate ty::Tables into one per each body.
_This is part of a series ([prev](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/38449) | [next]()) of patches designed to rework rustc into an out-of-order on-demand pipeline model for both better feature support (e.g. [MIR-based](https://github.com/solson/miri) early constant evaluation) and incremental execution of compiler passes (e.g. type-checking), with beneficial consequences to IDE support as well.
If any motivation is unclear, please ask for additional PR description clarifications or code comments._
<hr>
In order to track the results of type-checking and inference for incremental recompilation, they must be stored separately for each function or constant value, instead of lumped together.
These side-`Tables` also have to be tracked by various passes, as they visit through bodies (all of which have `Tables`, even if closures share the ones from their parent functions). This is usually done by switching a `tables` field in an override of `visit_nested_body` before recursing through `visit_body`, to the relevant one and then restoring it - however, in many cases the nesting is unnecessary and creating the visitor for each body in the crate and then visiting that body, would be a much cleaner solution.
To simplify handling of inlined HIR & its side-tables, their `NodeId` remapping and entries HIR map were fully stripped out, which means that `NodeId`s from inlined HIR must not be used where a local `NodeId` is expected. It might be possible to make the nodes (`Expr`, `Block`, `Pat`, etc.) that only show up within a `Body` have IDs that are scoped to that `Body`, which would also allow `Tables` to use `Vec`s.
That last part also fixes #38790 which was accidentally introduced in a previous refactor.
bors [Sun, 8 Jan 2017 08:22:06 +0000 (08:22 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38679 - alexcrichton:always-deny-warnings, r=nrc
Remove not(stage0) from deny(warnings)
Historically this was done to accommodate bugs in lints, but there hasn't been a
bug in a lint since this feature was added which the warnings affected. Let's
completely purge warnings from all our stages by denying warnings in all stages.
This will also assist in tracking down `stage0` code to be removed whenever
we're updating the bootstrap compiler.
bors [Sun, 8 Jan 2017 06:19:14 +0000 (06:19 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38883 - alexcrichton:android-flaky, r=brson
compiletest: Fix flaky Android gdb test runs
Local testing showed that I was able to reproduce an error where debuginfo tests
on Android would fail with "connection reset by peer". Further investigation
turned out that the gdb tests are android with bit of process management:
* First an `adb forward` command is run to ensure that the host's port 5039 is
the same as the emulator's.
* Next an `adb shell` command is run to execute the `gdbserver` executable
inside the emulator. This gdb server will attach to port 5039 and listen for
remote gdb debugging sessions.
* Finally, we run `gdb` on the host (not in the emulator) and then connect to
this gdb server to send it commands.
The problem was happening when the host's gdb was failing to connect to the
remote gdbserver running inside the emulator. The previous test for this was
that after `adb shell` executed we'd sleep for a second and then attempt to make
a TCP connection to port 5039. If successful we'd run gdb and on failure we'd
sleep again.
It turns out, however, that as soon as we've executed `adb forward` all TCP
connections to 5039 will succeed. This means that we would only ever sleep for
at most one second, and if this wasn't enough time we'd just fail later because
we would assume that gdbserver had started but it may not have done so yet.
This commit fixes these issues by removing the TCP connection to test if
gdbserver is ready to go. Instead we read the stdout of the process and wait for
it to print that it's listening at which point we start running gdb. I've found
that locally at least I was unable to reproduce the failure after these changes.
bors [Sun, 8 Jan 2017 04:18:32 +0000 (04:18 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38822 - michaelwoerister:collect-fn-once-adapter, r=eddyb
trans: Fix missing closure env drop-glue in trans-item collector.
FnOnce adapters automatically generated by the compiler introduce a call to drop the closure environment. The collector didn't pick up on that because this drop call does not show up in MIR. That could lead to an assertion being triggered if the drop-glue for the environment wasn't instantiated via something else.
bors [Sun, 8 Jan 2017 00:10:15 +0000 (00:10 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38798 - jsgf:fix-rpath, r=nikomatsakis
rustc: use -Xlinker when specifying an rpath with ',' in it
The `-Wl` option splits its parameters on commas, so if rustc specifies
`-Wl,-rpath,<path>` when `<path>` contains commas, the path gets split up
and the linker gets a partial path and spurious extra parameters.
Gcc/clang support the more verbose `-Xlinker` option to pass options to the linker directly, so use it for comma-containing paths.
bors [Sat, 7 Jan 2017 21:28:47 +0000 (21:28 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38781 - SimonSapin:unishrink, r=alexcrichton
Reduce the size of static data in std_unicode::tables
`BoolTrie` works well for sets of code points spread out through most of Unicode’s range, but is uses a lot of space for sets with few, mostly low, code points.
This switches a few of its instances to a similar but simpler trie data structure.
CC @raphlinus, who wrote the original `BoolTrie`.
## Before
`size_of::<BoolTrie>()` is 1552, which is added to `table.r3.len() * 8 + t.r5.len() + t.r6.len() * 8`:
bors [Sat, 7 Jan 2017 19:21:49 +0000 (19:21 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38733 - sfackler:peek-mut-pop, r=alexcrichton
Add PeekMut::pop
A fairly common workflow is to put a bunch of stuff into a binary heap
and then mutate the top value until its empty. This both makes that a
bit more convenient (no need to save a boolean off and pop after to
avoid borrowck issues), and a bit more efficient since you only shift
once.
bors [Sat, 7 Jan 2017 13:02:52 +0000 (13:02 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38551 - aidanhs:aphs-vec-in-place, r=brson
Implement placement-in protocol for `Vec`
Follow-up of #32366 per comment at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30172#issuecomment-268099009, updating to latest rust, leaving @apasel422 as author and putting myself as committer.
I've removed the implementation of `push` in terms of place to make this PR more conservative.
bors [Sat, 7 Jan 2017 05:59:38 +0000 (05:59 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38859 - jonathandturner:E0088_fix, r=eddyb
E0088/E0090 fix
This fixes an issue reported by @eddyb (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/36208#issuecomment-2707092230) where the check for "too few lifetime parameters" was removed in one of the error message PRs.
I also removed the span shrinking from E0088, as early bound lifetimes give you a confusing underline in some cases.
Alex Crichton [Fri, 6 Jan 2017 06:47:09 +0000 (22:47 -0800)]
std: Add a nonblocking `Child::try_wait` method
This commit adds a new method to the `Child` type in the `std::process` module
called `try_wait`. This method is the same as `wait` except that it will not
block the calling thread and instead only attempt to collect the exit status. On
Unix this means that we call `waitpid` with the `WNOHANG` flag and on Windows it
just means that we pass a 0 timeout to `WaitForSingleObject`.
Currently it's possible to build this method out of tree, but it's unfortunately
tricky to do so. Specifically on Unix you essentially lose ownership of the pid
for the process once a call to `waitpid` has succeeded. Although `Child` tracks
this state internally to be resilient to multiple calls to `wait` or a `kill`
after a successful wait, if the child is waited on externally then the state
inside of `Child` is not updated. This means that external implementations of
this method must be extra careful to essentially not use a `Child`'s methods
after a call to `waitpid` has succeeded (even in a nonblocking fashion).
By adding this functionality to the standard library it should help canonicalize
these external implementations and ensure they can continue to robustly reuse
the `Child` type from the standard library without worrying about pid ownership.
bors [Fri, 6 Jan 2017 23:49:57 +0000 (23:49 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38835 - alexcrichton:less-overlapped, r=brson
std: Don't pass overlapped handles to processes
This commit fixes a mistake introduced in #31618 where overlapped handles were
leaked to child processes on Windows. On Windows once a handle is in overlapped
mode it should always have I/O executed with an instance of `OVERLAPPED`. Most
child processes, however, are not prepared to have their stdio handles in
overlapped mode as they don't use `OVERLAPPED` on reads/writes to the handle.
Now we haven't had any odd behavior in Rust up to this point, and the original
bug was introduced almost a year ago. I believe this is because it turns out
that if you *don't* pass an `OVERLAPPED` then the system will [supply one for
you][link]. In this case everything will go awry if you concurrently operate on
the handle. In Rust, however, the stdio handles are always locked, and there's
no way to not use them unlocked in libstd. Due to that change we've always had
synchronized access to these handles, which means that Rust programs typically
"just work".
Conversely, though, this commit fixes the test case included, which exhibits
behavior that other programs Rust spawns may attempt to execute. Namely, the
stdio handles may be concurrently used and having them in overlapped mode wreaks
havoc.
Alex Crichton [Fri, 6 Jan 2017 18:26:40 +0000 (10:26 -0800)]
compiletest: Fix flaky Android gdb test runs
Local testing showed that I was able to reproduce an error where debuginfo tests
on Android would fail with "connection reset by peer". Further investigation
turned out that the gdb tests are android with bit of process management:
* First an `adb forward` command is run to ensure that the host's port 5039 is
the same as the emulator's.
* Next an `adb shell` command is run to execute the `gdbserver` executable
inside the emulator. This gdb server will attach to port 5039 and listen for
remote gdb debugging sessions.
* Finally, we run `gdb` on the host (not in the emulator) and then connect to
this gdb server to send it commands.
The problem was happening when the host's gdb was failing to connect to the
remote gdbserver running inside the emulator. The previous test for this was
that after `adb shell` executed we'd sleep for a second and then attempt to make
a TCP connection to port 5039. If successful we'd run gdb and on failure we'd
sleep again.
It turns out, however, that as soon as we've executed `adb forward` all TCP
connections to 5039 will succeed. This means that we would only ever sleep for
at most one second, and if this wasn't enough time we'd just fail later because
we would assume that gdbserver had started but it may not have done so yet.
This commit fixes these issues by removing the TCP connection to test if
gdbserver is ready to go. Instead we read the stdout of the process and wait for
it to print that it's listening at which point we start running gdb. I've found
that locally at least I was unable to reproduce the failure after these changes.
Alex Crichton [Thu, 5 Jan 2017 19:16:48 +0000 (11:16 -0800)]
rustbuild: Don't build target compilers in stage0
The `doc-book` and `doc-nomicon` steps accidentally depended on a rustbook
compiled by a cross-compiled compiler, which isn't necessary. Be sure to set the
`host` on these dependency edges to the build compiler to ensure that we're
always using a tool compiled for the host platform.
This was discovered trawling the build logs for the new dist bots and
discovering that they're building one too many compilers in stage0.
bors [Thu, 5 Jan 2017 11:06:10 +0000 (11:06 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38776 - eddyb:unsigned-means-unsigned, r=pnkfelix
Properly ban the negation of unsigned integers in type-checking.
Lint-time banning of unsigned negation appears to be vestigial from a time it was feature-gated.
But now it always errors and we do have the ability to deref the checking of e.g. `-0`, through the trait obligation fulfillment context, which will only succeed/error when the `0` gets inferred to a specific type.
The two removed tests are the main reason for finally cleaning this up, they need changing all the time when refactoring the HIR-based `rustc_const_eval` and/or `rustc_passes::consts`, as warnings pile up.
bors [Thu, 5 Jan 2017 09:02:40 +0000 (09:02 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38767 - est31:master, r=eddyb
Some i128 tests
* Add some FFI tests for i128 on architectures where we have sort of working "C" FFI support. On all other architectures we ignore the test.
* enhance the u128 overflow tests
bors [Thu, 5 Jan 2017 06:01:24 +0000 (06:01 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38756 - Mark-Simulacrum:2nd-trans-cleanup, r=eddyb
Additional cleanup to rustc_trans
Removes `BlockAndBuilder`, `FunctionContext`, and `MaybeSizedValue`.
`LvalueRef` is used instead of `MaybeSizedValue`, which has the added benefit of making functions operating on `Lvalue`s be able to take just that (since it encodes the type with an `LvalueTy`, which can carry discriminant information) instead of a `MaybeSizedValue` and a discriminant.
bors [Thu, 5 Jan 2017 04:01:35 +0000 (04:01 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38731 - alexcrichton:supafast-cross-dist, r=brson
rustbuild: Quickly `dist` cross-host compilers
This commit optimizes the compile time for creating tarballs of cross-host
compilers and as a proof of concept adds two to the standard Travis matrix. Much
of this commit is further refactoring and refining of the `step.rs` definitions
along with the interpretation of `--target` and `--host` flags. This has gotten
confusing enough that I've also added a small test suite to
`src/bootstrap/step.rs` to ensure what we're doing works and doesn't regress.
After this commit when you execute:
./x.py dist --host $MY_HOST --target $MY_HOST
the build system will compile two compilers. The first is for the build platform
and the second is for the host platform. This second compiler is then packaged
up and placed into `build/dist` and is ready to go. With a fully cached LLVM and
docker image I was able to create a cross-host compiler in around 20 minutes
locally.
Eventually we plan to add a whole litany of cross-host entries to the Travis
matrix, but for now we're just adding a few before we eat up all the extra
capacity.
bors [Thu, 5 Jan 2017 00:11:37 +0000 (00:11 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38770 - steveklabnik:doc-custom-derive, r=alexcrichton
Document custom derive.
These are some bare-bones documentation for custom derive, needed
to stabilize "macros 1.1",
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/35900
The book chapter is based off of a blog post by @cbreeden,
https://cbreeden.github.io/Macros11/
Normally, we have a policy of not mentioning external crates in
documentation. However, given that syn/quote are basically neccesary
for properly using macros 1.1, I feel that not including them here
would make the documentation very bad. So the rules should be bent
in this instance.
So far, this PR includes only docs; @alexcrichton said in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/35900 that he'd be okay with landing them before stabilization; I don't mind either way.
Alex Crichton [Wed, 4 Jan 2017 23:32:39 +0000 (15:32 -0800)]
std: Don't pass overlapped handles to processes
This commit fixes a mistake introduced in #31618 where overlapped handles were
leaked to child processes on Windows. On Windows once a handle is in overlapped
mode it should always have I/O executed with an instance of `OVERLAPPED`. Most
child processes, however, are not prepared to have their stdio handles in
overlapped mode as they don't use `OVERLAPPED` on reads/writes to the handle.
Now we haven't had any odd behavior in Rust up to this point, and the original
bug was introduced almost a year ago. I believe this is because it turns out
that if you *don't* pass an `OVERLAPPED` then the system will [supply one for
you][link]. In this case everything will go awry if you concurrently operate on
the handle. In Rust, however, the stdio handles are always locked, and there's
no way to not use them unlocked in libstd. Due to that change we've always had
synchronized access to these handles, which means that Rust programs typically
"just work".
Conversely, though, this commit fixes the test case included, which exhibits
behavior that other programs Rust spawns may attempt to execute. Namely, the
stdio handles may be concurrently used and having them in overlapped mode wreaks
havoc.
Steve Klabnik [Mon, 2 Jan 2017 01:33:37 +0000 (20:33 -0500)]
Document custom derive.
These are some bare-bones documentation for custom derive, needed
to stabilize "macros 1.1",
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/35900
The book chapter is based off of a blog post by @cbreeden,
https://cbreeden.github.io/Macros11/
Normally, we have a policy of not mentioning external crates in
documentation. However, given that syn/quote are basically neccesary
for properly using macros 1.1, I feel that not including them here
would make the documentation very bad. So the rules should be bent
in this instance.
bors [Wed, 4 Jan 2017 20:06:21 +0000 (20:06 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38783 - alexcrichton:stabilize-proc-macro, r=nikomatsakis
rustc: Stabilize the `proc_macro` feature
This commit stabilizes the `proc_macro` and `proc_macro_lib` features in the
compiler to stabilize the "Macros 1.1" feature of the language. Many more
details can be found on the tracking issue, #35900.
Alex Crichton [Sat, 31 Dec 2016 03:50:57 +0000 (19:50 -0800)]
rustbuild: Quickly `dist` cross-host compilers
This commit optimizes the compile time for creating tarballs of cross-host
compilers and as a proof of concept adds two to the standard Travis matrix. Much
of this commit is further refactoring and refining of the `step.rs` definitions
along with the interpretation of `--target` and `--host` flags. This has gotten
confusing enough that I've also added a small test suite to
`src/bootstrap/step.rs` to ensure what we're doing works and doesn't regress.
After this commit when you execute:
./x.py dist --host $MY_HOST --target $MY_HOST
the build system will compile two compilers. The first is for the build platform
and the second is for the host platform. This second compiler is then packaged
up and placed into `build/dist` and is ready to go. With a fully cached LLVM and
docker image I was able to create a cross-host compiler in around 20 minutes
locally.
Eventually we plan to add a whole litany of cross-host entries to the Travis
matrix, but for now we're just adding a few before we eat up all the extra
capacity.
bors [Wed, 4 Jan 2017 14:26:17 +0000 (14:26 +0000)]
Auto merge of #38670 - dotdash:transmute_align, r=eddyb
Fix transmute::<T, U> where T requires a bigger alignment than U
For transmute::<T, U> we simply pointercast the destination from a U
pointer to a T pointer, without providing any alignment information,
thus LLVM assumes that the destination is aligned to hold a value of
type T, which is not necessarily true. This can lead to LLVM emitting
machine instructions that assume said alignment, and thus cause aborts.
To fix this, we need to provide the actual alignment to store_operand()
and in turn to store() so they can set the proper alignment information
on the stores and LLVM can emit the proper machine instructions.