Rollup merge of #67011 - Aaron1011:fix/expected-found-span, r=Dylan-DPC
Include a span in more `expected...found` notes
In most places, we use a span when emitting `expected...found` errors.
However, there were a couple of places where we didn't use any span,
resulting in hard-to-interpret error messages.
This commit attaches the relevant span to these notes, and additionally
switches over to using `note_expected_found` instead of manually
formatting the message
Rollup merge of #66710 - vorner:weak-into-raw-null-docs, r=dtolnay
weak-into-raw: Clarify some details in Safety
Clarify it is OK to pass a pointer that never owned a weak count (one
from Weak::new) back into it as it was created from it. Relates to
discussion in #60728.
@CAD97 Do you want to have a look at the new docs?
bors [Thu, 5 Dec 2019 17:45:31 +0000 (17:45 +0000)]
Auto merge of #66828 - GuillaumeGomez:less-minification, r=kinnison
Less minification
The goal of this PR is to remove the minification process on the `search-index.js` file. It provides great result in term of space reduction but the computation time is far too long. I'll work on this issue and will put it back once it's fast enough.
bors [Thu, 5 Dec 2019 14:39:11 +0000 (14:39 +0000)]
Auto merge of #66815 - mark-i-m:simplify-borrow_check-errors, r=Dylan-DPC
Reorganize borrow check diagnostic code
Currently borrow checker diagnostics are split across many different modules in different places in the `librustc_mir` crate. This moves them all to a `diagnostics` module. This also reduces the nesting of the modules a bit (sooo much nesting).
I am also thinking of moving stuff out of the `nll` module since we only have one borrow checker now (:tada:), and maybe it even makes sense to split out all of this stuff to a `librustc_borrow_check`, but those are for the future. Feel free to ping me here or on zulip and let me know what you think...
Clarify it is OK to pass a pointer that never owned a weak count (one
from Weak::new) back into it as it was created from it. Relates to
discussion in #60728.
bors [Wed, 4 Dec 2019 14:33:38 +0000 (14:33 +0000)]
Auto merge of #66408 - nnethercote:greedy-process_obligations, r=nmatsakis
Make `process_obligations()` greedier.
`process_obligations()` adds new nodes, but it does not process these
new nodes until the next time it is called.
This commit changes it so that it does process these new nodes within
the same call. This change reduces the number of calls to
`process_obligations()` required to complete processing, sometimes
giving significant speed-ups.
The change required some changes to tests.
- The output of `cycle-cache-err-60010.rs` is slightly different.
- The unit tests required extra cases to handle the earlier processing
of the added nodes. I mostly did these in the simplest possible way,
by making the added nodes be ignored, thus giving outcomes the same as
with the old behaviour. But I changed `success_in_grandchildren()`
more extensively so that some obligations are completed earlier than
they used to be.
bors [Wed, 4 Dec 2019 08:22:05 +0000 (08:22 +0000)]
Auto merge of #65947 - eddyb:fn-abi, r=oli-obk,nagisa
rustc: split FnAbi's into definitions/direct calls ("of_instance") and indirect calls ("of_fn_ptr").
After this PR:
* `InstanceDef::Virtual` is only used for "direct" virtual calls, and shims around those calls use `InstanceDef::ReifyShim` (i.e. for `<dyn Trait as Trait>::f as fn(_)`)
* this could easily be done for intrinsics as well, to allow their reification, but I didn't do it
* `FnAbi::of_instance` is **always** used for declaring/defining an `fn`, and for direct calls to an `fn`
* this is great for e.g. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/65881 (`#[track_caller]`), which can introduce the "caller location" argument into "codegen signatures" by only changing `FnAbi::of_instance`, after this PR
* `FnAbi::of_fn_ptr` is used primarily for indirect calls, i.e. to `fn` pointers
* *not* virtual calls (which use `FnAbi::of_instance` with `InstanceDef::Virtual`)
* there's also a couple uses where the `rustc_codegen_llvm` needs to declare (i.e. FFI-import) an LLVM function that has no Rust declaration available at all
* at least one of them could probably be a "weak lang item" instead
As there are many steps, this PR is best reviewed commit by commit - some of which arguably should be in their own PRs, I may have gotten carried away a bit.
Aaron Hill [Wed, 4 Dec 2019 03:20:05 +0000 (22:20 -0500)]
Include a span in more `expected...found` notes
In most places, we use a span when emitting `expected...found` errors.
However, there were a couple of places where we didn't use any span,
resulting in hard-to-interpret error messages.
This commit attaches the relevant span to these notes, and additionally
switches over to using `note_expected_found` instead of manually
formatting the message
Rollup merge of #66957 - parthsane:pvs/ftx_lld_linker, r=alexcrichton
Change Linker for x86_64-fortanix-unknown-sgx target to rust-lld
Changed linker for `x86_64-fortanix-unknown-sgx` target to `rust-lld`
This change needed the RelaxELFRelocations flag to be set for it to work correctly
Rollup merge of #66878 - Mark-Simulacrum:sess-decouple, r=Centril
Move Sessions into (new) librustc_session
This PR moves `ParseSess` and `Session` from their current locations into a new crate, `librustc_session`.
There are several intents behind this change. librustc is a very large crate, and we want to split it up over time -- this movement removes the sizeable session module from it. It also helps allow for future movement of things not coupled to TyCtxt but coupled to Session out of the crate.
This movement allows allows for a future follow-up PR which unifies Session and ParseSess, allowing for a single source of truth for APIs interested in global options throughout the compiler; the ParseSess is already created directly as a member of Session in the current compiler (i.e., we do not first construct a ParseSess and then move it into Session later in the compilation).
This PR intentionally avoids changing numerous imports throughout the tree to new locations of the moved types; this is needless noise and can be done as needed.
In the process of moving the sessions back, the lint system received an update as well -- notably, early buffered lints are no longer ad-hoc declared as enum pairs and later associated with proper lint declarations. They are still separately handled (buffered), it is a little unclear whether this is truly necessary, but regardless is left for future PRs.
Many of the types moved back are sort of ad-hoc placed into the same crate (librustc_session) instead of creating other crates; it's unclear whether this is actually a good thing, but it seemed better than creating numerous tiny crates which served no purpose on their own.
Rollup merge of #66750 - alexcrichton:update-wasi, r=sfackler
Update the `wasi` crate for `wasm32-wasi`
This commit updates the `wasi` crate used by the standard library which
is used to implement most of the functionality of libstd on the
`wasm32-wasi` target. This update comes with a brand new crate structure
in the `wasi` crate which caused quite a few changes for the wasi target
here, but it also comes with a significant change to where the
functionality is coming from.
The WASI specification is organized into "snapshots" and a new snapshot
happened recently, so the WASI APIs themselves have changed since the
previous revision. This had only minor impact on the public facing
surface area of libstd, only changing on `u32` to a `u64` in an unstable
API. The actual source for all of these types and such, however, is now
coming from the `wasi_preview_snapshot1` module instead of the
`wasi_unstable` module like before. This means that any implementors
generating binaries will need to ensure that their embedding environment
handles the `wasi_preview_snapshot1` module.
Mark Rousskov [Tue, 12 Nov 2019 16:52:26 +0000 (11:52 -0500)]
Move Lint to rustc_session
This commit breaks early-lint registration, which will be fixed in the
next commit. This movement will allow essentially all crates in the compiler
tree to declare lints (though not lint passes).
Alex Crichton [Mon, 25 Nov 2019 17:27:25 +0000 (09:27 -0800)]
Update the `wasi` crate for `wasm32-wasi`
This commit updates the `wasi` crate used by the standard library which
is used to implement most of the functionality of libstd on the
`wasm32-wasi` target. This update comes with a brand new crate structure
in the `wasi` crate which caused quite a few changes for the wasi target
here, but it also comes with a significant change to where the
functionality is coming from.
The WASI specification is organized into "snapshots" and a new snapshot
happened recently, so the WASI APIs themselves have changed since the
previous revision. This had only minor impact on the public facing
surface area of libstd, only changing on `u32` to a `u64` in an unstable
API. The actual source for all of these types and such, however, is now
coming from the `wasi_preview_snapshot1` module instead of the
`wasi_unstable` module like before. This means that any implementors
generating binaries will need to ensure that their embedding environment
handles the `wasi_preview_snapshot1` module.