Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
mark
2c31b45ae8 mv std libs to library/ 2020-07-27 19:51:13 -05:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
0b662c2358 build: Remove unnecessary build = "build.rs" annotations 2020-07-22 19:13:02 +03:00
Taiki Endo
3893b2f04e libprofiler_builtins => 2018 2019-02-06 22:46:01 +09:00
Alex Crichton
4c21a3bc2a std: Depend directly on crates.io crates
Ever since we added a Cargo-based build system for the compiler the
standard library has always been a little special, it's never been able
to depend on crates.io crates for runtime dependencies. This has been a
result of various limitations, namely that Cargo doesn't understand that
crates from crates.io depend on libcore, so Cargo tries to build crates
before libcore is finished.

I had an idea this afternoon, however, which lifts the strategy
from #52919 to directly depend on crates.io crates from the standard
library. After all is said and done this removes a whopping three
submodules that we need to manage!

The basic idea here is that for any crate `std` depends on it adds an
*optional* dependency on an empty crate on crates.io, in this case named
`rustc-std-workspace-core`. This crate is overridden via `[patch]` in
this repository to point to a local crate we write, and *that* has a
`path` dependency on libcore.

Note that all `no_std` crates also depend on `compiler_builtins`, but if
we're not using submodules we can publish `compiler_builtins` to
crates.io and all crates can depend on it anyway! The basic strategy
then looks like:

* The standard library (or some transitive dep) decides to depend on a
  crate `foo`.
* The standard library adds

  ```toml
  [dependencies]
  foo = { version = "0.1", features = ['rustc-dep-of-std'] }
  ```
* The crate `foo` has an optional dependency on `rustc-std-workspace-core`
* The crate `foo` has an optional dependency on `compiler_builtins`
* The crate `foo` has a feature `rustc-dep-of-std` which activates these
  crates and any other necessary infrastructure in the crate.

A sample commit for `dlmalloc` [turns out to be quite simple][commit].
After that all `no_std` crates should largely build "as is" and still be
publishable on crates.io! Notably they should be able to continue to use
stable Rust if necessary, since the `rename-dependency` feature of Cargo
is soon stabilizing.

As a proof of concept, this commit removes the `dlmalloc`,
`libcompiler_builtins`, and `libc` submodules from this repository. Long
thorns in our side these are now gone for good and we can directly
depend on crates.io! It's hoped that in the long term we can bring in
other crates as necessary, but for now this is largely intended to
simply make it easier to manage these crates and remove submodules.

This should be a transparent non-breaking change for all users, but one
possible stickler is that this almost for sure breaks out-of-tree
`std`-building tools like `xargo` and `cargo-xbuild`. I think it should
be relatively easy to get them working, however, as all that's needed is
an entry in the `[patch]` section used to build the standard library.
Hopefully we can work with these tools to solve this problem!

[commit]: 28ee12db81
2018-12-11 21:08:22 -08:00
Oliver Schneider
679657b863
Inject the compiler_builtins crate whenever the core crate is injected 2018-04-07 09:24:35 +02:00
Marco A L Barbosa
03419c846a Bump cc to 1.01 to include x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32 support 2017-10-11 21:35:53 -03:00
Alex Crichton
7694ca419b Update to the cc crate
This is the name the `gcc` crate has moved to
2017-09-28 07:45:50 -07:00
Marco Castelluccio
dba9f84dc4 Fix gcc version required by libprofiler_builtins 2017-06-13 20:21:58 +01:00
whitequark
42754ce710 Add profiling support, through the rustc -Z profile flag.
When -Z profile is passed, the GCDAProfiling LLVM pass is added
to the pipeline, which uses debug information to instrument the IR.
After compiling with -Z profile, the $(OUT_DIR)/$(CRATE_NAME).gcno
file is created, containing initial profiling information.
After running the program built, the $(OUT_DIR)/$(CRATE_NAME).gcda
file is created, containing branch counters.

The created *.gcno and *.gcda files can be processed using
the "llvm-cov gcov" and "lcov" tools. The profiling data LLVM
generates does not faithfully follow the GCC's format for *.gcno
and *.gcda files, and so it will probably not work with other tools
(such as gcov itself) that consume these files.
2017-05-01 09:16:20 +00:00