Commit graph

160630 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Huss
455caef624 Update cargo 2022-01-04 18:41:07 -08:00
bors
7d6f948173 Auto merge of #92556 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-s9vopuj, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91754 (Modifications to `std::io::Stdin` on Windows so that there is no longer a 4-byte buffer minimum in read().)
 - #91884 (Constify `Box<T, A>` methods)
 - #92107 (Actually set IMAGE_SCN_LNK_REMOVE for .rmeta)
 - #92456 (Make the documentation of builtin macro attributes accessible)
 - #92507 (Suggest single quotes when char expected, str provided)
 - #92525 (intra-doc: Make `Receiver::into_iter` into a clickable link)
 - #92532 (revert #92254 "Bump gsgdt to 0.1.3")

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-04 19:56:13 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
76c02711a5
Rollup merge of #92532 - krasimirgg:gsgdt-down, r=Mark-Simulacrum
revert #92254 "Bump gsgdt to 0.1.3"

This reverts https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92254 since gsgdt 0.1.3 was yanked: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92254#issuecomment-1004269481
2022-01-04 16:34:20 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b2d6ff4b6e
Rollup merge of #92525 - zohnannor:patch-1, r=camelid
intra-doc: Make `Receiver::into_iter` into a clickable link

The documentation on `std::sync::mpsc::Iter` and `std::sync::mpsc::TryIter` provides links to the corresponding `Receiver` methods, unlike `std::sync::mpsc::IntoIter` does.

This was left out in c59b188aae
Related to #29377
2022-01-04 16:34:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
25fcc0ef8c
Rollup merge of #92507 - chordtoll:suggest-single-quotes, r=petrochenkov
Suggest single quotes when char expected, str provided

If a type mismatch occurs where a char is expected and a string literal is provided, suggest changing the double quotes to single quotes.

We already provide this suggestion in the other direction ( ' -> " ).

Especially useful for new rust devs used to a language in which single/double quotes are interchangeable.

Fixes #92479.
2022-01-04 16:34:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4e4e1ec931
Rollup merge of #92456 - danielhenrymantilla:patch-1, r=petrochenkov
Make the documentation of builtin macro attributes accessible

`use ::std::prelude::v1::derive;` compiles on stable, so, AFAIK, there is no reason to have it be `#[doc(hidden)]`.

  - What it currently looks like for things such as `#[test]`, `#[derive]`, `#[global_allocator]`: https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.57.0/core/prelude/v1/index.html#:~:text=Experimental-,pub,-use%20crate%3A%3Amacros%3A%3Abuiltin%3A%3Aglobal_allocator

    <img width="767" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 49 46" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147832999-cbd747a6-4607-4df6-8e57-c1675dcbc1c3.png">

    and in `::std` they're just straight `hidden`.

    <img width="452" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 53 18" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147833105-c5ff8cd1-9e4d-4d2b-9621-b36aa3cfcb28.png">

  - Here is how it looks like with this PR (assuming the `Rustc{De,En}codable` ones are not reverted):

    <img width="778" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 50 55" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147833034-84286342-dbf7-4e6e-9062-f39cd6c286a4.png">

    <img width="291" alt="Screen Shot 2021-12-31 at 17 52 54" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/9920355/147833109-c92ed55c-51c6-40a2-9205-f834d1e349c0.png">

 Since this involves doc people to chime in, and since `jyn` is on vacation, I'll cc `@GuillaumeGomez` and tag the `rustdoc` team as well
2022-01-04 16:34:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
855f6300fb
Rollup merge of #92107 - nikic:rmeta-lnk-remove, r=nagisa
Actually set IMAGE_SCN_LNK_REMOVE for .rmeta

The code intended to set the IMAGE_SCN_LNK_REMOVE flag for the
.rmeta section, however the value of this flag was set to zero.
Instead use the actual value provided by the object crate.

This dates back to the original introduction of this code in
PR #84449, so we were never setting this flag. As I'm not on
Windows, I'm not sure whether that means we were embedding .rmeta
into executables, or whether the section ended up getting stripped
for some other reason.
2022-01-04 16:34:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c7125ba0fa
Rollup merge of #91884 - woppopo:const_box, r=oli-obk
Constify `Box<T, A>` methods

Tracking issue: none yet

Most of the methods bounded on `~const`. `intrinsics::const_eval_select` is used for handling an allocation error.

<details><summary>Constified API</summary>

```rust
impl<T, A: Allocator> Box<T, A> {
    pub const fn new_in(x: T, alloc: A) -> Self
    where
        A: ~const Allocator + ~const Drop;
    pub const fn try_new_in(x: T, alloc: A) -> Result<Self, AllocError>
    where
        T: ~const Drop,
        A: ~const Allocator + ~const Drop;
    pub const fn new_uninit_in(alloc: A) -> Box<mem::MaybeUninit<T>, A>
    where
        A: ~const Allocator + ~const Drop;
    pub const fn try_new_uninit_in(alloc: A) -> Result<Box<mem::MaybeUninit<T>, A>, AllocError>
    where
        A: ~const Allocator + ~const Drop;
    pub const fn new_zeroed_in(alloc: A) -> Box<mem::MaybeUninit<T>, A>
    where
        A: ~const Allocator + ~const Drop;
    pub const fn try_new_zeroed_in(alloc: A) -> Result<Box<mem::MaybeUninit<T>, A>, AllocError>
    where
        A: ~const Allocator + ~const Drop;
    pub const fn pin_in(x: T, alloc: A) -> Pin<Self>
    where
        A: 'static,
        A: 'static + ~const Allocator + ~const Drop,
    pub const fn into_boxed_slice(boxed: Self) -> Box<[T], A>;
    pub const fn into_inner(boxed: Self) -> T
    where
        Self: ~const Drop,
}

impl<T, A: Allocator> Box<MaybeUninit<T>, A> {
    pub const unsafe fn assume_init(self) -> Box<T, A>;
    pub const fn write(mut boxed: Self, value: T) -> Box<T, A>;
    pub const unsafe fn from_raw_in(raw: *mut T, alloc: A) -> Self;
    pub const fn into_raw_with_allocator(b: Self) -> (*mut T, A);
    pub const fn into_unique(b: Self) -> (Unique<T>, A);
    pub const fn allocator(b: &Self) -> &A;
    pub const fn leak<'a>(b: Self) -> &'a mut T
    where
        A: 'a;
    pub const fn into_pin(boxed: Self) -> Pin<Self>
    where
        A: 'static;
}

unsafe impl<#[may_dangle] T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> const Drop for Box<T, A>;
impl<T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> const From<Box<T, A>> for Pin<Box<T, A>>
where
    A: 'static;
impl<T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> const Deref for Box<T, A>;
impl<T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> const DerefMut for Box<T, A>;
impl<T: ?Sized, A: Allocator> const Unpin for Box<T, A> where A: 'static;
```

</details>

<details><summary>Example</summary>

```rust
pub struct ConstAllocator;

unsafe impl const Allocator for ConstAllocator {
    fn allocate(&self, layout: Layout) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
        unsafe {
            let ptr = core::intrinsics::const_allocate(layout.size(), layout.align());
            Ok(NonNull::new_unchecked(ptr as *mut [u8; 0] as *mut [u8]))
        }
    }

    unsafe fn deallocate(&self, _ptr: NonNull<u8>, _layout: Layout) {
        /* do nothing */
    }

    fn allocate_zeroed(&self, layout: Layout) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
        self.allocate(layout)
    }

    unsafe fn grow(
        &self,
        _ptr: NonNull<u8>,
        _old_layout: Layout,
        _new_layout: Layout,
    ) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
        unimplemented!()
    }

    unsafe fn grow_zeroed(
        &self,
        _ptr: NonNull<u8>,
        _old_layout: Layout,
        _new_layout: Layout,
    ) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
        unimplemented!()
    }

    unsafe fn shrink(
        &self,
        _ptr: NonNull<u8>,
        _old_layout: Layout,
        _new_layout: Layout,
    ) -> Result<NonNull<[u8]>, AllocError> {
        unimplemented!()
    }

    fn by_ref(&self) -> &Self
    where
        Self: Sized,
    {
        self
    }
}

#[test]
fn const_box() {
    const VALUE: u32 = {
        let mut boxed = Box::new_in(1u32, ConstAllocator);
        assert!(*boxed == 1);

        *boxed = 42;
        assert!(*boxed == 42);

        *boxed
    };

    assert!(VALUE == 42);
}
```

</details>
2022-01-04 16:34:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
50a66b75dc
Rollup merge of #91754 - Patrick-Poitras:rm-4byte-minimum-stdio-windows, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Modifications to `std::io::Stdin` on Windows so that there is no longer a 4-byte buffer minimum in read().

This is an attempted fix of issue #91722, where a too-small buffer was passed to the read function of stdio on Windows. This caused an error to be returned when `read_to_end` or `read_to_string` were called. Both delegate to `std::io::default_read_to_end`, which creates a buffer that is of length >0, and forwards it to `std::io::Stdin::read()`. The latter method returns an error if the length of the buffer is less than 4, as there might not be enough space to allocate a UTF-16 character. This creates a problem when the buffer length is in `0 < N < 4`, causing the bug.

The current modification creates an internal buffer, much like the one used for the write functions

I'd also like to acknowledge the help of ``@agausmann`` and ``@hkratz`` in detecting and isolating the bug, and for suggestions that made the fix possible.

Couple disclaimers:

- Firstly, I didn't know where to put code to replicate the bug found in the issue. It would probably be wise to add that case to the testing suite, but I'm afraid that I don't know _where_ that test should be added.
- Secondly, the code is fairly fundamental to IO operations, so my fears are that this may cause some undesired side effects ~or performance loss in benchmarks.~ The testing suite runs on my computer, and it does fix the issue noted in #91722.
- Thirdly, I left the "surrogate" field in the Stdin struct, but from a cursory glance, it seems to be serving the same purpose for other functions. Perhaps merging the two would be appropriate.

Finally, this is my first pull request to the rust language, and as such some things may be weird/unidiomatic/plain out bad. If there are any obvious improvements I could do to the code, or any other suggestions, I would appreciate them.

Edit: Closes #91722
2022-01-04 16:34:14 +01:00
chordtoll
3087c4dfb7
Suggest changing quotes when str/char type mismatch 2022-01-03 22:08:08 -08:00
bors
2b681ac06b Auto merge of #92259 - Aaron1011:normal-mod-hashing, r=michaelwoerister
Remove special-cased stable hashing for HIR module

All other 'containers' (e.g. `impl` blocks) hashed their contents
in the normal, order-dependent way. However, `Mod` was hashing
its contents in a (sort-of) order-independent way. However, the
exact order is exposed to consumers through `Mod.item_ids`,
and through query results like `hir_module_items`. Therefore,
stable hashing needs to take the order of items into account,
to avoid fingerprint ICEs.

Unforuntately, I was unable to directly build a reproducer
for the ICE, due to the behavior of `Fingerprint::combine_commutative`.
This operation swaps the upper and lower `u64` when constructing the
result, which makes the function non-associative. Since we start
the hashing of module items by combining `Fingerprint::ZERO` with
the first item, it's difficult to actually build an example where
changing the order of module items leaves the final hash unchanged.

However, this appears to have been hit in practice in #92218
While we're not able to reproduce it, the fact that proc-macros
are involved (which can give an entire module the same span, preventing
any span-related invalidations) makes me confident that the root
cause of that issue is our method of hashing module items.

This PR removes all of the special handling for `Mod`, instead deriving
a `HashStable` implementation. This makes `Mod` consistent with other
'contains' like `Impl`, which hash their contents through the typical
derive of `HashStable`.
2022-01-04 00:25:23 +00:00
bors
399ba6bb37 Auto merge of #92314 - Kobzol:encoding-u16-leb128, r=michaelwoerister
Do not use LEB128 for encoding u16 and i16

An experiment to try out the suggestion from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/68779.

Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/68779
2022-01-03 20:30:23 +00:00
Daniel Henry-Mantilla
f20ccc0748 Make the documentation of builtin macro attributes accessible
- Do not `#[doc(hidden)]` the `#[derive]` macro attribute

  - Add a link to the reference section to `derive`'s inherent docs

  - Do the same for `#[test]` and `#[global_allocator]`

  - Fix `GlobalAlloc` link (why is it on `core` and not `alloc`?)

  - Try `no_inline`-ing the `std` reexports from `core`

  - Revert "Try `no_inline`-ing the `std` reexports from `core`"

  - Address PR review

  - Also document the unstable macros
2022-01-03 20:43:16 +01:00
Krasimir Georgiev
a9698e22ec revert #92254 "Bump gsgdt to 0.1.3"
gsgdt 0.1.3 was yanked:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92254#issuecomment-1004269481
2022-01-03 20:25:46 +01:00
zohnannor
ca3f9048a1
Make Receiver::into_iter into a clickable link
The documentation on `std::sync::mpsc::Iter` and `std::sync::mpsc::TryIter` provides links to the corresponding `Receiver` methods, unlike `std::sync::mpsc::IntoIter` does.

This was left out in c59b188aae
Related to #29377
2022-01-03 20:17:57 +03:00
woppopo
51e4291f2b Fix a compile error when no_global_oom_handling 2022-01-04 01:37:53 +09:00
woppopo
c9d2d3cc66 Add tracking issues (const_box, const_alloc_error) 2022-01-04 00:35:53 +09:00
bors
ddabe0775c Auto merge of #92518 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-fl8z4e7, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90102 (Remove `NullOp::Box`)
 - #92011 (Use field span in `rustc_macros` when emitting decode call)
 - #92402 (Suggest while let x = y when encountering while x = y)
 - #92409 (Couple of libtest cleanups)
 - #92418 (Fix spacing in pretty printed PatKind::Struct with no fields)
 - #92444 (Consolidate Result's and Option's methods into fewer impl blocks)

Failed merges:

 - #92483 (Stabilize `result_cloned` and `result_copied`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-03 14:30:36 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
13e284033e
Rollup merge of #92444 - dtolnay:coremethods, r=joshtriplett
Consolidate Result's and Option's methods into fewer impl blocks

`Result`'s and `Option`'s methods have historically been separated up into `impl` blocks based on their trait bounds, with the bounds specified on type parameters of the impl block. I find this unhelpful because closely related methods, like `unwrap_or` and `unwrap_or_default`, end up disproportionately far apart in source code and rustdocs:

<pre>
impl&lt;T&gt; Option&lt;T&gt; {
    pub fn unwrap_or(self, default: T) -&gt; T {
        ...
    }

    <img alt="one eternity later" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1940490/147780325-ad4e01a4-c971-436e-bdf4-e755f2d35f15.jpg" width="750">
}

impl&lt;T: Default&gt; Option&lt;T&gt; {
    pub fn unwrap_or_default(self) -&gt; T {
        ...
    }
}
</pre>

I'd prefer for method to be in as few impl blocks as possible, with the most logical grouping within each impl block. Any bounds needed can be written as `where` clauses on the method instead:

```rust
impl<T> Option<T> {
    pub fn unwrap_or(self, default: T) -> T {
        ...
    }

    pub fn unwrap_or_default(self) -> T
    where
        T: Default,
    {
        ...
    }
}
```

*Warning: the end-to-end diff of this PR is computed confusingly by git / rendered confusingly by GitHub; it's practically impossible to review that way. I've broken the PR into commits that move small groups of methods for which git behaves better &mdash; these each should be easily individually reviewable.*
2022-01-03 14:44:21 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
df921190f3
Rollup merge of #92418 - dtolnay:emptystructpat, r=michaelwoerister
Fix spacing in pretty printed PatKind::Struct with no fields

Follow-up to #92238 fixing one of the FIXMEs.

```rust
macro_rules! repro {
    ($pat:pat) => {
        stringify!($pat)
    };
}

fn main() {
    println!("{}", repro!(Struct {}));
}
```

Before:&ensp;<code>Struct&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;}</code>
After:&ensp;<code>Struct&nbsp;{}</code>
2022-01-03 14:44:20 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
92f28bda38
Rollup merge of #92409 - bjorn3:libtest_cleanups, r=m-ou-se
Couple of libtest cleanups

Remove the unnecessary `TDynBenchFn` trait and remove a couple of unused attributes and feature gates.
2022-01-03 14:44:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0335b7bca9
Rollup merge of #92402 - pr2502:while-let-typo, r=oli-obk
Suggest while let x = y when encountering while x = y

Extends #75931 to also detect where the `let` might be missing from `while let` expressions.
2022-01-03 14:44:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fd09f342f3
Rollup merge of #92011 - Aaron1011:decode-span, r=michaelwoerister
Use field span in `rustc_macros` when emitting decode call

This will cause backtraces to point to the location of
the field in the struct/enum, rather than the derive macro.

This makes it clear which field was being decoded when the
backtrace was captured (which is especially useful if
there are multiple fields with the same type).
2022-01-03 14:44:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
57a4f4a634
Rollup merge of #90102 - nbdd0121:box3, r=jonas-schievink
Remove `NullOp::Box`

Follow up of #89030 and MCP rust-lang/compiler-team#460.

~1 month later nothing seems to be broken, apart from a small regression that #89332 (1aac85bb716c09304b313d69d30d74fe7e8e1a8e) shows could be regained by remvoing the diverging path, so it shall be safe to continue and remove `NullOp::Box` completely.

r? `@jonas-schievink`
`@rustbot` label T-compiler
2022-01-03 14:44:15 +01:00
bors
b5efe5727f Auto merge of #92179 - Aaron1011:incr-loaded-from-disk, r=michaelwoerister
Add `#[rustc_clean(loaded_from_disk)]` to assert loading of query result

Currently, you can use `#[rustc_clean]` to assert to that a particular
query (technically, a `DepNode`) is green or red. However, a green
`DepNode` does not mean that the query result was actually deserialized
from disk - we might have never re-run a query that needed the result.

Some incremental tests are written as regression tests for ICEs that
occured during query result decoding. Using
`#[rustc_clean(loaded_from_disk="typeck")]`, you can now assert
that the result of a particular query (e.g. `typeck`) was actually
loaded from disk, in addition to being green.
2022-01-03 11:20:08 +00:00
bors
d367c349ef Auto merge of #92080 - Aaron1011:pattern-ice, r=cjgillot
Move `PatKind::Lit` checking from ast_validation to ast lowering

Fixes #92074

This allows us to insert an `ExprKind::Err` when an invalid expression
is used in a literal pattern, preventing later stages of compilation
from seeing an unexpected literal pattern.
2022-01-03 06:59:52 +00:00
bors
b5da80871d Auto merge of #92395 - Kobzol:rustdoc-bindings-thin-vec, r=camelid
Rustdoc: use ThinVec for GenericArgs bindings

The bindings are almost always empty. This reduces the size of `PathSegment` and `GenericArgs` by about one fourth.
2022-01-03 03:49:01 +00:00
bors
8f3238f898 Auto merge of #90128 - joshtriplett:stabilize-symbol-mangling-version, r=wesleywiser
Stabilize -Z symbol-mangling-version=v0 as -C symbol-mangling-version=v0

This allows selecting `v0` symbol-mangling without an unstable option. Selecting `legacy` still requires -Z unstable-options.

This does not change the default symbol-mangling-version. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89917 for a pull request changing the default. Rationale, from #89917:

Rust's current mangling scheme depends on compiler internals; loses information about generic parameters (and other things) which makes for a worse experience when using external tools that need to interact with Rust symbol names; is inconsistent; and can contain . characters which aren't universally supported. Therefore, Rust has defined its own symbol mangling scheme which is defined in terms of the Rust language, not the compiler implementation; encodes information about generic parameters in a reversible way; has a consistent definition; and generates symbols that only use the characters A-Z, a-z, 0-9, and _.

Support for the new Rust symbol mangling scheme has been added to upstream tools that will need to interact with Rust symbols (e.g. debuggers).

This pull request allows enabling the new v0 symbol-mangling-version.

See #89917 for references to the implementation of v0, and for references to the tool changes to decode Rust symbols.
2022-01-02 15:49:23 +00:00
bors
03360be6b7 Auto merge of #92066 - Smittyvb:concat_bytes-repeat, r=nagisa
Support [x; n] expressions in concat_bytes!

Currently trying to use `concat_bytes!` with a repeating array value like `[42; 5]` results in an error:
```
error: expected a byte literal
 --> src/main.rs:3:27
  |
3 |     let x = concat_bytes!([3; 4]);
  |                           ^^^^^^
  |
  = note: only byte literals (like `b"foo"`, `b's'`, and `[3, 4, 5]`) can be passed to `concat_bytes!()`
```

This makes it so repeating array syntax can be used the same way normal arrays can be. The RFC doesn't explicitly mention repeat expressions, but it seems reasonable to allow them as well, since normal arrays are allowed.

It is possible to make the compiler get stuck compiling forever with `concat_bytes!([3; 999999999])`, but I don't think that's much of an issue since you can do that already with `const X: [u8; 999999999] = [3; 999999999];`.

Contributes to #87555.
2022-01-02 12:38:41 +00:00
bors
82418f93ac Auto merge of #91961 - kornelski:track_split_caller, r=joshtriplett
Track caller of slice split and swap

Improves error location for `slice.split_at*()` and `slice.swap()`.

These are generic inline functions, so the `#[track_caller]` on them is free — only changes a value of an argument already passed to panicking code.
2022-01-02 09:35:24 +00:00
bors
f7934f693b Auto merge of #92034 - petrochenkov:nolinknores, r=joshtriplett
Remove effect of `#[no_link]` attribute on name resolution

Previously it hid all non-macro names from other crates.
This has no relation to linking and can change name resolution behavior in some cases (e.g. glob conflicts), in addition to just producing the "unresolved name" errors.

I can kind of understand the possible reasoning behind the current behavior - if you can use names from a `no_link` crates then you can use, for example, functions too, but whether it will actually work or produce link-time errors will depend on random factors like inliner behavior.
(^^^ This is not the actual reason why the current behavior exist, I've looked through git history and it's mostly accidental.)

I think this risk is ok for such an obscure attribute, and we don't need to specifically prevent use of non-macro items from such crates.
(I'm not actually sure why would anyone use `#[no_link]` on a crate, even if it's macro only, if you aware of any use cases, please share. IIRC, at some point it was used for crates implementing custom derives - the now removed legacy ones, not the current proc macros.)

Extracted from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91795.
2022-01-02 06:28:34 +00:00
bors
7b13c628a2 Auto merge of #92482 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-uso1zi0, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #84083 (Clarify the guarantees that ThreadId does and doesn't make.)
 - #91593 (Remove unnecessary bounds for some Hash{Map,Set} methods)
 - #92297 (Reduce compile time of rustbuild)
 - #92332 (Add test for where clause order)
 - #92438 (Enforce formatting for rustc_codegen_cranelift)
 - #92463 (Remove pronunciation guide from Vec<T>)
 - #92468 (Emit an error for `--cfg=)`)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-02 00:20:04 +00:00
Josh Triplett
ff94b3b12b Update references to -Z symbol-mangling-version to use -C
Replace `-Z symbol-mangling-version=v0` with `-C symbol-mangling-version=v0`.

Replace `-Z symbol-mangling-version=legacy` with
`-Z unstable-options -C symbol-mangling-version=legacy`.
2022-01-01 15:53:11 -08:00
Josh Triplett
bbf4b6699e Stabilize -Z symbol-mangling-version as -C symbol-mangling-version
This allows selecting `v0` symbol-mangling without an unstable option.
Selecting `legacy` still requires -Z unstable-options.

Continue supporting -Z symbol-mangling-version for compatibility for
now, but show a deprecation warning for it.
2022-01-01 15:51:02 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
2004a51fa4
Rollup merge of #92468 - NieDzejkob:silent-cfg, r=petrochenkov
Emit an error for `--cfg=)`

Fixes #73026

See also: #64467, #89468

The issue stems from a `FatalError` being silently raised in
`panictry_buffer`. Normally this is not a problem, because
`panictry_buffer` emits the causes of the error, but they are not
themselves fatal, so they get filtered out by the silent emitter.

To fix this, we use a parser entrypoint which doesn't use
`panictry_buffer`, and we handle the error ourselves.
2022-01-01 22:49:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
aa31c9726d
Rollup merge of #92463 - thomcc:thats-not-how-its-pronounced, r=joshtriplett
Remove pronunciation guide from Vec<T>

I performed an extremely scientific poll on twitter, and determined this is not how it's pronounced: https://twitter.com/at_tcsc/status/1476643344285581315
2022-01-01 22:49:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f6ce1e8627
Rollup merge of #92438 - bjorn3:less_cg_clif_exceptions, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Enforce formatting for rustc_codegen_cranelift
2022-01-01 22:49:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a015c86a1d
Rollup merge of #92332 - GuillaumeGomez:where-clause-order, r=jsha
Add test for where clause order

I didn't use ``@snapshot`` because of the `&nbsp;` characters, it's much simpler doing it through rustdoc-gui testsuite.

r? `@camelid`
2022-01-01 22:49:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ab7a356b5d
Rollup merge of #92297 - bjorn3:smaller_bootstrap, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Reduce compile time of rustbuild

Best reviewed commit by commit. The `ignore` crate and it's dependencies are probably responsible for the majority of the compile time after this PR.

cc `@jyn514` as you got a couple of open rustbuild PR.
2022-01-01 22:49:49 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5137f7c9db
Rollup merge of #91593 - upsuper-forks:hashmap-set-methods-bound, r=dtolnay
Remove unnecessary bounds for some Hash{Map,Set} methods

This PR moves `HashMap::{into_keys,into_values,retain}` and `HashSet::retain` from `impl` blocks with `K: Eq + Hash, S: BuildHasher` into the blocks without them. It doesn't seem to me there is any reason these methods need to be bounded by that. This change brings `HashMap::{into_keys,into_values}` on par with `HashMap::{keys,values,values_mut}` which are not bounded either.
2022-01-01 22:49:48 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
30ec1f0384
Rollup merge of #84083 - ltratt:threadid_doc_tweak, r=dtolnay
Clarify the guarantees that ThreadId does and doesn't make.

The existing documentation does not spell out whether `ThreadId`s are unique during the lifetime of a thread or of a process. I had to examine the source code to realise (pleasingly!) that they're unique for the lifetime of a process. That seems worth documenting clearly, as it's a strong guarantee.

Examining the way `ThreadId`s are created also made me realise that the `as_u64` method on `ThreadId` could be a trap for the unwary on those platforms where the platform's notion of a thread identifier is also a 64 bit integer (particularly if they happen to use a similar identifier scheme to `ThreadId`). I therefore think it's worth being even clearer that there's no relationship between the two.
2022-01-01 22:49:47 +01:00
bors
dd3ac41495 Auto merge of #92396 - xfix:remove-commandenv-apply, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove CommandEnv::apply

It's not being used and uses unsound set_var and remove_var functions. This is an internal function that isn't exported (even with `process_internals` feature), so this shouldn't break anything.

Also see #92365. Note that this isn't the only use of those methods in standard library, so that particular pull request will need more changes than just this to work (in particular, `test_capture_env_at_spawn` is using `set_var` and `remove_var`).
2022-01-01 20:45:37 +00:00
Aaron Hill
137c374c41
Move PatKind::Lit checking from ast_validation to ast lowering
Fixes #92074

This allows us to insert an `ExprKind::Err` when an invalid expression
is used in a literal pattern, preventing later stages of compilation
from seeing an unexpected literal pattern.
2022-01-01 15:10:43 -05:00
bjorn3
7ea6e713c2 Remove some dead code 2022-01-01 18:50:56 +01:00
bors
c145692254 Auto merge of #92455 - petrochenkov:alltraits2, r=cjgillot
rustc_metadata: Use a query for collecting all traits in encoder

Implement refactoring suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92244#discussion_r775976336
r? `@cjgillot`
2022-01-01 17:34:12 +00:00
bjorn3
ad6f98cd28 Remove the merge dependency 2022-01-01 17:03:24 +01:00
bjorn3
947e9483e9 Make the rustc and rustdoc wrapper not depend on libbootstrap
This slightly improves compilation time by reducing linking time
(saving about a 1/10 of the the total compilation time after
changing rustbuild) and slightly reduces disk usage (from 16MB for
the rustc wrapper to 4MB).
2022-01-01 16:56:05 +01:00
bjorn3
043745cb96 Avoid the merge derive macro in rustbuild
The task of the macro is simple enough that a decl macro is almost ten
times shorter than the original proc macro. The proc macro is 159 lines
while the decl macro is just 18 lines.

This reduces the amount of dependencies of rustbuild from 45 to 37. It
also slight reduces compilation time from 47s to 44s for debug builds.
2022-01-01 16:56:03 +01:00
bjorn3
2fe2728fa9 Remove the lazy_static dependency from rustbuild
Rustbuild already depends on once_cell which in the future can be
replaced with std::lazy::Lazy.
2022-01-01 16:53:47 +01:00
bjorn3
bffe880cfd Enforce formatting for rustc_codegen_cranelift 2022-01-01 16:52:30 +01:00