Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #124655 (Add `-Zfixed-x18`)
- #125693 (Format all source files in `tests/coverage/`)
- #125700 (coverage: Avoid overflow when the MC/DC condition limit is exceeded)
- #125705 (Reintroduce name resolution check for trying to access locals from an inline const)
- #125708 (tier 3 target policy: clarify the point about producing assembly)
- #125715 (remove unneeded extern crate in rmake test)
- #125719 (Extract coverage-specific code out of `compiletest::runtest`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Reintroduce name resolution check for trying to access locals from an inline const
fixes#125676
I removed this without replacement in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124650 without considering the consequences
coverage: Avoid overflow when the MC/DC condition limit is exceeded
Fix for the test failure seen in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124571#issuecomment-2099620869.
If we perform this subtraction first, it can sometimes overflow to -1 before the addition can bring its value back to 0.
That behaviour seems to be benign, but it nevertheless causes test failures in compiler configurations that check for overflow.
``@rustbot`` label +A-code-coverage
Format all source files in `tests/coverage/`
Currently we can't automatically enforce formatting on tests (see #125637), but we can at least keep things relatively tidy by occasionally running the formatter manually.
This was done by temporarily commenting out the `"/tests/"` exclusion in `rustfmt.toml`, and then running:
- `x fmt tests/coverage`
- `x test coverage --bless`
(This PR also includes a few cosmetic tweaks to some of the affected files, to convince rustfmt to format them in the way we want.)
``@rustbot`` label +A-code-coverage
Use `rmake` for `windows-` run-make tests
Convert some Makefile tests to recipes.
I renamed "issue-85441" to "windows-ws2_32" as I think it's slightly more descriptive. EDIT: `llvm-readobj` seems to work for reading DLL imports so I've used that instead of `objdump`.
cc #121876
Make lint: `lint_dropping_references` `lint_forgetting_copy_types` `lint_forgetting_references` give suggestion if possible.
This is a follow-up PR of #125433. When it's merged, I want change lint `dropping_copy_types` to use the same `Subdiagnostic` struct `UseLetUnderscoreIgnoreSuggestion` which is added in this PR.
Hi, Thank you(`@Urgau` ) again for your help in the previous PR. If your time permits, please also take a look at this one.
r? compiler
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don't inhibit random field reordering on repr(packed(1))
`inhibit_struct_field_reordering_opt` being false means we exclude this type from random field shuffling. However, `packed(1)` types can still be shuffled! The logic was added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/48528 since it's pointless to reorder fields in packed(1) types (there's no padding that could be saved) -- but that shouldn't inhibit `-Zrandomize-layout` (which did not exist at the time).
We could add an optimization elsewhere to not bother sorting the fields for `repr(packed)` types, but I don't think that's worth the effort.
This *does* change the behavior in that we may now reorder fields of `packed(1)` structs (e.g. if there are niches, we'll try to move them to the start/end, according to `NicheBias`). We were always allowed to do that but so far we didn't. Quoting the [reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/type-layout.html):
> On their own, align and packed do not provide guarantees about the order of fields in the layout of a struct or the layout of an enum variant, although they may be combined with representations (such as C) which do provide such guarantees.
A small diagnostic improvement for dropping_copy_types
For a value `m` which implements `Copy` trait, `drop(m);` does nothing.
We now suggest user to ignore it by a abstract and general note: `let _ = ...`.
I think we can give a clearer note here: `let _ = m;`
fixes#125189
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Currently we can't automatically enforce formatting on tests (see #125637), but
we can at least keep things relatively tidy by occasionally running the
formatter manually.
This was done by temporarily commenting out the `"/tests/"` exclusion in
`rustfmt.toml`, and then running `x fmt tests/coverage` and
`x test coverage --bless`.
For coverage tests, splitting code across multiple lines often makes the
resulting coverage report easier to interpret, so we force rustfmt to retain
line breaks by adding dummy line comments with `//`.
Silence some resolve errors when there have been glob import errors
When encountering `use foo::*;` where `foo` fails to be found, and we later encounter resolution errors, we silence those later errors.
A single case of the above, for an *existing* import on a big codebase would otherwise have a huge number of knock-down spurious errors.
Ideally, instead of a global flag to silence all subsequent resolve errors, we'd want to introduce an unnameable binding in the appropriate rib as a sentinel when there's a failed glob import, so when we encounter a resolve error we can search for that sentinel and if found, and only then, silence that error. The current approach is just a quick proof of concept to iterate over.
Partially address #96799.
Make more of the test suite run on Mac Catalyst
Combined with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125225, the only failing parts of the test suite are in `tests/rustdoc-js`, `tests/rustdoc-js-std` and `tests/debuginfo`. Tested with:
```console
./x test --target=aarch64-apple-ios-macabi library/std
./x test --target=aarch64-apple-ios-macabi --skip=tests/rustdoc-js --skip=tests/rustdoc-js-std --skip=tests/debuginfo tests
```
Will probably put up a PR later to enable _running_ on (not just compiling for) Mac Catalyst in CI, though not sure where exactly I should do so? `src/ci/github-actions/jobs.yml`?
Note that I've deliberately _not_ enabled stack overflow handlers on iOS/tvOS/watchOS/visionOS (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/25872), but rather just skipped those tests, as it uses quite a few APIs that I'd be weary about getting rejected by the App Store (note that Swift doesn't do it on those platforms either).
r? ``@workingjubilee``
CC ``@thomcc``
``@rustbot`` label O-ios O-apple
Add `--print=check-cfg` to get the expected configs
This PR adds a new `--print` variant `check-cfg` to get the expected configs.
Details and rational can be found on the MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/743
``@rustbot`` label +F-check-cfg +S-waiting-on-MCP
r? ``@petrochenkov``
NVPTX: Avoid PassMode::Direct for args in C abi
Fixes#117480
I must admit that I'm confused about `PassMode` altogether, is there a good sum-up threads for this anywhere? I'm especially confused about how "indirect" and "byval" goes together. To me it seems like "indirect" basically means "use a indirection through a pointer", while "byval" basically means "do not use indirection through a pointer".
The return used to keep `PassMode::Direct` for small aggregates. It turns out that `make_indirect` messes up the tests and one way to fix it is to keep `PassMode::Direct` for all aggregates. I have mostly seen this PassMode mentioned for args. Is it also a problem for returns? When experimenting with `byval` as an alternative i ran into [this assert](61a3eea804/compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/abi.rs (L463C22-L463C22))
I have added tests for the same kind of types that is already tested for the "ptx-kernel" abi. The tests cannot be enabled until something like #117458 is completed and merged.
CC: ``@RalfJung`` since you seem to be the expert on this and have already helped me out tremendously
CC: ``@RDambrosio016`` in case this influence your work on `rustc_codegen_nvvm`
``@rustbot`` label +O-NVPTX
Omit non-needs_drop drop_in_place in vtables
This replaces the drop_in_place reference with null in vtables. On librustc_driver.so, this drops about ~17k (11%) dynamic relocations from the output, since many vtables can now be placed in read-only memory, rather than having a relocated pointer included.
This makes a tradeoff by adding a null check at vtable call sites. I'm not sure that's readily avoidable without changing the vtable format (e.g., so that we can use a pc-relative relocation instead of an absolute address, and avoid the dynamic relocation that way). But it seems likely that the check is cheap at runtime.
Accepted MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/730
When encountering `use foo::*;` where `foo` fails to be found, and we later
encounter resolution errors, we silence those later errors.
A single case of the above, for an *existing* import on a big codebase would
otherwise have a huge number of knock-down spurious errors.
Ideally, instead of a global flag to silence all subsequent resolve errors,
we'd want to introduce an unameable binding in the appropriate rib as a
sentinel when there's a failed glob import, so when we encounter a resolve
error we can search for that sentinel and if found, and only then, silence
that error. The current approach is just a quick proof of concept to
iterate over.
Partially address #96799.
This adds the `only-apple`/`ignore-apple` compiletest directive, and
uses that basically everywhere instead of `only-macos`/`ignore-macos`.
Some of the updates in `run-make` are a bit redundant, as they use
`ignore-cross-compile` and won't run on iOS - but using Apple in these
is still more correct, so I've made that change anyhow.