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interpret `#[used]` as `#[used(compiler)]` on illumos
helps rust-lang/rust#146169 not be as painful: fixes the illumos regression in rust-lang/rust#140872, but `#[used(linker)]` is still erroneous on illumos generally.
illumos' `ld` does not support a flag like either SHF_GNU_RETAIN or SHF_SUNW_NODISCARD, so there is no way to communicate `#[used(linker)]` for that target. Setting `USED_LINKER` to try results in LLVM setting SHF_SUNW_NODISCARD for Solaris-like targets, which is an unknown section header flag for illumos `ld` and prevents sections from being merged that otherwise would.
As a motivating example, the `inventory` crate produces `#[used]` items to merge into `.init_array`. Because those items have an unknown section header flag they are not merged with the default `.init_array` with `frame_dummy`, and end up never executed.
Downgrading `#[used]` to `#[used(compiler)]` on illumos keeps so-attributed items as preserved as they had been before https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/140872. As was the case before that change, because rustc passes `-z ignore` to illumos `ld`, it's possible that `used` sections are GC'd at link time. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/146169 describes this unfortunate circumstance.
----
as it turns out, `tests/ui/attributes/used_with_archive.rs` had broken on `x86_64-unknown-illumos`, and this patch fixes it. the trials and tribulations of tier 2 :(
r? ``@Noratrieb`` probably?
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illumos' `ld` does not support a flag like either SHF_GNU_RETAIN or
SHF_SUNW_NODISCARD, so there is no way to communicate `#[used(linker)]`
for that target. Setting `USED_LINKER` to try results in LLVM setting
SHF_SUNW_NODISCARD for Solaris-like targets, which is an unknown section
header flag for illumos `ld` and prevents sections from being merged
that otherwise would.
As a motivating example, the `inventory` crate produces
`#[used]` items to merge into `.init_array`. Because those items have an
unknown section header flag they are not merged with the default
`.init_array` with `frame_dummy`, and end up never executed.
Downgrading `#[used]` to `#[used(compiler)]` on illumos keeps
so-attributed items as preserved as they had been before
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/140872. As was the case before
that change, because rustc passes `-z ignore` to illumos `ld`, it's
possible that `used` sections are GC'd at link time.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/146169 describes this
unfortunate circumstance.
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r=saethlin
Extending `#[rustc_force_inline]` to be applicable to inherent methods
`#[rustc_force_inline]` is an internal-only attribute similar to `#[inline(always)]` but which emits an error if inlining cannot occur. rustc_force_inline uses the MIR inliner to do this and has limitations on where it can be applied to ensure that an error is always emitted if inlining can't happen (e.g. it can't be applied to trait methods because calls to those can't always be resolved).
`#[rustc_force_inline]` is motivated by AArch64 pointer authentication intrinsics where it is vital for the security properties of these intrinsics that they do not exist in standalone functions that could be used as gadgets in an exploit (if they could, then you could sign whatever pointers you want, for example, which is bad, but if you force inlining, then you can't jump to a reusable function containing only these instructions).
Since its initial implementation, `#[rustc_force_inline]` could only be applied to free functions. This can be relaxed to also allow inherent methods while still preserving the desired properties. In a work-in-progress patch for manual pointer authentication intrinsics, it is useful to introduce types with inherent methods that would need to be force inlined.
r? `@saethlin`
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- Changes parser to allow application to inherent methods.
- Adds tests to confirm extended functionality works just as the existing.
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mbe: Implement `unsafe` attribute rules
This implements `unsafe attr` rules for declarative `macro_rules!` attributes, as specified in [RFC 3697](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3697).
An invocation of an attribute that uses an `unsafe attr` rule requires the `unsafe(attr(...))` syntax.
An invocation of an attribute that uses an ordinary `attr` rule must *not* use the `unsafe(attr(...))` syntax.
`unsafe` is only supported on an `attr` rule, not any other kind of `macro_rules!` rule.
Tracking issue for `macro_rules!` attributes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/143547
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Use `Iterator::eq` and (dogfood) `eq_by` in compiler and library
Now that rust-lang/rust#137122 has landed, we can replace stuff that looks like:
```rust
let a: &[T];
let b: &[T];
let eq = a.len() == b.len() && a.iter().zip(b).all(|(a,b)| a == b)
```
with the much simpler `a.iter().eq(b)`, without losing the perf benefit of the different-length-fast-path.
Also dogfooded `Iterator::eq_by` (cc rust-lang/rust#64295 ) while I'm at it.
First commit (4d1b6fad230f8a5ccceccc7562eadc4ea50059da) should be very straightforward to review, second one (049a4606cb3906787aedf508ee8eea09c2bb3b9a) is slightly more creative, but IMHO a nice cleanup.
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port `#[debugger_visualizer]` to the new attribute system
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Add an attribute to check the number of lanes in a SIMD vector after monomorphization
Allows std::simd to drop the `LaneCount<N>: SupportedLaneCount` trait and maintain good error messages.
Also, extends rust-lang/rust#145967 by including spans in layout errors for all ADTs.
r? ``@RalfJung``
cc ``@workingjubilee`` ``@programmerjake``
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monomorphization
Unify zero-length and oversized SIMD errors
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Co-authored-by: Anne Stijns <anstijns@gmail.com>
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initial implementation of the darwin_objc unstable feature
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/145496
This feature makes it possible to reference Objective-C classes and selectors using the same ABI used by native Objective-C on Apple/Darwin platforms. Without it, Rust code interacting with Objective-C must resort to loading classes and selectors using costly string-based lookups at runtime. With it, these references can be loaded efficiently at dynamic load time.
r? ```@tmandry```
try-job: `*apple*`
try-job: `x86_64-gnu-nopt`
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Convert `no_std` and `no_core` to the new attribute infrastructure
r? ```@oli-obk```
Also added a test for these, since we didn't have any and I was kind of surprised new diagnostics didn't break anything hehe
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r=jdonszelmann,ralfjung,traviscross
Implement `#[rustc_align_static(N)]` on `static`s
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/146177
```rust
#![feature(static_align)]
#[rustc_align_static(64)]
static SO_ALIGNED: u64 = 0;
```
We need a different attribute than `rustc_align` because unstable attributes are tied to their feature (we can't have two unstable features use the same unstable attribute). Otherwise this uses all of the same infrastructure as `#[rustc_align]`.
r? `@traviscross`
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We need a different attribute than `rustc_align` because unstable attributes are
tied to their feature (we can't have two unstable features use the same
unstable attribute). Otherwise this uses all of the same infrastructure
as `#[rustc_align]`.
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add doc-hidden to exports in attribute prelude
Seems to fix rust-lang/rust#145870, at least temporarily. The underlying problem of course is still there.
r? `@fmease`
<img width="653" height="167" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b5a8094c-849e-4328-997d-b772f9aa4088" />
Fixes rust-lang/rust#145870
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Signed-off-by: Jonathan Brouwer <jonathantbrouwer@gmail.com>
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Port `#[link]` to the new attribute parsing infrastructure
Ports `link` to the new attribute parsing infrastructure for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131229#issuecomment-2971353197
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Use attribute name in message for "outer attr used as inner attr" errors
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convert strings to symbols in attr diagnostics
r? `@lcnr`
As you rightfully noticed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/145670
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Add an experimental unsafe(force_target_feature) attribute.
This uses the feature gate for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/143352, but is described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3820 which is strongly tied to the experiment.
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