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2020-10-31Implement -Z relax-elf-relocations=yes|noAnthony Ramine-1/+5
This lets rustc users tweak whether the linker should relax ELF relocations, namely whether it should emit R_X86_64_GOTPCRELX relocations instead of R_X86_64_GOTPCREL, as the former is allowed by the ABI to be further optimised. The default value is whatever the target defines.
2020-10-30Fix even more clippy warningsJoshua Nelson-1/+1
2020-10-26Implement -Z function-sections=yes|noAnthony Ramine-1/+2
This lets rustc users tweak whether all functions should be put in their own TEXT section, using whatever default value the target defines if the flag is missing.
2020-10-23Revert "Set .llvmbc and .llvmcmd sections as allocatable"Tyler Mandry-2/+2
2020-10-17Rollup merge of #77961 - glandium:embed-bitcode, r=nagisaDylan DPC-2/+2
Set .llvmbc and .llvmcmd sections as allocatable This marks both sections as allocatable rather than excluded, which matches what clang does with the equivalent `-fembed-bitcode` flag.
2020-10-15Replace target.target with target and target.ptr_width with target.pointer_widthest31-9/+9
Preparation for a subsequent change that replaces rustc_target::config::Config with its wrapped Target. On its own, this commit breaks the build. I don't like making build-breaking commits, but in this instance I believe that it makes review easier, as the "real" changes of this PR can be seen much more easily. Result of running: find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target\.target\([)\.,; ]\)/target\1/g' {} \; find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target\.target$/target/g' {} \; find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target.ptr_width/target.pointer_width/g' {} \; ./x.py fmt
2020-10-15Set .llvmbc and .llvmcmd sections as allocatableMike Hommey-2/+2
2020-10-11Auto merge of #76859 - Aaron1011:fix/llvm-cgu-reuse, r=davidtwco,nikicbors-192/+69
Use llvm::computeLTOCacheKey to determine post-ThinLTO CGU reuse During incremental ThinLTO compilation, we attempt to re-use the optimized (post-ThinLTO) bitcode file for a module if it is 'safe' to do so. Up until now, 'safe' has meant that the set of modules that our current modules imports from/exports to is unchanged from the previous compilation session. See PR #67020 and PR #71131 for more details. However, this turns out be insufficient to guarantee that it's safe to reuse the post-LTO module (i.e. that optimizing the pre-LTO module would produce the same result). When LLVM optimizes a module during ThinLTO, it may look at other information from the 'module index', such as whether a (non-imported!) global variable is used. If this information changes between compilation runs, we may end up re-using an optimized module that (for example) had dead-code elimination run on a function that is now used by another module. Fortunately, LLVM implements its own ThinLTO module cache, which is used when ThinLTO is performed by a linker plugin (e.g. when clang is used to compile a C proect). Using this cache directly would require extensive refactoring of our code - but fortunately for us, LLVM provides a function that does exactly what we need. The function `llvm::computeLTOCacheKey` is used to compute a SHA-1 hash from all data that might influence the result of ThinLTO on a module. In addition to the module imports/exports that we manually track, it also hashes information about global variables (e.g. their liveness) which might be used during optimization. By using this function, we shouldn't have to worry about new LLVM passes breaking our module re-use behavior. In LLVM, the output of this function forms part of the filename used to store the post-ThinLTO module. To keep our current filename structure intact, this PR just writes out the mapping 'CGU name -> Hash' to a file. To determine if a post-LTO module should be reused, we compare hashes from the previous session. This should unblock PR #75199 - by sheer chance, it seems to have hit this issue due to the particular CGU partitioning and optimization decisions that end up getting made.
2020-09-30Update LLVM and add Unsupported diagnosticHugues de Valon-0/+7
Secure entry functions do not support if arguments are passed on the stack. An "unsupported" diagnostic will be emitted by LLVM if that is the case. This commits adds support in Rust for that diagnostic so that an error will be output if that is the case! Signed-off-by: Hugues de Valon <hugues.devalon@arm.com>
2020-09-17Use llvm::computeLTOCacheKey to determine post-ThinLTO CGU reuseAaron Hill-192/+69
During incremental ThinLTO compilation, we attempt to re-use the optimized (post-ThinLTO) bitcode file for a module if it is 'safe' to do so. Up until now, 'safe' has meant that the set of modules that our current modules imports from/exports to is unchanged from the previous compilation session. See PR #67020 and PR #71131 for more details. However, this turns out be insufficient to guarantee that it's safe to reuse the post-LTO module (i.e. that optimizing the pre-LTO module would produce the same result). When LLVM optimizes a module during ThinLTO, it may look at other information from the 'module index', such as whether a (non-imported!) global variable is used. If this information changes between compilation runs, we may end up re-using an optimized module that (for example) had dead-code elimination run on a function that is now used by another module. Fortunately, LLVM implements its own ThinLTO module cache, which is used when ThinLTO is performed by a linker plugin (e.g. when clang is used to compile a C proect). Using this cache directly would require extensive refactoring of our code - but fortunately for us, LLVM provides a function that does exactly what we need. The function `llvm::computeLTOCacheKey` is used to compute a SHA-1 hash from all data that might influence the result of ThinLTO on a module. In addition to the module imports/exports that we manually track, it also hashes information about global variables (e.g. their liveness) which might be used during optimization. By using this function, we shouldn't have to worry about new LLVM passes breaking our module re-use behavior. In LLVM, the output of this function forms part of the filename used to store the post-ThinLTO module. To keep our current filename structure intact, this PR just writes out the mapping 'CGU name -> Hash' to a file. To determine if a post-LTO module should be reused, we compare hashes from the previous session. This should unblock PR #75199 - by sheer chance, it seems to have hit this issue due to the particular CGU partitioning and optimization decisions that end up getting made.
2020-09-09Add `-Z combine_cgu` flagVictor Ding-3/+28
Introduce a compiler option to let rustc combines all regular CGUs into a single one at the end of compilation. Part of Issue #64191
2020-08-30mv compiler to compiler/mark-0/+2484