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2020-05-20Show default values for debug-assertions & debug-assertions-stdTomasz Miąsko-2/+2
2020-05-15Rollup merge of #72146 - Mark-Simulacrum:separate-std-asserts, r=alexcrichtonDylan DPC-0/+4
Provide separate option for std debug asserts On local one-off benchmarking of libcore metadata-only, debug asserts in std are a significant hit (15s to 20s). Provide an option for compiler developers to disable them. A build with a nightly compiler is around 10s, for reference.
2020-05-12Provide separate option for std debug assertsMark Rousskov-0/+4
2020-05-10remove lldb package from bootstrap, config and build-manifestRalf Jung-4/+0
it's not been built since a long time ago
2020-05-08x.py: allow configuring the build directoryJoshua Nelson-0/+4
This allows configuring the directory for build artifacts, instead of having it always be ./build. This means you can set it to a constant location, letting you reuse the same cache while working in several different directories. The configuration lives in config.toml under build.build-dir. By default, it keeps the existing default of ./build, but it can be configured to any relative or absolute path. Additionally, it allows making outputs relative to the root of the git repository using $ROOT.
2020-04-13Auto merge of #70882 - tmiasko:llvm-version-suffix, r=Mark-Simulacrumbors-2/+3
Make LLVM version suffix independent of rustc version on dev channel Remove rustc version from LLVM version suffix on dev channel, avoiding the need for full rebuilds when switching between branches with different LLVM submodule & rustc version. Note: To avoid full rebuild, on subsequent LLVM submodule update, copy the current value of `LLVM_VERSION_SUFFIX` from `build/*/llvm/build/CMakeCache.txt`, to `version-suffix` in `config.toml`.
2020-04-10Enforce Python 3 as much as possibleGuillaume Gomez-4/+2
2020-04-07Make LLVM version suffix independent of rustc version on dev channelTomasz Miąsko-2/+3
Remove rustc version from LLVM version suffix on dev channel, avoiding the need for full rebuilds when moving between commits with different LLVM submodule & rustc version.
2020-03-06fix various typosMatthias Krüger-1/+1
2020-02-11Rollup merge of #68824 - ajpaverd:cfguard-rustbuild, r=Mark-SimulacrumDylan DPC-0/+4
Enable Control Flow Guard in rustbuild Now that Rust supports Control Flow Guard (#68180), add a config.toml option to build the standard library with CFG enabled. r? @nagisa
2020-02-10Enable Control Flow Guard in rustbuildAndrew Paverd-0/+4
2020-02-09More commentsJohn Kåre Alsaker-0/+3
2020-02-09Add some commentsJohn Kåre Alsaker-0/+2
2020-01-29Add an option to use LLD to link the compiler on Windows platformsJohn Kåre Alsaker-0/+5
2020-01-11Clarify the relationship between `extended` and `tools` in `config.toml`varkor-5/+7
2020-01-03Rollup merge of #67636 - semarie:bootstrap-rustfmt, r=Mark-SimulacrumYuki Okushi-0/+4
allow rustfmt key in [build] section Permit using `rustfmt` in `config.toml`. It will allow to not download `rustfmt` binary, which is not possible for at least some tiers-3 platforms. Fixes: #67624 r? @Mark-Simulacrum
2020-01-02bootstrap: Allow for setting the ThinLTO import limit used for compiler the ↵Michael Woerister-0/+7
compiler.
2019-12-27add comment for rustfmt in config.toml.exampleSebastien Marie-0/+4
2019-12-26Document LLVM skip-rebuild config.toml optionMatthew Healy-0/+6
2019-12-11rustc: Link LLVM directly into rustc againAlex Crichton-3/+0
This commit builds on #65501 continue to simplify the build system and compiler now that we no longer have multiple LLVM backends to ship by default. Here this switches the compiler back to what it once was long long ago, which is linking LLVM directly to the compiler rather than dynamically loading it at runtime. The `codegen-backends` directory of the sysroot no longer exists and all relevant support in the build system is removed. Note that `rustc` still supports a dynamically loaded codegen backend as it did previously, it just no longer supports dynamically loaded codegen backends in its own sysroot. Additionally as part of this the `librustc_codegen_llvm` crate now once again explicitly depends on all of its crates instead of implicitly loading them through the sysroot. This involved filling out its `Cargo.toml` and deleting all the now-unnecessary `extern crate` annotations in the header of the crate. (this in turn required adding a number of imports for names of macros too). The end results of this change are: * Rustbuild's build process for the compiler as all the "oh don't forget the codegen backend" checks can be easily removed. * Building `rustc_codegen_llvm` is much simpler since it's simply another compiler crate. * Managing the dependencies of `rustc_codegen_llvm` is much simpler since it's "just another `Cargo.toml` to edit" * The build process should be a smidge faster because there's more parallelism in the main rustc build step rather than splitting `librustc_codegen_llvm` out to its own step. * The compiler is expected to be slightly faster by default because the codegen backend does not need to be dynamically loaded. * Disabling LLVM as part of rustbuild is still supported, supporting multiple codegen backends is still supported, and dynamic loading of a codegen backend is still supported.
2019-10-25Rollup merge of #65408 - guanqun:remove-rust-optimize, r=Mark-SimulacrumMazdak Farrokhzad-4/+6
reorder config.toml.example options and add one missing option r? @Mark-Simulacrum
2019-10-24add the missing rust.musl-root option in config.toml.exampleGuanqun Lu-0/+3
2019-10-24add a WARNING to rust.optimize option in config.toml.exampleGuanqun Lu-4/+3
2019-10-21Remove `src/llvm-emscripten` submoduleAlex Crichton-4/+1
With #65251 landed there's no need to build two LLVM backends and ship them with rustc, every target we have now uses the same LLVM backend! This removes the `src/llvm-emscripten` submodule and additionally removes all support from rustbuild for building the emscripten LLVM backend. Multiple codegen backend support is left in place for now, and this is intended to be an easy 10-15 minute win on CI times by avoiding having to build LLVM twice.
2019-10-16Upgrade Emscripten targets to use upstream LLVM backendThomas Lively-0/+1
- Compatible with Emscripten 1.38.46-upstream or later upstream. - Refactors the Emscripten target spec to share code with other wasm targets. - Replaces the old incorrect wasm32 C call ABI with the correct one, preserving the old one as wasm32_bindgen_compat for wasm-bindgen compatibility. - Updates the varargs ABI used by Emscripten and deletes the old one. - Removes the obsolete wasm32-experimental-emscripten target. - Uses EMCC_CFLAGS on CI to avoid the timeout problems with #63649.
2019-10-05Revert "Auto merge of #63649 - tlively:emscripten-upstream-upgrade, ↵Tyler Mandry-1/+0
r=alexcrichton" This reverts commit 7870050796e5904a0fc85ecbe6fa6dde1cfe0c91, reversing changes made to 2e7244807a7878f6eca3eb7d97ae9b413aa49014.
2019-10-04Upgrade Emscripten targets to use upstream LLVM backendThomas Lively-0/+1
- Refactors the Emscripten target spec to share code with other wasm targets. - Replaces the incorrect wasm32 C call ABI with the old asmjs version, which is correct for both wasm32 and JS. - Updates the varargs ABI used by Emscripten and deletes the old one. - Removes the obsolete wasm32-experimental-emscripten target. - Temporarily makes Emscripten targets use panic=abort by default because supporting unwinding will require an LLVM patch.
2019-09-09Fix typo in config.toml.exampleLukas-1/+1
2019-08-28std: Remove the `wasm_syscall` featureAlex Crichton-5/+0
This commit removes the `wasm_syscall` feature from the wasm32-unknown-unknown build of the standard library. This feature was originally intended to allow an opt-in way to interact with the operating system in a posix-like way but it was never stabilized. Nowadays with the advent of the `wasm32-wasi` target that should entirely replace the intentions of the `wasm_syscall` feature.
2019-08-16add git keyword to submodule optionJustin Restivo-2/+2
2019-08-08remove test-miri from config.toml.exampleRalf Jung-4/+0
2019-08-02rustbuild: WebAssembly is no longer an experimental LLVM backendSam Elliott-4/+3
2019-08-02rustbuild: RISC-V is no longer an experimental LLVM targetSam Elliott-3/+3
This commit moves RISC-V from the experimental LLVM targets to the regular LLVM targets. RISC-V was made non-experimental in https://reviews.llvm.org/rL366399 I have also sorted the list of LLVM targets, and changed the code around setting llvm_exp_targets (and its default) to match the code setting llvm_targets (and its default), ensuring future changes to the defaults, as LLVM targets become stable, affect as few places as possible.
2019-05-24Address review commentsVadim Petrochenkov-1/+2
2019-05-24rustbuild: Untie `debuginfo-level-tests` from `debuginfo-level`Vadim Petrochenkov-3/+5
2019-05-24rustbuild: Simplify debuginfo configurationVadim Petrochenkov-14/+16
2019-05-09Omit the vendor component in the WASI tripleDan Gohman-1/+1
This renames wasm32-unknown-wasi to wasm32-wasi, omitting the vendor component. This follows aarch64-linux-android, x86_64-fuchsia, and others in omitting the vendor field, which has the advantage of aligning with the [multiarch tuple](https://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch/Tuples), and of being less noisy.
2019-04-03Support using LLVM's libunwind as the unwinder implementationPetr Hosek-0/+3
This avoids the dependency on host libraries such as libgcc_s which may be undesirable in some deployment environments where these aren't available.
2019-03-29Add a new wasm32-unknown-wasi targetAlex Crichton-0/+3
This commit adds a new wasm32-based target distributed through rustup, supported in the standard library, and implemented in the compiler. The `wasm32-unknown-wasi` target is intended to be a WebAssembly target which matches the [WASI proposal recently announced.][LINK]. In summary the WASI target is an effort to define a standard set of syscalls for WebAssembly modules, allowing WebAssembly modules to not only be portable across architectures but also be portable across environments implementing this standard set of system calls. The wasi target in libstd is still somewhat bare bones. This PR does not fill out the filesystem, networking, threads, etc. Instead it only provides the most basic of integration with the wasi syscalls, enabling features like: * `Instant::now` and `SystemTime::now` work * `env::args` is hooked up * `env::vars` will look up environment variables * `println!` will print to standard out * `process::{exit, abort}` should be hooked up appropriately None of these APIs can work natively on the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target, but with the assumption of the WASI set of syscalls we're able to provide implementations of these syscalls that engines can implement. Currently the primary engine implementing wasi is [wasmtime], but more will surely emerge! In terms of future development of libstd, I think this is something we'll probably want to discuss. The purpose of the WASI target is to provide a standardized set of syscalls, but it's *also* to provide a standard C sysroot for compiling C/C++ programs. This means it's intended that functions like `read` and `write` are implemented for this target with a relatively standard definition and implementation. It's unclear, therefore, how we want to expose file descriptors and how we'll want to implement system primitives. For example should `std::fs::File` have a libc-based file descriptor underneath it? The raw wasi file descriptor? We'll see! Currently these details are all intentionally hidden and things we can change over time. A `WasiFd` sample struct was added to the standard library as part of this commit, but it's not currently used. It shows how all the wasi syscalls could be ergonomically bound in Rust, and they offer a possible implementation of primitives like `std::fs::File` if we bind wasi file descriptors exactly. Apart from the standard library, there's also the matter of how this target is integrated with respect to its C standard library. The reference sysroot, for example, provides managment of standard unix file descriptors and also standard APIs like `open` (as opposed to the relative `openat` inspiration for the wasi ssycalls). Currently the standard library relies on the C sysroot symbols for operations such as environment management, process exit, and `read`/`write` of stdio fds. We want these operations in Rust to be interoperable with C if they're used in the same process. Put another way, if Rust and C are linked into the same WebAssembly binary they should work together, but that requires that the same C standard library is used. We also, however, want the `wasm32-unknown-wasi` target to be usable-by-default with the Rust compiler without requiring a separate toolchain to get downloaded and configured. With that in mind, there's two modes of operation for the `wasm32-unknown-wasi` target: 1. By default the C standard library is statically provided inside of `liblibc.rlib` distributed as part of the sysroot. This means that you can `rustc foo.wasm --target wasm32-unknown-unknown` and you're good to go, a fully workable wasi binary pops out. This is incompatible with linking in C code, however, which may be compiled against a different sysroot than the Rust code was previously compiled against. In this mode the default of `rust-lld` is used to link binaries. 2. For linking with C code, the `-C target-feature=-crt-static` flag needs to be passed. This takes inspiration from the musl target for this flag, but the idea is that you're no longer using the provided static C runtime, but rather one will be provided externally. This flag is intended to also get coupled with an external `clang` compiler configured with its own sysroot. Therefore you'll typically use this flag with `-C linker=/path/to/clang-script-wrapper`. Using this mode the Rust code will continue to reference standard C symbols, but the definition will be pulled in by the linker configured. Alright so that's all the current state of this PR. I suspect we'll definitely want to discuss this before landing of course! This PR is coupled with libc changes as well which I'll be posting shortly. [LINK]: [wasmtime]:
2019-03-16[bootstrap] Remove llvm.enabled configbjorn3-4/+0
2019-03-09Rollup merge of #58676 - euclio:bootstrap-python, r=alexcrichtonMazdak Farrokhzad-0/+3
look for python2 symlinks before bootstrap python Before this commit, if you're running x.py directly on a system where `python` is symlinked to Python 3, then the `python` config option will default to a Python 3 interpreter. This causes debuginfo tests to fail with an opaque error message, since they have a hard requirement on Python 2. This commit modifies the Python probe behavior to look for python2.7 and python2 *before* using the interpreter used to execute `x.py`.
2019-03-05Remove JSBackend from config.tomlHadley Canine-1/+1
JSBackend is implied when building the emscripten backend, and not available for the standard llvm backend. This commit also puts the example config in sync with the defaults in src/bootstrap/native.rs
2019-03-01look for python2 symlinks before bootstrap pythonAndy Russell-0/+3
Before this commit, if you're running x.py directly on a system where `python` is symlinked to Python 3, then the `python` config option will default to a Python 3 interpreter. This causes debuginfo tests to fail with an opaque error message, since they have a hard requirement on Python 2. This commit modifies the Python probe behavior to look for python2.7 and python2 *before* using the interpreter used to execute `x.py`.
2019-02-27Whitelist containers that allow older toolchainsAlex Crichton-0/+2
We'll use this as a temporary measure to get an LLVM update landed, but we'll have to go through and update images later to make sure they've got the right toolchains.
2019-01-31Auto merge of #57514 - michaelwoerister:xlto-tests, r=alexcrichtonbors-0/+4
compiletest: Support opt-in Clang-based run-make tests and use them for testing xLTO. Some cross-language run-make tests need a Clang compiler that matches the LLVM version of `rustc`. Since such a compiler usually isn't available these tests (marked with the `needs-matching-clang` directive) are ignored by default. For some CI jobs we do need these tests to run unconditionally though. In order to support this a `--force-clang-based-tests` flag is added to compiletest. If this flag is specified, `compiletest` will fail if it can't detect an appropriate version of Clang. @rust-lang/infra The PR doesn't yet enable the tests yet. Do you have any recommendation for which jobs to enable them? cc #57438 r? @alexcrichton
2019-01-30bootstrap: Expose LLVM_USE_LINKER cmake option to config.toml.Michael Woerister-0/+4
2019-01-28Fix a commentJohn Kåre Alsaker-1/+1
2019-01-28Use multiple threads by default. Limits tests to one thread. Do some renaming.John Kåre Alsaker-1/+1
2019-01-13Support passing cflags/cxxflags/ldflags to LLVM buildPetr Hosek-0/+5
This may be needed with some host compilers.
2019-01-09Remove outdated commentking6cong-1/+1