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LLVM_CONFIG_PATH is no longer supported as of LLVM 16, switch to
using the cmake module instead.
We separately return the llvm-config and cmake directory paths,
because llvm-config always refers to the host binary, while
the cmake directory is for the target triple.
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The compiler currently has `-Ztime` and `-Ztime-passes`. I've used
`-Ztime-passes` for years but only recently learned about `-Ztime`.
What's the difference? Let's look at the `-Zhelp` output:
```
-Z time=val -- measure time of rustc processes (default: no)
-Z time-passes=val -- measure time of each rustc pass (default: no)
```
The `-Ztime-passes` description is clear, but the `-Ztime` one is less so.
Sounds like it measures the time for the entire process?
No. The real difference is that `-Ztime-passes` prints out info about passes,
and `-Ztime` does the same, but only for a subset of those passes. More
specifically, there is a distinction in the profiling code between a "verbose
generic activity" and an "extra verbose generic activity". `-Ztime-passes`
prints both kinds, while `-Ztime` only prints the first one. (It took me
a close reading of the source code to determine this difference.)
In practice this distinction has low value. Perhaps in the past the "extra
verbose" output was more voluminous, but now that we only print stats for a
pass if it exceeds 5ms or alters the RSS, `-Ztime-passes` is less spammy. Also,
a lot of the "extra verbose" cases are for individual lint passes, and you need
to also use `-Zno-interleave-lints` to see those anyway.
Therefore, this commit removes `-Ztime` and the associated machinery. One thing
to note is that the existing "extra verbose" activities all have an extra
string argument, so the commit adds the ability to accept an extra argument to
the "verbose" activities.
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This commit does three things:
* First, it passes --cfg=bootstrap on stage 0 for rustdoc
invocations on proc_macro crates. This mirrors what we
do already for rustc invocations of those, and is needed
because cargo doesn't respect RUSTFLAGS or RUSTDOCFLAGS
when confronted with a proc macro.
* Second, it marks the bootstrap config variable as expected.
This is needed both on later stages where it's not set,
but also on stage 0, where it is set.
* Third, it adjusts the comment in the rustc wrapper to better
reflect the reason why we set the bootstrap variable as
expected: due to recent changes, setting it as expected
is also required even if the cfg variable is passed: ebf4cc361e0d0f11a25b42372bd629953365d17e .
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Revert #95993 fix
This reverts the temporary fix implemented by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95993 since a permanent fix has been implemented by https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/10594
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98728
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This reverts the temporary fix implemented by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95993 since a permanent fix has been implemented by https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/10594
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As was discovered in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93628#issuecomment-1154697627 ,
adding #[cfg(bootstrap)] to a rust-internal proc macro crate
would yield an unexpected cfg name error, at least on later
stages wher the bootstrap cfg arg wasn't set.
rustc already passes arguments to mark bootstrap as expected,
however the means of delivery through the RUSTFLAGS env var
is unable to reach proc macro crates, as described
in the issue linked in the code this commit touches.
This wouldn't be an issue for cfg args that get passed through
RUSTFLAGS, as they would never become *active* either, so
any usage of one of these flags in a proc macro's code would
legitimately yield a lint warning. But since dc302587e2cf5105a3a864319d7e7bcb434bba20,
rust takes extra measures to pass --cfg=bootstrap even in
proc macros, by passing it via the wrapper. Thus, we need
to send the flags to mark bootstrap as expected also from the
wrapper, so that #[cfg(bootstrap)] also works from proc macros.
I want to thank Urgau and jplatte for helping me find the cause of this. ❤️
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The `RUSTDOC_RESOURCE_SUFFIX` variable was never actually set.
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I managed to break this in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95449.
I am not quite sure why this is the correct fix, but it doesn't break `doc --stage 0`
and is strictly closer to the previous behavior.
Previously, rustdoc would error with strange issues because of the mismatched sysroot:
```
error[E0460]: found possibly newer version of crate `std` which `rustc_span` depends on
--> /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/lib.rs:14:5
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14 | use rustc_span::{sym, symbol::Ident, Span, Symbol};
| ^^^^^^^^^^
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= note: perhaps that crate needs to be recompiled?
= note: the following crate versions were found:
crate `std`: /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/libstd-ff9290e971253a38.rlib
crate `std`: /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/libstd-ff9290e971253a38.so
crate `rustc_span`: /home/jnelson/rust-lang/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-rustc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/deps/librustc_span-ed11dce30c1766f9.rlib
```
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Fix `x doc --stage 0 compiler`
Eric figured out the fix to this almost 2 years ago, I just didn't read his comment carefully enough at the timme.
The issue was that fake rustc and fake rustdoc were inconsistent about when they passed `--sysroot` to the real compiler.
Change them to consistently only pass it when `--target` is present.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74976#issuecomment-667265945
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79980
r? ``@ehuss``
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Eric figured out the fix to this almost 2 years ago, I just didn't read his comment carefully enough at the timme.
The issue was that fake rustc and fake rustdoc were inconsistent about when they passed `--sysroot` to the real compiler.
Change them to consistently only pass it when `--target` is present.
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This reverts commit 6499c5e7fc173a3f55b7a3bd1e6a50e9edef782d, reversing
changes made to 78450d2d602b06d9b94349aaf8cece1a4acaf3a8.
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This reverts commit e7cc3bddbe0d0e374d05e7003e662bba1742dbae, reversing
changes made to 734368a200904ef9c21db86c595dc04263c87be0.
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Lazy type-alias-impl-trait
Previously opaque types were processed by
1. replacing all mentions of them with inference variables
2. memorizing these inference variables in a side-table
3. at the end of typeck, resolve the inference variables in the side table and use the resolved type as the hidden type of the opaque type
This worked okayish for `impl Trait` in return position, but required lots of roundabout type inference hacks and processing.
This PR instead stops this process of replacing opaque types with inference variables, and just keeps the opaque types around.
Whenever an opaque type `O` is compared with another type `T`, we make the comparison succeed and record `T` as the hidden type. If `O` is compared to `U` while there is a recorded hidden type for it, we grab the recorded type (`T`) and compare that against `U`. This makes implementing
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2515
much simpler (previous attempts on the inference based scheme were very prone to ICEs and general misbehaviour that was not explainable except by random implementation defined oddities).
r? `@nikomatsakis`
fixes #93411
fixes #88236
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Make the pre-commit script pre-push instead
This should make it substantially less annoying, and hopefully more
people will find it useful. In particular, it will no longer run tidy
each time you run `git commit --amend` or rebase a branch.
This also warns if you have the old script in pre-commit; see the HACK
comment for details.
r? ````@Mark-Simulacrum```` cc ````@caass````
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pipeline without causing rebuilds
Useful for -Ztreat-err-as-bug
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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).
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Currently the verbosity settings are:
- 2: RUSTC-SHIM envvars get spammed on every invocation, O(30) lines
cargo is passed -v which outputs CLI invocations, O(5) lines
- 3: cargo is passed -vv which outputs build script output, O(0-10) lines
This commit changes it to:
- 1: cargo is passed -v, O(5) lines
- 2: cargo is passed -vv, O(10) lines
- 3: RUSTC-SHIM envvars get spammed, O(30) lines
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This should make it substantially less annoying, and hopefully more
people will find it useful. In particular, it will no longer run tidy
each time you run `git commit --amend` or rebase a branch.
This also warns if you have the old script in pre-commit; see the HACK
comment for details.
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Cargo ignores RUSTFLAGS when building proc macro crates. However,
sometimes rustc_macro needs to have conditional compilation when there
are breaking changes to the `libproc_macro` API (see for example
tell the difference between stage 0 and stage 1.
Another alternative is to unconditionally build rustc_macros with the
master libstd instead of the beta one (i.e. use `--sysroot
stage0-sysroot`), but that led to strange and maddening errors:
```
error[E0460]: found possibly newer version of crate `std` which `proc_macro2` depends on
--> /home/joshua/.local/lib/cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/tracing-attributes-0.1.13/src/lib.rs:90:5
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90 | use proc_macro2::TokenStream;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
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= note: perhaps that crate needs to be recompiled?
= note: the following crate versions were found:
crate `std`: /home/joshua/rustc2/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-sysroot/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/libstd-b3602c301b71cc3d.rmeta
crate `proc_macro2`: /home/joshua/rustc2/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage0-rustc/release/deps/libproc_macro2-a83c1f01610c129e.rlib
```
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This bug was only visible on mac. Also, print_step_rusage is a relatively new
internal feature, that is not heavily used, and has no tests. All of these
factors contributed to how this went uncaught this long. Thanks to Josh Triplett
for pointing it out!
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Attempt to gather similar stats as rusage on Windows
A follow up to #82532. This is a bit hacked in because I think we need to discuss this before merging, but this is an attempt to gather similar metrics as `libc::rusage` on Windows.
Some comments on differences:
* Currently, we're passing `RUSAGE_CHILDREN` to `rusage` which collects statistics on all children that have been waited on and terminated. I believe this is currently just the invocation of the real `rustc` that the shim is wrapping. Does `rustc` itself spawn children processes? The windows version gets the child processes handle when spawning it, and uses that to collect the statistics. For maxrss, `rusage` will return "the resident set size of the largest child, not the maximum resident set size of the process tree.", the Windows version will only collect statistics on the wrapped `rustc` child process directly even if some theoretical sub process has a larger memory footprint.
* There might be subtle differences between `rusage`'s "resident set" and Window's "working set". The "working set" and "resident set" should both be the number of pages that are in memory and which would not cause a page fault when accessed.
* I'm not yet sure how best to get the same information that `ru_minflt`, `ru_inblock`, `ru_oublock`, `ru_nivcsw ` and `ru_nvcsw` provide.
r? `@pnkfelix`
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unconditionally.
1. I added `--test` based on review feedback from simulacrum: I decided I would
rather include such extra context than get confused later on by its absence.
(However, I chose to encode it differently than how `[RUSTC-TIMING]` does... I
don't have much basis for doing so, other than `--test` to me more directly
reflects what it came from.)
2. I also decided to include `[RUSTC-SHIM]` at start of all of these lines
driven by the verbosity level, to make to clear where these lines of text
originate from. (Basically, I skimmed over the output and realized that a casual
observer might not be able to tell where this huge set of new lines were coming
from.)
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This change is mainly motivated by an issue with the environment
printing I added in PR 82403: multiple rustc invocations progress
in parallel, and the environment output, spanning multiple lines,
gets interleaved in ways make it difficult to extra the enviroment settings.
(This aforementioned difficulty is more of a hiccup than an outright
show-stopper, because the environment variables tend to be the same for all of
the rustc invocations, so it doesn't matter too much if one mixes up which lines
one is looking at. But still: Better to fix it.)
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Add `build.print_step_rusage` to config.toml
Adds `build.print_step_rusage` to config.toml, which is meant to be an easy way to let compiler developers get feedback on the terminal during bootstrap about resource usage during each step.
The output is piggy-backed on `[PRINT-STEP-TIMINGS]`, mostly because the functionality seemed to naturally fit there in the overall control-flow and output structure (even if very little is shared between the implementations themselves).
Some sample output (from my Linux box, where I believe the `max rss` output to be somewhat trust-worthy...):
```
[...]
Compiling regex v1.4.3
[RUSTC-TIMING] tempfile test:false 0.323 user: 1.418662 sys: 0.81767 max rss (kb): 182084 page reclaims: 26615 page faults: 0 fs block inputs: 0 fs block outputs: 2160 voluntary ctxt switches: 798 involuntary ctxt switches: 131
Completed tempfile v3.1.0 in 0.3s
[RUSTC-TIMING] chalk_ir test:false 1.890 user: 1.893603 sys: 0.99663 max rss (kb): 239432 page reclaims: 32107 page faults: 0 fs block inputs: 0 fs block outputs: 25008 voluntary ctxt switches: 108 involuntary ctxt switches: 183
Completed chalk-ir v0.55.0 in 1.9s
Compiling rustc_data_structures v0.0.0 (/home/pnkfelix/Dev/Rust/rust.git/compiler/rustc_data_structures)
[RUSTC-TIMING] chrono test:false 1.244 user: 3.333198 sys: 0.134963 max rss (kb): 246612 page reclaims: 44857 page faults: 0 fs block inputs: 0 fs block outputs: 11704 voluntary ctxt switches: 1043 involuntary ctxt switches: 326
Completed chrono v0.4.15 in 1.3s
[RUSTC-TIMING] rustc_rayon test:false 1.332 user: 1.763912 sys: 0.75996 max rss (kb): 239076 page reclaims: 35285 page faults: 0 fs block inputs: 0 fs block outputs: 19576 voluntary ctxt switches: 359 involuntary ctxt switches: 168
Completed rustc-rayon v0.3.0 in 1.3s
Compiling matchers v0.0.1
[RUSTC-TIMING] matchers test:false 0.100 user: 0.94495 sys: 0.15119 max rss (kb): 140076 page reclaims: 8200 page faults: 0 fs block inputs: 0 fs block outputs: 392 voluntary ctxt switches: 43 involuntary ctxt switches: 12
Completed matchers v0.0.1 in 0.1s
[...]
```
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On non-unix platforms, does not try to call `getrusage` (and does not attempt to
implement its own shim; that could be follow-on work, though its probably best
to not invest too much effort there, versus using separate dedicated tooling).
On unix platforms, calls libc::rusage and attempts to emit the subset of fields
that are supported on Linux and Mac OS X. Omits groups of related stats which
appear to be unsupported on the platform (due to them all remaining zero).
Adjusts output to compensate for Mac using bytes instead of kb (a well known
discrepancy on Mac OS X). However, so far I observe a lot of strange values
(orders of magnitude wrong) reported on Mac OS X in some cases, so I would not
trust this in that context currently.
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Fix issue 38686.
(update: placated tidy.)
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More print statementsstatements lol
Solved the basic case of eliminating check_version ifk_version if subcommand = setup
Finished v1
checking out old bootstrap.py
checked out old irrelevant files
fixed tidy
Moved VERSION from bin/main.rs to lib.rs
Fixed semicolon return issue
x.py fmt
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Remove --cfg dox from rustdoc.rs
This was added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/53076 because
several dependencies were using `cfg(dox)` instead of `cfg(rustdoc)` (now `cfg(doc)`).
I ran `rg 'cfg\(dox\)'` on the source tree with no matches, so I think
this is now safe to remove.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
cc `@QuietMisdreavus` :)
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This was added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/53076 because
several dependencies were using `cfg(dox)` instead of `cfg(rustdoc)`.
I ran `rg 'cfg\(dox\)'` on the source tree with no matches, so I think
this is now safe to remove.
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Add `x.py setup`
Closes #76503.
- Suggest `x.py setup` if config.toml doesn't exist yet
- Prompt for a profile if not given on the command line
- Print the configuration that will be used
- Print helpful starting commands after setup
- Link to the dev-guide after finishing
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- Suggest `x.py setup` if config.toml doesn't exist yet (twice, once
before and once after the build)
- Prompt for a profile if not given on the command line
- Print the configuration file that will be used
- Print helpful starting commands after setup
- Link to the dev-guide after finishing
- Note that distro maintainers will see the changelog warning
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Fixes #77105
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- Add a changelog and instructions for updating it
- Use `changelog-seen` in `config.toml` and `VERSION` in bootstrap to determine whether the changelog has been read
- Nag people if they haven't read the x.py changelog
+ Print message twice to make sure it's seen
- Give different error messages depending on whether the version needs to be updated or added
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These are quite long, usually, and in most cases not interesting. On smaller
terminals they can take up more than a full page of output, hiding the error
diagnostics emitted.
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