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2020-07-27mv std libs to library/mark-29/+0
2020-06-18Ensure std benchmarks get tested.Eric Huss-0/+1
2019-08-04bump libcore tests to rand 0.7Ralf Jung-1/+1
2019-04-18libcore => 2018Taiki Endo-0/+1
2018-12-11std: Depend directly on crates.io cratesAlex Crichton-1/+1
Ever since we added a Cargo-based build system for the compiler the standard library has always been a little special, it's never been able to depend on crates.io crates for runtime dependencies. This has been a result of various limitations, namely that Cargo doesn't understand that crates from crates.io depend on libcore, so Cargo tries to build crates before libcore is finished. I had an idea this afternoon, however, which lifts the strategy from #52919 to directly depend on crates.io crates from the standard library. After all is said and done this removes a whopping three submodules that we need to manage! The basic idea here is that for any crate `std` depends on it adds an *optional* dependency on an empty crate on crates.io, in this case named `rustc-std-workspace-core`. This crate is overridden via `[patch]` in this repository to point to a local crate we write, and *that* has a `path` dependency on libcore. Note that all `no_std` crates also depend on `compiler_builtins`, but if we're not using submodules we can publish `compiler_builtins` to crates.io and all crates can depend on it anyway! The basic strategy then looks like: * The standard library (or some transitive dep) decides to depend on a crate `foo`. * The standard library adds ```toml [dependencies] foo = { version = "0.1", features = ['rustc-dep-of-std'] } ``` * The crate `foo` has an optional dependency on `rustc-std-workspace-core` * The crate `foo` has an optional dependency on `compiler_builtins` * The crate `foo` has a feature `rustc-dep-of-std` which activates these crates and any other necessary infrastructure in the crate. A sample commit for `dlmalloc` [turns out to be quite simple][commit]. After that all `no_std` crates should largely build "as is" and still be publishable on crates.io! Notably they should be able to continue to use stable Rust if necessary, since the `rename-dependency` feature of Cargo is soon stabilizing. As a proof of concept, this commit removes the `dlmalloc`, `libcompiler_builtins`, and `libc` submodules from this repository. Long thorns in our side these are now gone for good and we can directly depend on crates.io! It's hoped that in the long term we can bring in other crates as necessary, but for now this is largely intended to simply make it easier to manage these crates and remove submodules. This should be a transparent non-breaking change for all users, but one possible stickler is that this almost for sure breaks out-of-tree `std`-building tools like `xargo` and `cargo-xbuild`. I think it should be relatively easy to get them working, however, as all that's needed is an entry in the `[patch]` section used to build the standard library. Hopefully we can work with these tools to solve this problem! [commit]: https://github.com/alexcrichton/dlmalloc-rs/commit/28ee12db813a3b650a7c25d1c36d2c17dcb88ae3
2018-11-30Add libstd and libcore Cargo features "panic_immediate_abort"Vitaly _Vi Shukela-0/+4
It stop asserts and panics from libstd to automatically include string output and formatting code. Use case: developing static executables smaller than 50 kilobytes, where usual formatting code is excessive while keeping debuggability in debug mode. May resolve #54981.
2018-09-04Breaking change upgradesMark Rousskov-1/+1
2018-05-17Switch to 1.26 bootstrap compilerMark Simulacrum-0/+2
2018-03-11Update Cargo submoduleAlex Crichton-0/+3
Required moving all fulldeps tests depending on `rand` to different locations as now there's multiple `rand` crates that can't be implicitly linked against.
2017-11-19std: Add a new wasm32-unknown-unknown targetAlex Crichton-3/+0
This commit adds a new target to the compiler: wasm32-unknown-unknown. This target is a reimagining of what it looks like to generate WebAssembly code from Rust. Instead of using Emscripten which can bring with it a weighty runtime this instead is a target which uses only the LLVM backend for WebAssembly and a "custom linker" for now which will hopefully one day be direct calls to lld. Notable features of this target include: * There is zero runtime footprint. The target assumes nothing exists other than the wasm32 instruction set. * There is zero toolchain footprint beyond adding the target. No custom linker is needed, rustc contains everything. * Very small wasm modules can be generated directly from Rust code using this target. * Most of the standard library is stubbed out to return an error, but anything related to allocation works (aka `HashMap`, `Vec`, etc). * Naturally, any `#[no_std]` crate should be 100% compatible with this new target. This target is currently somewhat janky due to how linking works. The "linking" is currently unconditional whole program LTO (aka LLVM is being used as a linker). Naturally that means compiling programs is pretty slow! Eventually though this target should have a linker. This target is also intended to be quite experimental. I'm hoping that this can act as a catalyst for further experimentation in Rust with WebAssembly. Breaking changes are very likely to land to this target, so it's not recommended to rely on it in any critical capacity yet. We'll let you know when it's "production ready". --- Currently testing-wise this target is looking pretty good but isn't complete. I've got almost the entire `run-pass` test suite working with this target (lots of tests ignored, but many passing as well). The `core` test suite is still getting LLVM bugs fixed to get that working and will take some time. Relatively simple programs all seem to work though! --- It's worth nothing that you may not immediately see the "smallest possible wasm module" for the input you feed to rustc. For various reasons it's very difficult to get rid of the final "bloat" in vanilla rustc (again, a real linker should fix all this). For now what you'll have to do is: cargo install --git https://github.com/alexcrichton/wasm-gc wasm-gc foo.wasm bar.wasm And then `bar.wasm` should be the smallest we can get it! --- In any case for now I'd love feedback on this, particularly on the various integration points if you've got better ideas of how to approach them!
2017-11-08std: Remove `rand` crate and moduleAlex Crichton-1/+1
This commit removes the `rand` crate from the standard library facade as well as the `__rand` module in the standard library. Neither of these were used in any meaningful way in the standard library itself. The only need for randomness in libstd is to initialize the thread-local keys of a `HashMap`, and that unconditionally used `OsRng` defined in the standard library anyway. The cruft of the `rand` crate and the extra `rand` support in the standard library makes libstd slightly more difficult to port to new platforms, namely WebAssembly which doesn't have any randomness at all (without interfacing with JS). The purpose of this commit is to clarify and streamline randomness in libstd, focusing on how it's only required in one location, hashmap seeds. Note that the `rand` crate out of tree has almost always been a drop-in replacement for the `rand` crate in-tree, so any usage (accidental or purposeful) of the crate in-tree should switch to the `rand` crate on crates.io. This then also has the further benefit of avoiding duplication (mostly) between the two crates!
2017-06-21Integrate jobserver support to parallel codegenAlex Crichton-0/+3
This commit integrates the `jobserver` crate into the compiler. The crate was previously integrated in to Cargo as part of rust-lang/cargo#4110. The purpose here is to two-fold: * Primarily the compiler can cooperate with Cargo on parallelism. When you run `cargo build -j4` then this'll make sure that the entire build process between Cargo/rustc won't use more than 4 cores, whereas today you'd get 4 rustc instances which may all try to spawn lots of threads. * Secondarily rustc/Cargo can now integrate with a foreign GNU `make` jobserver. This means that if you call cargo/rustc from `make` or another jobserver-compatible implementation it'll use foreign parallelism settings instead of creating new ones locally. As the number of parallel codegen instances in the compiler continues to grow over time with the advent of incremental compilation it's expected that this'll become more of a problem, so this is intended to nip concurrent concerns in the bud by having all the tools to cooperate! Note that while rustc has support for itself creating a jobserver it's far more likely that rustc will always use the jobserver configured by Cargo. Cargo today will now set a jobserver unconditionally for rustc to use.
2017-04-03Move libXtest into libX/testsStjepan Glavina-2/+2
This change moves: 1. `libcoretest` into `libcore/tests` 2. `libcollectionstest` into `libcollections/tests` This is a follow-up to #39561.
2017-02-06Extract collections benchmarks to libcollections/benchesSon-2/+2
And libcore/benches
2017-02-04Extract libcore benchmarks to a separate folderSon-4/+3
2016-12-29Fallout from updating bootstrap CargoAlex Crichton-3/+4
2016-11-25rustbuild: Point to core and collections's external benchmarks.Ulrik Sverdrup-0/+5
2016-06-04No build.rs for libcoreJohn Ericson-1/+0
2016-05-12rustbuild: Add support for crate tests + doctestsAlex Crichton-0/+4
This commit adds support to rustbuild to run crate unit tests (those defined by `#[test]`) as well as documentation tests. All tests are powered by `cargo test` under the hood. Each step requires the `libtest` library is built for that corresponding stage. Ideally the `test` crate would be a dev-dependency, but for now it's just easier to ensure that we sequence everything in the right order. Currently no filtering is implemented, so there's not actually a method of testing *only* libstd or *only* libcore, but rather entire swaths of crates are tested all at once. A few points of note here are: * The `coretest` and `collectionstest` crates are just listed as `[[test]]` entires for `cargo test` to naturally pick up. This mean that `cargo test -p core` actually runs all the tests for libcore. * Libraries that aren't tested all mention `test = false` in their `Cargo.toml` * Crates aren't currently allowed to have dev-dependencies due to rust-lang/cargo#860, but we can likely alleviate this restriction once workspaces are implemented. cc #31590
2016-03-20Update snapshots to 2016-03-18 (235d774).Eduard Burtescu-0/+1
2016-02-11bootstrap: Add a bunch of Cargo.toml filesAlex Crichton-0/+9
These describe the structure of all our crate dependencies.