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2016-04-07Auto merge of #32016 - nikomatsakis:incr-comp-save, r=mwbors-3/+21
Save/load incremental compilation dep graph Contains the code to serialize/deserialize the dep graph to disk between executions. We also hash the item contents and compare to the new hashes. Also includes a unit test harness. There are definitely some known limitations, such as https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32014 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32015, but I am leaving those for follow-up work. Note that this PR builds on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/32007, so the overlapping commits can be excluded from review. r? @michaelwoerister
2016-04-06Auto merge of #32230 - GuillaumeGomez:extend_css, r=alexcrichtonbors-49/+4
Add --extend-css option to rustdoc Fixes #32223 r? @brson
2016-04-06add code to persist graph and for unit-testingNiko Matsakis-0/+8
2016-04-06make an incremental crateNiko Matsakis-2/+12
for now, this houses `svh` and the code to check `assert_dep_graph` is sane
2016-04-06restructure rustc options relating to incr. comp.Niko Matsakis-1/+1
You can now pass `-Z incremental=dir` as well as saying `-Z query-dep-graph` if you want to enable queries for some other purpose. Accessor functions take the place of computed boolean flags.
2016-04-06rustc: retire hir::map's paths.Eduard Burtescu-2/+17
2016-04-06rustc: move rustc_front to rustc::hir.Eduard Burtescu-15/+12
2016-04-05Rollup merge of #32596 - soltanmm:lazy, r=nikomatsakisManish Goregaokar-8/+17
Plumb obligations through librustc/infer Like #32542, but more like #31867. TODO before merge: make an issue for the propagation of obligations through... uh, everywhere... then replace the `#????`s with the actual issue number. cc @jroesch r? @nikomatsakis
2016-04-05Centralize nightly compiler flags handlingGuillaume Gomez-49/+4
2016-04-04Address nitsMasood Malekghassemi-3/+3
2016-04-03Auto merge of #32210 - Aatch:mir-traversal, r=nikomatsakisbors-7/+13
rBreak Critical Edges and other MIR work This PR is built on top of #32080. This adds the basic depth-first traversals for MIR, preorder, postorder and reverse postorder. The MIR blocks are now translated using reverse postorder. There is also a transform for breaking critical edges, which includes the edges from `invoke`d calls (`Drop` and `Call`), to account for the fact that we can't add code after an `invoke`. It also stops generating the intermediate block (since the transform essentially does it if necessary already). The kinds of cases this deals with are difficult to produce, so the test is the one I managed to get. However, it seems to bootstrap with `-Z orbit`, which it didn't before my changes.
2016-04-02Auto merge of #32549 - respeccing:rust_backtrace_disabled, r=alexcrichtonbors-1/+4
allow RUST_BACKTRACE=0 to act as if unset **UPDATE:** `RUST_BACKTRACE=0` to act as if the env. var is unset! (now `0` is what `disabled` was for, below) When RUST_BACKTRACE is set to "disabled" then this acts as if the env. var is unset. So, either make sure `RUST_BACKTRACE` is not set OR set it to `disabled` to achieve the same effect. Sample usage: ```bash $ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled /tmp/a.out !! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63' thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1 note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace. $ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && RUST_BACKTRACE=1 /tmp/a.out !! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63' thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1 stack backtrace: 1: 0x55709e8148c0 - sys::backtrace::tracing::imp::write::h140f24a0cfc189b98Ru 2: 0x55709e816a5b - panicking::default_hook::_$u7b$$u7b$closure$u7d$$u7d$::closure.45165 3: 0x55709e8166e8 - panicking::default_hook::hed419823688cb82aXoA 4: 0x55709e810fff - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind_inner::hbb9642f6e212d56fmHt 5: 0x55709e810513 - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind::h16232867470678019594 6: 0x55709e810489 - main::hb524f9576270962feaa 7: 0x55709e816314 - sys_common::unwind::try::try_fn::h1274188004693518534 8: 0x55709e813dfb - __rust_try 9: 0x55709e815dab - rt::lang_start::h712b1cd650781872ahA 10: 0x55709e810679 - main 11: 0x7efd1026859f - __libc_start_main 12: 0x55709e810348 - _start 13: 0x0 - <unknown> ``` Some programs(eg. [vim's syntactic](https://github.com/scrooloose/syntastic) used by [rust.vim](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust.vim)) cannot unset the env. var RUST_BACKTRACE if it's already set(eg. in .bashrc) but [they can set it to some value](https://github.com/respeccing/gentooskyline/blob/cb5533e1598f871d3fdf7c3d8248ce767b5b9360/system/Z575/OSes/gentoo/on_baremetal/filesystem_now/gentoo/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust.vim/upd#L17), and I needed to ensure the env. var is unset in order to avoid this issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29293 **EDIT:** Sample usage 2: ```bash $ export RUST_BACKTRACE=1 $ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && /tmp/a.out !! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63' thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1 stack backtrace: 1: 0x55c2696738c0 - sys::backtrace::tracing::imp::write::h140f24a0cfc189b98Ru 2: 0x55c269675a5b - panicking::default_hook::_$u7b$$u7b$closure$u7d$$u7d$::closure.45165 3: 0x55c2696756e8 - panicking::default_hook::hed419823688cb82aXoA 4: 0x55c26966ffff - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind_inner::hbb9642f6e212d56fmHt 5: 0x55c26966f513 - sys_common::unwind::begin_unwind::h16023941661074805588 6: 0x55c26966f489 - main::hb524f9576270962feaa 7: 0x55c269675314 - sys_common::unwind::try::try_fn::h1274188004693518534 8: 0x55c269672dfb - __rust_try 9: 0x55c269674dab - rt::lang_start::h712b1cd650781872ahA 10: 0x55c26966f679 - main 11: 0x7f593d58459f - __libc_start_main 12: 0x55c26966f348 - _start 13: 0x0 - <unknown> $ rustc -o /tmp/a.out -- <(echo 'fn main(){ panic!() }') && RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled /tmp/a.out !! executing '/home/zazdxscf/build/1nonpkgs/rust/rust//x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/bin//rustc' with args: '-o /tmp/a.out -- /dev/fd/63' thread '<main>' panicked at 'explicit panic', /dev/fd/63:1 note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace. ```
2016-04-01Auto merge of #32544 - alexcrichton:rustbuild-dist-libtest, r=brsonbors-1/+0
rustbuild: Fix dist for non-host targets The `rust-std` package that we produce is expected to have not only the standard library but also libtest for compiling unit tests. Unfortunately this does not currently happen due to the way rustbuild is structured. There are currently two main stages of compilation in rustbuild, one for the standard library and one for the compiler. This is primarily done to allow us to fill in the sysroot right after the standard library has finished compiling to continue compiling the rest of the crates. Consequently the entire compiler does not have to explicitly depend on the standard library, and this also should allow us to pull in crates.io dependencies into the build in the future because they'll just naturally build against the std we just produced. These phases, however, do not represent a cross-compiled build. Target-only builds also require libtest, and libtest is currently part of the all-encompassing "compiler build". There's unfortunately no way to learn about just libtest and its dependencies (in a great and robust fashion) so to ensure that we can copy the right artifacts over this commit introduces a new build step, libtest. The new libtest build step has documentation, dist, and link steps as std/rustc already do. The compiler now depends on libtest instead of libstd, and all compiler crates can now assume that test and its dependencies are implicitly part of the sysroot (hence explicit dependencies being removed). This makes the build a tad less parallel as in theory many rustc crates can be compiled in parallel with libtest, but this likely isn't where we really need parallelism either (all the time is still spent in the compiler). All in all this allows the `dist-std` step to depend on both libstd and libtest, so `rust-std` packages produced by rustbuild should start having both the standard library and libtest. Closes #32523
2016-04-01rustbuild: Fix dist for non-host targetsAlex Crichton-1/+0
The `rust-std` package that we produce is expected to have not only the standard library but also libtest for compiling unit tests. Unfortunately this does not currently happen due to the way rustbuild is structured. There are currently two main stages of compilation in rustbuild, one for the standard library and one for the compiler. This is primarily done to allow us to fill in the sysroot right after the standard library has finished compiling to continue compiling the rest of the crates. Consequently the entire compiler does not have to explicitly depend on the standard library, and this also should allow us to pull in crates.io dependencies into the build in the future because they'll just naturally build against the std we just produced. These phases, however, do not represent a cross-compiled build. Target-only builds also require libtest, and libtest is currently part of the all-encompassing "compiler build". There's unfortunately no way to learn about just libtest and its dependencies (in a great and robust fashion) so to ensure that we can copy the right artifacts over this commit introduces a new build step, libtest. The new libtest build step has documentation, dist, and link steps as std/rustc already do. The compiler now depends on libtest instead of libstd, and all compiler crates can now assume that test and its dependencies are implicitly part of the sysroot (hence explicit dependencies being removed). This makes the build a tad less parallel as in theory many rustc crates can be compiled in parallel with libtest, but this likely isn't where we really need parallelism either (all the time is still spent in the compiler). All in all this allows the `dist-std` step to depend on both libstd and libtest, so `rust-std` packages produced by rustbuild should start having both the standard library and libtest. Closes #32523
2016-03-31allow RUST_BACKTRACE=0 to act as if unsetEmanuel Czirai-1/+4
/# This is a combination of 16 commits. /# The first commit's message is: allow RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled to act as if unset When RUST_BACKTRACE is set to "disabled" then this acts as if the env. var is unset. /# This is the 2nd commit message: case insensitive "DiSaBLeD" RUST_BACKTRACE value previously it expected a lowercase "disabled" to treat the env. var as unset /# This is the 3rd commit message: RUST_BACKTRACE=0 acts as if unset previously RUST_BACKTRACE=disabled was doing the same thing /# This is the 4th commit message: RUST_BACKTRACE=0|n|no|off acts as if unset previously only RUST_BACKTRACE=0 acted as if RUST_BACKTRACE was unset Now added more options (case-insensitive): 'n','no' and 'off' eg. RUST_BACKTRACE=oFF /# This is the 5th commit message: DRY on the value of 2 DRY=don't repeat yourself Because having to remember to keep the two places of '2' in sync is not ideal, even though this is a simple enough case. /# This is the 6th commit message: Revert "DRY on the value of 2" This reverts commit 95a0479d5cf72a2b2d9d21ec0bed2823ed213fef. Nevermind this DRY on 2, because we already have a RY on 1, besides the code is less readable this way... /# This is the 7th commit message: attempt to document unsetting RUST_BACKTRACE /# This is the 8th commit message: curb allocations when checking for RUST_BACKTRACE this means we don't check for case-insensitivity anymore /# This is the 9th commit message: as decided, RUST_BACKTRACE=0 turns off backtrace /# This is the 10th commit message: RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE=0 acts as if unset (that is, capture is on) Any other value acts as if nocapture is enabled (that is, capture is off) /# This is the 11th commit message: update other RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE occurrences apparently only one place needs updating /# This is the 12th commit message: update RUST_BACKTRACE in man page /# This is the 13th commit message: handle an occurrence of RUST_BACKTRACE /# This is the 14th commit message: ensure consistency with new rules for backtrace /# This is the 15th commit message: a more concise comment for RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE /# This is the 16th commit message: update RUST_TEST_NOCAPTURE in man page
2016-03-31Turn break critical edges into a MIR passJames Miller-12/+11
Also adds a new set of passes to run just before translation that "prepare" the MIR for codegen. Removal of landing pads, region erasure and break critical edges are run in this pass. Also fixes some merge/rebase errors.
2016-03-31Rollup merge of #32494 - pnkfelix:gate-parser-recovery-via-debugflag, r=nrcManish Goregaokar-0/+4
Gate parser recovery via debugflag Gate parser recovery via debugflag Put in `-Z continue_parse_after_error` This works by adding a method, `fn abort_if_no_parse_recovery`, to the diagnostic handler in `syntax::errors`, and calling it after each error is emitted in the parser. (We might consider adding a debugflag to do such aborts in other places where we are currently attempting recovery, such as resolve, but I think the parser is the really important case to handle in the face of #31994 and the parser bugs of varying degrees that were injected by parse error recovery.) r? @nikomatsakis
2016-03-30Put in `-Z continue-parse-after-error`Felix S. Klock II-0/+4
This works by adding a boolean flag, `continue_after_error`, to `syntax::errors::Handler` that can be imperatively set to `true` or `false` via a new `fn set_continue_after_error`. The flag starts off true (since we generally try to recover from compiler errors, and `Handler` is shared across all phases). Then, during the `phase_1_parse_input`, we consult the setting of the `-Z continue-parse-after-error` debug flag to determine whether we should leave the flag set to `true` or should change it to `false`. ---- (We might consider adding a debugflag to do such aborts in other places where we are currently attempting recovery, such as resolve, but I think the parser is the really important case to handle in the face of #31994 and the parser bugs of varying degrees that were injected by parse error recovery.)
2016-03-30move `const_eval` and `check_match` out of `librustc`Oliver Schneider-1/+5
2016-03-29Plumb obligations through librustc/inferMasood Malekghassemi-8/+17
2016-03-30Add and use a break critical edges transformJames Miller-1/+8
This is a fairly standard transform that inserts blocks along critical edges so code can be inserted along the edge without it affecting other edges. The main difference is that it considers a Drop or Call terminator that would require an `invoke` instruction in LLVM a critical edge. This is because we can't actually insert code after an invoke, so it ends up looking similar to a critical edge anyway. The transform is run just before translation right now.
2016-03-29Auto merge of #32571 - eddyb:llvm-back-to-back, r=alexcrichtonbors-0/+4
Weed out dependencies on librustc_llvm and librustc. Found while working on #32570. cc @nikomatsakis
2016-03-29Remove unnecessary dependencies on rustc_llvm.Eduard Burtescu-0/+4
2016-03-28Refactor s.t. TypeRelation implementors don't escape InferCtxtMasood Malekghassemi-14/+11
2016-03-27rustc_trans: move the contents of the trans module to top-level.Eduard Burtescu-1/+1
2016-03-27rustc_trans: move save to librustc_save_analysis.Eduard Burtescu-1/+3
2016-03-27rustc: move cfg, infer, traits and ty from middle to top-level.Eduard Burtescu-20/+20
2016-03-27rustc: move middle::subst into middle::ty.Eduard Burtescu-2/+2
2016-03-25store krate information more uniformlyNiko Matsakis-1/+1
make DefPath store krate and enable uniform access to crate_name/crate_disambiguator
2016-03-25Make the compiler emit an error if the crate graph contains two crates with ↵Michael Woerister-3/+7
the same crate-name and crate-salt but different SVHs.
2016-03-25Make the definite name of the local crate available in the tcx.Michael Woerister-0/+2
2016-03-25Compute a salt from arguments passed via -Cmetadata.Michael Woerister-5/+30
2016-03-22fix alignmentJorge Aparicio-16/+16
2016-03-22sprinkle feature gates here and thereJorge Aparicio-0/+1
2016-03-22try! -> ?Jorge Aparicio-58/+58
Automated conversion using the untry tool [1] and the following command: ``` $ find -name '*.rs' -type f | xargs untry ``` at the root of the Rust repo. [1]: https://github.com/japaric/untry
2016-03-22Auto merge of #32156 - pnkfelix:borrowck-on-mir-move-analysis, r=nikomatsakisbors-8/+13
Move analysis for MIR borrowck This PR adds code for doing MIR-based gathering of the moves in a `fn` and the dataflow to determine where uninitialized locations flow to, analogous to how the same thing is done in `borrowck`. It also adds a couple attributes to print out graphviz visualizations of the analyzed MIR that includes the dataflow analysis results. cc @nikomatsakis
2016-03-21scaffolding for borrowck on MIR.Felix S. Klock II-8/+13
emit (via debug!) scary message from `fn borrowck_mir` until basic prototype is in place. Gather children of move paths and set their kill bits in dataflow. (Each node has a link to the child that is first among its siblings.) Hooked in libgraphviz based rendering, including of borrowck dataflow state. doing this well required some refactoring of the code, so I cleaned it up more generally (adding comments to explain what its trying to do and how it is doing it). Update: this newer version addresses most review comments (at least the ones that were largely mechanical changes), but I left the more interesting revisions to separate followup commits (in this same PR).
2016-03-20Utilize `if..let` over single `match` branch.Corey Farwell-33/+28
2016-03-20Remove double-negative conditionals.Corey Farwell-6/+6
2016-03-20Replace unneeded owned `Vec` usage with `slice`.Corey Farwell-3/+3
2016-03-14Auto merge of #30652 - aturon:specialization, r=nikomatsakisbors-1/+5
Implement RFC 1210: impl specialization This PR implements [impl specialization](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1210), carefully following the proposal laid out in the RFC. The implementation covers the bulk of the RFC. The remaining gaps I know of are: - no checking for lifetime-dependent specialization (a soundness hole); - no `default impl` yet; - no support for `default` with associated consts; I plan to cover these gaps in follow-up PRs, as per @nikomatsakis's preference. The basic strategy is to build up a *specialization graph* during coherence checking. Insertion into the graph locates the right place to put an impl in the specialization hierarchy; if there is no right place (due to partial overlap but no containment), you get an overlap error. Specialization is consulted when selecting an impl (of course), and the graph is consulted when propagating defaults down the specialization hierarchy. You might expect that the specialization graph would be used during selection -- i.e., when actually performing specialization. This is not done for two reasons: - It's merely an optimization: given a set of candidates that apply, we can determine the most specialized one by comparing them directly for specialization, rather than consulting the graph. Given that we also cache the results of selection, the benefit of this optimization is questionable. - To build the specialization graph in the first place, we need to use selection (because we need to determine whether one impl specializes another). Dealing with this reentrancy would require some additional mode switch for selection. Given that there seems to be no strong reason to use the graph anyway, we stick with a simpler approach in selection, and use the graph only for propagating default implementations. Trait impl selection can succeed even when multiple impls can apply, as long as they are part of the same specialization family. In that case, it returns a *single* impl on success -- this is the most specialized impl *known* to apply. However, if there are any inference variables in play, the returned impl may not be the actual impl we will use at trans time. Thus, we take special care to avoid projecting associated types unless either (1) the associated type does not use `default` and thus cannot be overridden or (2) all input types are known concretely. r? @nikomatsakis
2016-03-14Fixes after rebaseAaron Turon-1/+5
2016-03-14Auto merge of #32169 - mitaa:anon-tip, r=nrcbors-11/+14
Allow custom filenames for anonymous inputs This came out of #29253 but doesn't fix it. I thought it might be worth merging on its own nonetheless.
2016-03-14Allow custom filenames for anonymous inputsmitaa-11/+14
2016-03-13Auto merge of #31916 - nagisa:mir-passmgr-2, r=arielb1bors-39/+43
Add Pass manager for MIR A new PR, since rebasing the original one (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/31448) properly was a pain. Since then there has been several changes most notable of which: 1. Removed the pretty-printing with `#[rustc_mir(graphviz/pretty)]`, mostly because we now have `--unpretty=mir`, IMHO that’s the direction we should expand this functionality into; 2. Reverted the infercx change done for typeck, because typeck can make an infercx for itself by being a `MirMapPass` r? @nikomatsakis
2016-03-12Implement --unpretty mir-cfg for graphviz outputSimonas Kazlauskas-29/+28
Also change output for --unpretty mir to output function names in a prettier way.
2016-03-09Auto merge of #31710 - eddyb:reify, r=nikomatsakisbors-10/+9
Distinguish fn item types to allow reification from nothing to fn pointers. The first commit is a rebase of #26284, except for files that have moved since. This is a [breaking-change], due to: * each FFI function has a distinct type, like all other functions currently do * all generic parameters on functions are recorded in their item types, e.g.: `size_of::<u8>` & `size_of::<i8>`'s types differ despite their identical signature. * function items are zero-sized, which will stop transmutes from working on them The first two cases are handled in most cases with the new coerce-unify logic, which will combine incompatible function item types into function pointers, at the outer-most level of if-else chains, match arms and array literals. The last case is specially handled during type-checking such that transmutes from a function item type to a pointer or integer type will continue to work for another release cycle, but are being linted against. To get rid of warnings and ensure your code will continue to compile, cast to a pointer before transmuting.
2016-03-09Auto merge of #32073 - jseyfried:fix_another_trait_privacy_error, r=nikomatsakisbors-4/+1
Fix incorrect trait privacy error This PR fixes #21670 by using the crate metadata instead of `ExternalExports` to determine if an external item is public. r? @nikomatsakis
2016-03-09Split TyBareFn into TyFnDef and TyFnPtr.Eli Friedman-10/+9
There's a lot of stuff wrong with the representation of these types: TyFnDef doesn't actually uniquely identify a function, TyFnPtr is used to represent method calls, TyFnDef in the sub-expression of a cast isn't correctly reified, and probably some other stuff I haven't discovered yet. Splitting them seems like the right first step, though.
2016-03-09Auto merge of #31631 - jonas-schievink:agoraphobia, r=nrcbors-18/+36
[breaking-batch] Move more uses of `panictry!` out of libsyntax