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2017-04-21Move parse_remaining_bounds into a separate functionVadim Petrochenkov-20/+21
2017-04-21Fix issue with single question mark or parenVadim Petrochenkov-23/+28
2017-04-21syntax: Support parentheses around trait boundsVadim Petrochenkov-4/+25
2017-04-20Reduce visual clutter of multiline start when possibleEsteban Küber-47/+46
When a span starts on a line with nothing but whitespace to the left, and there are no other annotations in that line, simplify the visual representation of the span. Go from: ```rust error[E0072]: recursive type `A` has infinite size --> file2.rs:1:1 | 1 | struct A { | _^ starting here... 2 | | a: A, 3 | | } | |_^ ...ending here: recursive type has infinite size | ``` To: ```rust error[E0072]: recursive type `A` has infinite size --> file2.rs:1:1 | 1 | / struct A { 2 | | a: A, 3 | | } | |_^ recursive type has infinite size ``` Remove `starting here...`/`...ending here` labels from all multiline diagnostics.
2017-04-20Don't panic if an attribute macro fails to resolve at crate rootAustin Bonander-2/+12
Adds temporary regression test; this ideally should work as-is (#41430) Closes #41211
2017-04-21Added feature gate, updated error messages and tests.Cameron Hart-5/+18
2017-04-21Implementation of repr struct alignment RFC 1358.Cameron Hart-7/+45
The main changes around rustc::ty::Layout::struct and rustc_trans:adt: * Added primitive_align field which stores alignment before repr align * Always emit field padding when generating the LLVM struct fields * Added methods for adjusting field indexes from the layout index to the LLVM struct field index The main user of this information is rustc_trans::adt::struct_llfields which determines the LLVM fields to be used by LLVM, including padding fields.
2017-04-20Stabilize RFC 1506 - clarified ADT kindsMatthew-25/+3
2017-04-20Rollup merge of #41214 - estebank:less-multiline, r=petrochenkovCorey Farwell-0/+19
Add a way to get shorter spans until `char` for pointing at defs ```rust error[E0072]: recursive type `X` has infinite size --> file.rs:10:1 | 10 | struct X { | ^^^^^^^^ recursive type has infinite size | = help: insert indirection (e.g., a `Box`, `Rc`, or `&`) at some point to make `X` representable ``` vs ```rust error[E0072]: recursive type `X` has infinite size --> file.rs:10:1 | 10 | struct X { | _^ starting here... 11 | | x: X, 12 | | } | |_^ ...ending here: recursive type has infinite size | = help: insert indirection (e.g., a `Box`, `Rc`, or `&`) at some point to make `X` representable ``` Re: #35965, #38246. Follow up to #38328. r? @jonathandturner
2017-04-18Add top level sections to the Unstable Book.Corey Farwell-3/+0
Prior to this commit, the contents of the Unstable Book were assumed to be unstable features. This commit moves features into 'language features' or 'library features' subsections. It also moves the 'linker_flavor' compiler flag into a new 'Compiler Flags' subsection. Even though it was helpful, I removed the tidy check that cross-references the SUMMARY.md links with the Unstable Book directory contents just because it would be difficult to maintain. Relevant PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/41142.
2017-04-17Auto merge of #41282 - arielb1:missing-impl-item, r=petrochenkovbors-70/+101
libsyntax/parse: fix missing kind error reporting Fixes #41161. Fixes #41239.
2017-04-17libsyntax/parse: improve associated item error reportingAriel Ben-Yehuda-70/+101
Fixes #41161. Fixes #41239.
2017-04-17Auto merge of #41345 - frewsxcv:rollup, r=frewsxcvbors-30/+82
Rollup of 3 pull requests - Successful merges: #41012, #41280, #41290 - Failed merges:
2017-04-17Auto merge of #41264 - alexeyzab:41158-fix-docs, r=steveklabnikbors-2/+2
Fix old docs Fixes #41158
2017-04-17Adjust descriptionalexey zabelin-1/+1
2017-04-15satisfy completely useless tidy checkAlex Burka-1/+1
2017-04-15feature gate :vis matcherAlex Burka-22/+51
2017-04-15widen :vis follow setAlex Burka-4/+4
2017-04-15move NtVis enum variant to stave off comment rotAlex Burka-1/+1
2017-04-15parse interpolated visibility tokensAlex Burka-1/+4
2017-04-15update print_visibility for new pub(restricted) syntaxAlex Burka-8/+6
2017-04-15update :vis implementation to current rustAlex Burka-7/+7
2017-04-15Implementation of the `vis` macro matcher.Daniel Keep-1/+23
2017-04-14Put overlapping impls behind feature gate, add testsSean Griffin-0/+3
I've added some explicit tests that negative impls are allowed to overlap, and also to make sure that the feature doesn't interfere with specialization. I've not added an explicit test for positive overlapping with negative, as that's already tested elsewhere.
2017-04-13Address the PR reviewalexey zabelin-2/+2
2017-04-12Fix old docsalexey zabelin-2/+2
#41158
2017-04-12Add global_asm testsA.J. Gardner-1/+1
2017-04-12First attempt at global_asm! macroA.J. Gardner-0/+40
2017-04-12Rollup merge of #41087 - estebank:tuple-float-index, r=arielb1Tim Neumann-3/+3
Use proper span for tuple index parsed as float Fix diagnostic suggestion from: ```rust help: try parenthesizing the first index | (1, (2, 3)).((1, (2, 3)).1).1; ``` to the correct: ```rust help: try parenthesizing the first index | ((1, (2, 3)).1).1; ``` Fix #41081.
2017-04-12Add a way to get shorter spans until `char` for pointing at defsEsteban Küber-0/+19
```rust error[E0072]: recursive type `X` has infinite size --> file.rs:10:1 | 10 | struct X { | ^^^^^^^^ recursive type has infinite size | = help: insert indirection (e.g., a `Box`, `Rc`, or `&`) at some point to make `X` representable ``` vs ```rust error[E0072]: recursive type `X` has infinite size --> file.rs:10:1 | 10 | struct X { | _^ starting here... 11 | | x: X, 12 | | } | |_^ ...ending here: recursive type has infinite size | = help: insert indirection (e.g., a `Box`, `Rc`, or `&`) at some point to make `X` representable ```
2017-04-11Auto merge of #41174 - estebank:issue-41155, r=nikomatsakisbors-2/+4
Point at only one char on `Span::next_point` Avoid pointing at two chars so the diagnostic output doesn't display a multiline span when starting beyond a line end. Fix #41155. Instead of ```rust error: expected one of `(`, `const`, `default`, `extern`, `fn`, `type`, or `unsafe`, found `}` --> <anon>:3:1 | 1 | impl S { pub | _____________- starting here... 2 | | | | ...ending here: expected one of 7 possible tokens here 3 | } | ^ unexpected token ``` show ```rust error: expected one of `(`, `const`, `default`, `extern`, `fn`, `type`, or `unsafe`, found `}` --> <anon>:13:1 | 12 | pub | - expected one of 7 possible tokens here 13 | } | ^ unexpected token ```
2017-04-10Point at only one char on `Span::next_point`Esteban Küber-2/+4
Avoid pointing at two chars so the diagnostic output doesn't display a multiline span when starting beyond a line end.
2017-04-10Auto merge of #40018 - japaric:ld, r=alexcrichtonbors-0/+3
-Z linker-flavor (Please read the commit message first) This PR is an alternative to rust-lang/rust#36120 (internal lld linker). The main goal of this PR is to make it *possible* to use LLD as a linker to allow out of tree experimentation. Now that LLD is going to be shipped with LLVM 4.0, it should become easier to get a hold of LLD (hopefully, it will be packaged by Linux distros soon). Since LLD is a multiarch linker, it has the potential to make cross compilation easier (less tools need to be installed). Supposedly, LLD is also faster than the gold linker so LLD may improve build times where link times are significant (e.g. 100% incremental compilation reuse). The place where LLD shines is at linking Rust programs that don't depend on system libraries. For example, here's how you would link a bare metal ARM Cortex-M program: ``` $ xargo rustc --target thumbv7m-none-eabi -- -Z linker-flavor=ld -C linker=ld.lld -Z print-link-args "ld.lld" \ "-L" \ "$XARGO_HOME/lib/rustlib/thumbv7m-none-eabi/lib" \ "$PWD/target/thumbv7m-none-eabi/debug/deps/app-de1f86df314ad68c.0.o" \ "-o" \ "$PWD/target/thumbv7m-none-eabi/debug/deps/app-de1f86df314ad68c" \ "--gc-sections" \ "-L" \ "$PWD/target/thumbv7m-none-eabi/debug/deps" \ "-L" \ "$PWD/target/debug/deps" \ "-L" \ "$XARGO_HOME/lib/rustlib/thumbv7m-none-eabi/lib" \ "-Bstatic" \ "-Bdynamic" \ "$XARGO_HOME/lib/rustlib/thumbv7m-none-eabi/lib/libcore-11670d2bd4951fa7.rlib" $ file target/thumbv7m-none-eabi/debug/app app: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, ARM, EABI5 version 1 (SYSV), statically linked, not stripped, with debug_info ``` This doesn't require installing the `arm-none-eabi-gcc` toolchain. Even cooler (but I'm biased) is that you can link Rust programs that use [`steed`] (`steed` is a `std` re-implementation free of C dependencies for Linux systems) instead of `std` for a bunch of different architectures without having to install a single cross toolchain. [`steed`]: https://github.com/japaric/steed ``` $ xargo rustc --target aarch64-unknown-linux-steed --example hello --release -- -Z print-link-args "ld.lld" \ "-L" \ "$XARGO_HOME/lib/rustlib/aarch64-unknown-linux-steed/lib" \ "$PWD/target/aarch64-unknown-linux-steed/release/examples/hello-80c130ad884c0f8f.0.o" \ "-o" \ "$PWD/target/aarch64-unknown-linux-steed/release/examples/hello-80c130ad884c0f8f" \ "--gc-sections" \ "-L" \ "$PWD/target/aarch64-unknown-linux-steed/release/deps" \ "-L" \ "$PWD/target/release/deps" \ "-L" \ "$XARGO_HOME/lib/rustlib/aarch64-unknown-linux-steed/lib" \ "-Bstatic" \ "-Bdynamic" \ "/tmp/rustc.lAybk9Ltx93Q/libcompiler_builtins-589aede02de78434.rlib" $ file target/aarch64-unknown-linux-steed/release/examples/hello hello: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, ARM aarch64, version 1 (SYSV), statically linked, not stripped, with debug_info ``` All these targets (architectures) worked with LLD: - [aarch64-unknown-linux-steed](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/aarch64-unknown-linux-steed.json) - [arm-unknown-linux-steedeabi](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/arm-unknown-linux-steedeabi.json) - [arm-unknown-linux-steedeabihf](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/arm-unknown-linux-steedeabihf.json) - [armv7-unknown-linux-steedeabihf](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/armv7-unknown-linux-steedeabihf.json) - [i686-unknown-linux-steed](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/i686-unknown-linux-steed.json) - [mips-unknown-linux-steed](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/mips-unknown-linux-steed.json) - [mipsel-unknown-linux-steed](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/mipsel-unknown-linux-steed.json) - [powerpc-unknown-linux-steed](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/powerpc-unknown-linux-steed.json) - [powerpc64-unknown-linux-steed](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/powerpc64-unknown-linux-steed.json) - [x86_64-unknown-linux-steed](https://github.com/japaric/steed/blob/lld/docker/x86_64-unknown-linux-steed.json) --- The case where lld is unergonomic is linking binaries that depend on system libraries. Like "Hello, world" for `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`. Because you have to pass as linker arguments: the path to the startup objects, the path to the dynamic linker and the library search paths. And all those are system specific so they can't be encoded in the target itself. ``` $ cargo \ rustc \ --release \ -- \ -C \ linker=ld.lld \ -Z \ linker-flavor=ld \ -C \ link-args='-dynamic-linker /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 -L/usr/lib -L/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/6.3.1 /usr/lib/Scrt1.o /usr/lib/crti.o /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/6.3.1/crtbeginS.o /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/6.3.1/crtendS.o /usr/lib/crtn.o' ``` --- Another case where `-Z linker-flavor` may come in handy is directly calling Solaris' linker which is also a multiarch linker (or so I have heard). cc @binarycrusader cc @alexcrichton Heads up: [breaking-change] due to changes in the target specification format.
2017-04-09Auto merge of #41136 - estebank:multiline, r=jonathandturnerbors-0/+134
Always show end line of multiline annotations ```rust error[E0046]: not all trait items implemented, missing: `Item` --> $DIR/issue-23729.rs:20:9 | 20 | impl Iterator for Recurrence { | _________^ starting here... 21 | | //~^ ERROR E0046 22 | | //~| NOTE missing `Item` in implementation 23 | | //~| NOTE `Item` from trait: `type Item;` ... | 36 | | } 37 | | } | |_________^ ...ending here: missing `Item` in implementation | = note: `Item` from trait: `type Item;` ``` instead of ```rust error[E0046]: not all trait items implemented, missing: `Item` --> $DIR/issue-23729.rs:20:9 | 20 | impl Iterator for Recurrence { | ^ missing `Item` in implementation | = note: `Item` from trait: `type Item;` ```
2017-04-09Always show end line of multiline annotationsEsteban Küber-0/+134
```rust error[E0046]: not all trait items implemented, missing: `Item` --> $DIR/issue-23729.rs:20:9 | 20 | impl Iterator for Recurrence { | _________^ starting here... 21 | | //~^ ERROR E0046 22 | | //~| NOTE missing `Item` in implementation 23 | | //~| NOTE `Item` from trait: `type Item;` ... | 36 | | } 37 | | } | |_________^ ...ending here: missing `Item` in implementation | = note: `Item` from trait: `type Item;` ``` instead of ```rust error[E0046]: not all trait items implemented, missing: `Item` --> $DIR/issue-23729.rs:20:9 | 20 | impl Iterator for Recurrence { | ^ missing `Item` in implementation | = note: `Item` from trait: `type Item;` ```
2017-04-08Auto merge of #40887 - estebank:ty-placeholder, r=petrochenkovbors-3/+31
Introduce `TyErr` independent from `TyInfer` Add a `TyErr` type to represent unknown types in places where parse errors have happened, while still able to build the AST. Initially only used to represent incorrectly written fn arguments and avoid "expected X parameters, found Y" errors when called with the appropriate amount of parameters. We cannot use `TyInfer` for this as `_` is not allowed as a valid argument type. Example output: ```rust error: expected one of `:` or `@`, found `,` --> file.rs:12:9 | 12 | fn bar(x, y: usize) {} | ^ error[E0061]: this function takes 2 parameters but 3 parameters were supplied --> file.rs:19:9 | 12 | fn bar(x, y) {} | --------------- defined here ... 19 | bar(1, 2, 3); | ^^^^^^^ expected 2 parameters ``` Fix #34264.
2017-04-07Merge branch 'master' into ty-placeholderEsteban Küber-38/+126
2017-04-07pub(restricted) didn't make it into 1.17est31-1/+1
Gets shipped in 1.18 instead.
2017-04-07hack: add a linker_flavor feature gateJorge Aparicio-0/+3
to make tidy accept `-Z linker-flavor` documentation
2017-04-07Auto merge of #39987 - japaric:used, r=arielb1bors-0/+8
#[used] attribute (For an explanation of what this feature does, read the commit message) I'd like to propose landing this as an experimental feature (experimental as in: no clear stabilization path -- like `asm!`, `#[linkage]`) as it's low maintenance (I think) and relevant to the "Usage in resource-constrained environments" exploration area. The main use case I see is running code before `main`. This could be used, for instance, to cheaply initialize an allocator before `main` where the alternative is to use `lazy_static` to initialize the allocator on its first use which it's more expensive (atomics) and doesn't work on ARM Cortex-M0 microcontrollers (no `AtomicUsize` on that platform) Here's a `std` example of that: ``` rust unsafe extern "C" fn before_main_1() { println!("Hello"); } unsafe extern "C" fn before_main_2() { println!("World"); } #[link_section = ".init_arary"] #[used] static INIT_ARRAY: [unsafe extern "C" fn(); 2] = [before_main_1, before_main_2]; fn main() { println!("Goodbye"); } ``` ``` $ rustc -C lto -C opt-level=3 before_main.rs $ ./before_main Hello World Goodbye ``` In general, this pattern could be used to let *dependencies* run code before `main` (which sounds like it could go very wrong in some cases). There are probably other use cases; I hope that the people I have cc-ed can comment on those. Note that I'm personally unsure if the above pattern is something we want to promote / allow and that's why I'm proposing this feature as experimental. If this leads to more footguns than benefits then we can just axe the feature. cc @nikomatsakis ^ I know you have some thoughts on having a process for experimental features though I'm fine with writing an RFC before landing this. - `dead_code` lint will have to be updated to special case `#[used]` symbols. - Should we extend `#[used]` to work on non-generic functions? cc rust-lang/rfcs#1002 cc rust-lang/rfcs#1459 cc @dpc @JinShil
2017-04-06Introduce HashStable trait and base ICH implementations on it.Michael Woerister-0/+25
This initial commit provides implementations for HIR, MIR, and everything that also needs to be supported for those two.
2017-04-05Rollup merge of #41050 - jseyfried:fix_derive_parsing, r=petrochenkovCorey Farwell-1/+22
macros: fix bug parsing `#[derive]` invocations Fixes #40962 (introduced in #40346). r? @nrc
2017-04-05document the implementation a bit moreJorge Aparicio-2/+2
2017-04-05Rollup merge of #40815 - estebank:issue-40006, r=GuillaumeGomezAriel Ben-Yehuda-15/+42
Identify missing item category in `impl`s ```rust struct S; impl S { pub hello_method(&self) { println!("Hello"); } } fn main() { S.hello_method(); } ``` ```rust error: missing `fn` for method declaration --> file.rs:3:4 | 3 | pub hello_method(&self) { | ^ missing `fn` ``` Fix #40006. r? @pnkfelix CC @jonathandturner @GuillaumeGomez
2017-04-05add an #[used] attributeJorge Aparicio-0/+8
similar to GCC's __attribute((used))__. This attribute prevents LLVM from optimizing away a non-exported symbol, within a compilation unit (object file), when there are no references to it. This is better explained with an example: ``` #[used] static LIVE: i32 = 0; static REFERENCED: i32 = 0; static DEAD: i32 = 0; fn internal() {} pub fn exported() -> &'static i32 { &REFERENCED } ``` Without optimizations, LLVM pretty much preserves all the static variables and functions within the compilation unit. ``` $ rustc --crate-type=lib --emit=obj symbols.rs && nm -C symbols.o 0000000000000000 t drop::h1be0f8f27a2ba94a 0000000000000000 r symbols::REFERENCED::hb3bdfd46050bc84c 0000000000000000 r symbols::DEAD::hc2ea8f9bd06f380b 0000000000000000 r symbols::LIVE::h0970cf9889edb56e 0000000000000000 T symbols::exported::h6f096c2b1fc292b2 0000000000000000 t symbols::internal::h0ac1aadbc1e3a494 ``` With optimizations, LLVM will drop dead code. Here `internal` is dropped because it's not a exported function/symbol (i.e. not `pub`lic). `DEAD` is dropped for the same reason. `REFERENCED` is preserved, even though it's not exported, because it's referenced by the `exported` function. Finally, `LIVE` survives because of the `#[used]` attribute even though it's not exported or referenced. ``` $ rustc --crate-type=lib -C opt-level=3 --emit=obj symbols.rs && nm -C symbols.o 0000000000000000 r symbols::REFERENCED::hb3bdfd46050bc84c 0000000000000000 r symbols::LIVE::h0970cf9889edb56e 0000000000000000 T symbols::exported::h6f096c2b1fc292b2 ``` Note that the linker knows nothing about `#[used]` and will drop `LIVE` because no other object references to it. ``` $ echo 'fn main() {}' >> symbols.rs $ rustc symbols.rs && nm -C symbols | grep LIVE ``` At this time, `#[used]` only works on `static` variables.
2017-04-05Use proper span for tuple index parsed as floatEsteban Küber-3/+3
Fix diagnostic suggestion from: ```rust help: try parenthesizing the first index | (1, (2, 3)).((1, (2, 3)).1).1; ``` to the correct: ```rust help: try parenthesizing the first index | ((1, (2, 3)).1).1; ```
2017-04-05Rollup merge of #40870 - alexcrichton:stabilize-windows-subsystem, r=aturonCorey Farwell-9/+3
rustc: Stabilize the `#![windows_subsystem]` attribute This commit stabilizes the `#![windows_subsystem]` attribute which is a conservative exposure of the `/SUBSYSTEM` linker flag on Widnows platforms. This is useful for creating applications as well as console programs. Closes #37499
2017-04-04Merge branch 'master' into issue-32540Esteban Küber-1662/+671
2017-04-03Fix bug parsing `#[derive]` macro invocations.Jeffrey Seyfried-1/+22
2017-04-03Merge branch 'master' into issue-40006Esteban Küber-1663/+672