| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Lines | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018-03-22 | rustc: Add a `#[wasm_custom_section]` attribute | Alex Crichton | -31/+0 | |
| This commit is an implementation of adding custom sections to wasm artifacts in rustc. The intention here is to expose the ability of the wasm binary format to contain custom sections with arbitrary user-defined data. Currently neither our version of LLVM nor LLD supports this so the implementation is currently custom to rustc itself. The implementation here is to attach a `#[wasm_custom_section = "foo"]` attribute to any `const` which has a type like `[u8; N]`. Other types of constants aren't supported yet but may be added one day! This should hopefully be enough to get off the ground with *some* custom section support. The current semantics are that any constant tagged with `#[wasm_custom_section]` section will be *appended* to the corresponding section in the final output wasm artifact (and this affects dependencies linked in as well, not just the final crate). This means that whatever is interpreting the contents must be able to interpret binary-concatenated sections (or each constant needs to be in its own custom section). To test this change the existing `run-make` test suite was moved to a `run-make-fulldeps` folder and a new `run-make` test suite was added which applies to all targets by default. This test suite currently only has one test which only runs for the wasm target (using a node.js script to use `WebAssembly` in JS to parse the wasm output). | ||||
| 2014-02-14 | extern mod => extern crate | Alex Crichton | -1/+1 | |
| This was previously implemented, and it just needed a snapshot to go through | ||||
| 2014-02-07 | Added tests to make tidy | Derek Guenther | -0/+20 | |
| 2014-02-06 | Redesign output flags for rustc | Alex Crichton | -1/+1 | |
| This commit removes the -c, --emit-llvm, -s, --rlib, --dylib, --staticlib, --lib, and --bin flags from rustc, adding the following flags: * --emit=[asm,ir,bc,obj,link] * --crate-type=[dylib,rlib,staticlib,bin,lib] The -o option has also been redefined to be used for *all* flavors of outputs. This means that we no longer ignore it for libraries. The --out-dir remains the same as before. The new logic for files that rustc emits is as follows: 1. Output types are dictated by the --emit flag. The default value is --emit=link, and this option can be passed multiple times and have all options stacked on one another. 2. Crate types are dictated by the --crate-type flag and the #[crate_type] attribute. The flags can be passed many times and stack with the crate attribute. 3. If the -o flag is specified, and only one output type is specified, the output will be emitted at this location. If more than one output type is specified, then the filename of -o is ignored, and all output goes in the directory that -o specifies. The -o option always ignores the --out-dir option. 4. If the --out-dir flag is specified, all output goes in this directory. 5. If -o and --out-dir are both not present, all output goes in the current directory of the process. 6. When multiple output types are specified, the filestem of all output is the same as the name of the CrateId (derived from a crate attribute or from the filestem of the crate file). Closes #7791 Closes #11056 Closes #11667 | ||||
| 2013-11-29 | Add a new run-make test directory | Alex Crichton | -0/+11 | |
| This infrastructure is meant to support runnings tests that involve various interesting interdependencies about the types of crates being linked or possibly interacting with C libraries. The goal of these make tests is to not restrict them to a particular test runner, but allow each test to run its own tests. To this end, there is a new src/test/run-make directory which has sub-folders of tests. Each test requires a `Makefile`, and running the tests constitues simply running `make` inside the directory. The new target is `check-stageN-rmake`. These tests will have the destination directory (as TMPDIR) and the local rust compiler (as RUSTC) passed along to them. There is also some helpful cross-platform utilities included in src/test/run-make/tools.mk to aid with compiling C programs and running them. The impetus for adding this new test suite is to allow various interesting forms of testing rust linkage. All of the tests initially added are various flavors of compiling Rust and C with one another as well as just making sure that rust linkage works in general. Closes #10434 | ||||
