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2019-01-25Rebase to the llvm-project monorepoJosh Stone-0/+0
The new git submodule src/llvm-project is a monorepo replacing src/llvm and src/tools/{clang,lld,lldb}. This also serves as a rebase for these projects to the new 8.x branch from trunk. The src/llvm-emscripten fork is unchanged for now.
2018-11-25Upgrade to LLVM trunkAlex Crichton-0/+0
2018-08-31Update LLVM submoduleAlex Crichton-0/+0
This commit updates the LLVM submodule to the current trunk of LLVM itself. This brings a few notable improvements for the wasm target: * Support for wasm atomic instructions is greatly improved * Renamed memory wasm intrinsics are fully supported * LLD has fixed a quadratic execution bug with large numbers of relocations in wasm files. The compiler-rt submodule has been updated in tandem as well.
2018-08-19update lld submodule to include RISCV patchDan Callaghan-0/+0
This pulls in one new commit, to add support for linking static RISCV binaries, suitable for the new riscv32imac-unknown-none-elf target. See: https://github.com/rust-lang/lld/pull/1
2018-08-04Update LLVM submodule to 7.0Alex Crichton-0/+0
This commit updates the following submodules to LLVM's [recently branched][1] 7.0 release branch: * src/llvm * src/tools/lld * src/libcompiler_builtins/compiler-rt [1]: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-August/125004.html Closes #52970
2018-07-10Upgrade to LLVM's master branch (LLVM 7)Alex Crichton-0/+0
This commit upgrades the main LLVM submodule to LLVM's current master branch. The LLD submodule is updated in tandem as well as compiler-builtins. Along the way support was also added for LLVM 7's new features. This primarily includes the support for custom section concatenation natively in LLD so we now add wasm custom sections in LLVM IR rather than having custom support in rustc itself for doing so. Some other miscellaneous changes are: * We now pass `--gc-sections` to `wasm-ld` * The optimization level is now passed to `wasm-ld` * A `--stack-first` option is passed to LLD to have stack overflow always cause a trap instead of corrupting static data * The wasm target for LLVM switched to `wasm32-unknown-unknown`. * The syntax for aligned pointers has changed in LLVM IR and tests are updated to reflect this. * The `thumbv6m-none-eabi` target is disabled due to an [LLVM bug][llbug] Nowadays we've been mostly only upgrading whenever there's a major release of LLVM but enough changes have been happening on the wasm target that there's been growing motivation for quite some time now to upgrade out version of LLD. To upgrade LLD, however, we need to upgrade LLVM to avoid needing to build yet another version of LLVM on the builders. The revision of LLVM in use here is arbitrarily chosen. We will likely need to continue to update it over time if and when we discover bugs. Once LLVM 7 is fully released we can switch to that channel as well. [llbug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37382
2018-03-03rust: Import LLD for linking wasm objectsAlex Crichton-0/+0
This commit imports the LLD project from LLVM to serve as the default linker for the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target. The `binaryen` submoule is consequently removed along with "binaryen linker" support in rustc. Moving to LLD brings with it a number of benefits for wasm code: * LLD is itself an actual linker, so there's no need to compile all wasm code with LTO any more. As a result builds should be *much* speedier as LTO is no longer forcibly enabled for all builds of the wasm target. * LLD is quickly becoming an "official solution" for linking wasm code together. This, I believe at least, is intended to be the main supported linker for native code and wasm moving forward. Picking up support early on should help ensure that we can help LLD identify bugs and otherwise prove that it works great for all our use cases! * Improvements to the wasm toolchain are currently primarily focused around LLVM and LLD (from what I can tell at least), so it's in general much better to be on this bandwagon for bugfixes and new features. * Historical "hacks" like `wasm-gc` will soon no longer be necessary, LLD will [natively implement][gc] `--gc-sections` (better than `wasm-gc`!) which means a postprocessor is no longer needed to show off Rust's "small wasm binary size". LLD is added in a pretty standard way to rustc right now. A new rustbuild target was defined for building LLD, and this is executed when a compiler's sysroot is being assembled. LLD is compiled against the LLVM that we've got in tree, which means we're currently on the `release_60` branch, but this may get upgraded in the near future! LLD is placed into rustc's sysroot in a `bin` directory. This is similar to where `gcc.exe` can be found on Windows. This directory is automatically added to `PATH` whenever rustc executes the linker, allowing us to define a `WasmLd` linker which implements the interface that `wasm-ld`, LLD's frontend, expects. Like Emscripten the LLD target is currently only enabled for Tier 1 platforms, notably OSX/Windows/Linux, and will need to be installed manually for compiling to wasm on other platforms. LLD is by default turned off in rustbuild, and requires a `config.toml` option to be enabled to turn it on. Finally the unstable `#![wasm_import_memory]` attribute was also removed as LLD has a native option for controlling this. [gc]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42511