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2024-11-25Support predicate registers (clobber-only) in Hexagon inline assemblyTaiki Endo-0/+37
2024-11-25Fix clobber_abi in RV32E and RV64E inline assemblyTaiki Endo-0/+44
2024-11-24Make asm_goto_with_outputs a separate feature gateGary Guo-1/+1
2024-11-24Support use of asm goto with outputs and `options(noreturn)`Gary Guo-1/+11
When labels are present, the `noreturn` option really means that asm block won't fallthrough -- if labels are present, then outputs can still be meaningfully used.
2024-11-24Fix asm goto with outputsGary Guo-11/+13
When outputs are used together with labels, they are considered to be written for all destinations, not only when falling through.
2024-11-23Rollup merge of #127483 - BertalanD:no_sanitize-global-var, r=rcvalle许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)-0/+10
Allow disabling ASan instrumentation for globals AddressSanitizer adds instrumentation to global variables unless the [`no_sanitize_address`](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#global-attributes) attribute is set on them. This commit extends the existing `#[no_sanitize(address)]` attribute to set this; previously it only had the desired effect on functions. (cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/39699)
2024-11-22Rollup merge of #133102 - RalfJung:aarch64-softfloat, r=davidtwco,wesleywiserMichael Goulet-0/+48
aarch64 softfloat target: always pass floats in int registers This is a part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131058: on softfloat aarch64 targets, the float registers may be unavailable. And yet, LLVM will happily use them to pass float types if the corresponding target features are enabled. That's a problem as it means enabling/disabling `neon` instructions can change the ABI. Other targets have a `soft-float` target feature that forces the use of the soft-float ABI no matter whether float registers are enabled or not; aarch64 has nothing like that. So we follow the aarch64 [softfloat ABI](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131058#issuecomment-2385027423) and treat floats like integers for `extern "C"` functions. For the "Rust" ABI, we do the same for scalars, and then just do something reasonable for ScalarPair that avoids the pointer indirection. Cc ```@workingjubilee```
2024-11-20aarch64 softfloat target: always pass floats in int registersRalf Jung-0/+48
2024-11-17Likely unlikely fixJiri Bobek-13/+91
2024-11-14Always inline functions signatures containing `f16` or `f128`Trevor Gross-0/+29
There are a handful of tier 2 and tier 3 targets that cause a LLVM crash or linker error when generating code that contains `f16` or `f128`. The cranelift backend also does not support these types. To work around this, every function in `std` or `core` that contains these types must be marked `#[inline]` in order to avoid sending any code to the backend unless specifically requested. However, this is inconvenient and easy to forget. Introduce a check for these types in the frontend that automatically inlines any function signatures that take or return `f16` or `f128`. Note that this is not a perfect fix because it does not account for the types being passed by reference or as members of aggregate types, but this is sufficient for what is currently needed in the standard library. Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133035 Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133037
2024-11-14tests: use `max-llvm-major-version` instead of `ignore-llvm-version` range ↵许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)-3/+3
like `N - 99` For tests that use `ignore-llvm-version: N - M`, replace that with `max-llvm-major-version: N-1`.
2024-11-13Add ``exact-llvm-major-version`` directiveKirill Podoprigora-2/+1
2024-11-12Rollup merge of #132702 - 1c3t3a:issue-132615, r=rcvalleMatthias Krüger-0/+19
CFI: Append debug location to CFI blocks Currently we're not appending debug locations to the inserted CFI blocks. This shows up in #132615 and #100783. This change fixes that by passing down the debug location to the CFI type-test generation and appending it to the blocks. Credits also belong to `@jakos-sec` who worked with me on this.
2024-11-11CFI: Append debug location to CFI blocksBastian Kersting-0/+19
2024-11-10Stabilize Arm64EC inline assemblyTaiki Endo-1/+1
2024-11-09Rollup merge of #131258 - taiki-e:s390x-stabilize-asm, r=AmanieuJubilee-1/+1
Stabilize s390x inline assembly This stabilizes inline assembly for s390x (SystemZ). Corresponding reference PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1643 --- From the requirements of stabilization mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93335 > Each architecture needs to be reviewed before stabilization: > - It must have clobber_abi. Done in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130630. > - It must be possible to clobber every register that is normally clobbered by a function call. Done in the PR that added support for clobber_abi. > - Generally review that the exposed register classes make sense. The followings can be used as input/output: - `reg` (`r[0-10]`, `r[12-14]`): General-purpose register - `reg_addr` (`r[1-10]`, `r[12-14]`): General-purpose register except `r0` which is evaluated as zero in an address context This class is needed because `r0`, which may be allocated when using the `reg` class, cannot be used as a register in certain contexts. This is identical to the `a` constraint in LLVM and GCC. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119431 for details. - `freg` (`f[0-15]`): Floating-point register The followings are clobber-only: - `vreg` (`v[0-31]`): Vector register Technically `vreg` should be able to accept `#[repr(simd)]` types as input/output if the unstable `vector` target feature added is enabled, but `core::arch` has no s390x vector type and both `#[repr(simd)]` and `core::simd` are unstable. Everything related is unstable, so the fact that this is currently a clobber-only should not be considered a stabilization blocker. (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130869 tracks unstable stuff here) - `areg` (`a[2-15]`): Access register All of the above register classes except `reg_addr` are needed for `clobber_abi`. The followings cannot be used as operands for inline asm (see also [getReservedRegs](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/SystemZ/SystemZRegisterInfo.cpp#L258-L282) and [SystemZELFRegisters](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/SystemZ/SystemZRegisterInfo.h#L107-L128) in LLVM): - `r11`: frame pointer - `r15`: stack pointer - `a0`, `a1`: Reserved for system use - `c[0-15]` (control register) Reserved by the kernel Although not listed in the above requirements, `preserves_flags` is implemented in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111331. --- cc ``@uweigand`` r? ``@Amanieu`` ``@rustbot`` label +O-SystemZ +A-inline-assembly
2024-11-09Add discriminators to DILocations when multiple functions are inlined into a ↵Kyle Huey-0/+64
single point. LLVM does not expect to ever see multiple dbg_declares for the same variable at the same location with different values. proc-macros make it possible for arbitrary code, including multiple calls that get inlined, to happen at any given location in the source code. Add discriminators when that happens so these locations are different to LLVM. This may interfere with the AddDiscriminators pass in LLVM, which is added by the unstable flag -Zdebug-info-for-profiling. Fixes #131944
2024-11-09Rollup merge of #132777 - durin42:llvm-20-poison-prop, r=nikicMatthias Krüger-1/+10
try_question_mark_nop: update test for LLVM 20 llvm/llvm-project@dd116369f646d023a2e7e5c145a1bed5dcf9a45c changes the IR of this test in a way that I don't think is bad, but needs adjusting. r? `@nikic` `@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
2024-11-09Rollup merge of #132745 - RalfJung:pointee-info-inside-enum, r=DianQKMatthias Krüger-4/+20
pointee_info_at: fix logic for recursing into enums Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131834 The logic in `pointee_info_at` was likely written at a time when the null pointer optimization was the *only* enum layout optimization -- and as `Variant::Multiple` kept getting expanded, nobody noticed that the logic is now unsound. The job of this function is to figure out whether there is a dereferenceable-or-null and aligned pointer at a given offset inside a type. So when we recurse into a multi-variant enum, we better make sure that all the other enum variants must be null! This is the part that was forgotten, and this PR adds it. The reason this didn't explode in many ways so far is that our references only have 1 niche value (null), so it's not possible on stable to have a multi-variant enum with a dereferenceable pointer and other enum variants that are not null. But with `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range` attributes one can force such a layout, and if `@the8472's` work on alignment niches ever lands, that will make this possible on stable.
2024-11-08try_question_mark_nop: update test for LLVM 20Augie Fackler-1/+10
llvm/llvm-project@dd116369f646d023a2e7e5c145a1bed5dcf9a45c changes the IR of this test in a way that I don't think is bad, but needs adjusting. r? @nikic @rustbot label: +llvm-main
2024-11-08pointee_info_at: fix logic for recursing into enumsRalf Jung-4/+20
2024-11-07Rollup merge of #132740 - zmodem:simd_syntax_update, r=durin42Jubilee-3/+3
Update test for LLVM 20's new vector splat syntax that was introduced in https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/112548
2024-11-07Rollup merge of #131913 - jieyouxu:only_debug_assertions, r=onur-ozkanJubilee-9/+11
Add `{ignore,needs}-{rustc,std}-debug-assertions` directive support Add `{ignore,needs}-{rustc,std}-debug-assertions` compiletest directives and retire the old `{ignore,only}-debug` directives. The old `{ignore,only}-debug` directives were ambiguous because you could have std built with debug assertions but rustc not built with debug assertions or vice versa. If we want to support the use case of controlling test run based on if rustc was built with debug assertions, then having `{ignore,only}-debug` will be very confusing. cc ````@matthiaskrgr```` Closes #123987. r? bootstrap (or compiler tbh)
2024-11-08Stabilize s390x inline assemblyTaiki Endo-1/+1
2024-11-07Update test for LLVM 20's new vector splat syntaxHans Wennborg-3/+3
that was introduced in https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/pull/112548
2024-11-07Basic inline assembly support for SPARC and SPARC64Taiki Endo-0/+40
2024-11-06Fix relative lines in coroutine testMatt Weber-2/+2
2024-11-06Use -DAG to handle use of file before definitionWesley Wiser-4/+4
Also fixup the test assertion for msvc and unix
2024-11-06Restructure `compile-flags` for testsMatt Weber-12/+8
Optimization needs to be explicitly disabled now.
2024-11-06Update compile flags formattingMatt Weber-5/+5
2024-11-06Rename generator test fileMatt Weber-7/+7
2024-11-06Rename option and add docMatt Weber-4/+4
2024-11-06Move additional source location info behind -Z optionMatt Weber-14/+15
2024-11-06Move tests into issues directoryMatt Weber-0/+0
2024-11-06Refactor and expand enum testMatt Weber-40/+41
2024-11-06Add test for async function and async blockMatt Weber-0/+25
2024-11-06Allow check lines to exceed normal length limitMatt Weber-0/+8
2024-11-06Separate NONMSVC and MSVC checksMatt Weber-11/+18
2024-11-06Split metadata testing into multiple filesMatt Weber-46/+74
This helps with the fact that the order in which debuginfo is emitted differs between platforms, and is probably not guaranteed to be stable in general.
2024-11-06Add file and line metadata for enum variant and fieldsMatt Weber-2/+4
2024-11-06Add file and line metadata for struct/union membersMatt Weber-2/+7
2024-11-06Add file and line metadata for coroutinesMatt Weber-0/+5
2024-11-06Refactor `type_map::stub` parametersMatt Weber-2/+21
Push span lookup into `type_map::stub` and pass the `DefId` instead of doing the lookup outside and passing in the location metadata.
2024-11-06Add file and line metadata for closuresMatt Weber-1/+5
2024-11-06Add codegen test to validate IR for debuginfoMatt Weber-0/+11
2024-11-06Add `is_ascii` function optimized for x86-64 for [u8]okaneco-0/+16
The new `is_ascii` function is optimized to use the `pmovmskb` vector instruction which tests the high bit in a lane. This corresponds to the same check of whether a byte is ASCII so ASCII validity checking can be vectorized. This instruction does not exist on other platforms so it is likely to regress performance and is gated to all(target_arch = "x86_64", target_feature = "sse2"). Add codegen test Remove crate::mem import for functions included in the prelude
2024-11-06Auto merge of #132664 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-i27nr7i, r=matthiaskrgrbors-3/+3
Rollup of 5 pull requests Successful merges: - #131261 (Stabilize `UnsafeCell::from_mut`) - #131405 (bootstrap/codegen_ssa: ship llvm-strip and use it for -Cstrip) - #132077 (Add a new `wide-arithmetic` feature for WebAssembly) - #132562 (Remove the `wasm32-wasi` target from rustc) - #132660 (Remove unused errs.rs file) Failed merges: - #131721 (Add new unstable feature `const_eq_ignore_ascii_case`) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-11-05Rollup merge of #132562 - alexcrichton:remove-wasm32-wasi, r=jieyouxuMatthias Krüger-3/+3
Remove the `wasm32-wasi` target from rustc This commit is the final step in the journey of renaming the historical `wasm32-wasi` target in the Rust compiler to `wasm32-wasip1`. Various steps in this journey so far have been: * 2023-04-03: rust-lang/compiler-team#607 - initial proposal for this rename * 2024-11-27: rust-lang/compiler-team#695 - amended schedule/procedure for rename * 2024-01-29: rust-lang/rust#120468 - initial introduction of `wasm32-wasip1` * 2024-06-18: rust-lang/rust#126662 - warn on usage of `wasm32-wasi` * 2024-11-08: this PR - remove the `wasm32-wasi` target The full transition schedule is in [this comment][comment] and is summarized with: * 2024-05-02: Rust 1.78 released with `wasm32-wasip1` target * 2024-09-05: Rust 1.81 released warning on usage of `wasm32-wasi` * 2025-01-09: Rust 1.84 to be released without the `wasm32-wasi` target This means that support on stable for the replacement target of `wasm32-wasip1` has currently been available for 6 months. Users have already seen warnings on stable for 2 months about usage of `wasm32-wasi` and stable users have another 2 months of warnings before the target is removed from stable. This commit is intended to be the final step in this transition so the source tree should no longer mention `wasm32-wasi` except in historical reference to the older name of the `wasm32-wasip1` target. [comment]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120468#issuecomment-1977878747
2024-11-05Rollup merge of #132259 - mrkajetanp:branch-protection-pauth-lr, r=davidtwcoMatthias Krüger-1/+41
rustc_codegen_llvm: Add a new 'pc' option to branch-protection Add a new 'pc' option to -Z branch-protection for aarch64 that enables the use of PC as a diversifier in PAC branch protection code. When the pauth-lr target feature is enabled in combination with -Z branch-protection=pac-ret,pc, the new 9.5-a instructions (pacibsppc, retaasppc, etc) will be generated.
2024-11-05Auto merge of #131341 - taiki-e:ppc-clobber-abi, r=bzEq,workingjubileebors-5/+21
Support clobber_abi and vector registers (clobber-only) in PowerPC inline assembly This supports `clobber_abi` which is one of the requirements of stabilization mentioned in #93335. This basically does a similar thing I did in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130630 to implement `clobber_abi` for s390x, but for powerpc/powerpc64/powerpc64le. - This also supports vector registers (as `vreg`) as clobber-only, which need to support clobbering of them to implement `clobber_abi`. - `vreg` should be able to accept `#[repr(simd)]` types as input/output if the unstable `altivec` target feature is enabled, but `core::arch::{powerpc,powerpc64}` vector types, `#[repr(simd)]`, and `core::simd` are all unstable, so the fact that this is currently a clobber-only should not be considered a blocker of clobber_abi implementation or stabilization. So I have not implemented it in this PR. - See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131551 (which is based on this PR) for a PR to implement this. - (I'm not sticking to whether that PR should be a separate PR or part of this PR, so I can merge that PR into this PR if needed.) Refs: - PPC32 SysV: Section "Function Calling Sequence" in [System V Application Binary Interface PowerPC Processor Supplement](https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/elf/elfspec_ppc.pdf) - PPC64 ELFv1: Section 3.2 "Function Calling Sequence" in [64-bit PowerPC ELF Application Binary Interface Supplement](https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/ELF/ppc64/PPC-elf64abi.html#FUNC-CALL) - PPC64 ELFv2: Section 2.2 "Function Calling Sequence" in [64-Bit ELF V2 ABI Specification](https://openpowerfoundation.org/specifications/64bitelfabi/) - AIX: [Register usage and conventions](https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.3?topic=overview-register-usage-conventions), [Special registers in the PowerPC®](https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.3?topic=overview-special-registers-in-powerpc), [AIX vector programming](https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/aix/7.3?topic=concepts-aix-vector-programming) - Register definition in LLVM: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCRegisterInfo.td#L189 If I understand the above four ABI documentations correctly, except for the PPC32 SysV's VR (Vector Registers) and 32-bit AIX (currently not supported by rustc)'s r13, there does not appear to be important differences in terms of implementing `clobber_abi`: - The above four ABIs are consistent about FPR (0-13: volatile, 14-31: nonvolatile), CR (0-1,5-7: volatile, 2-4: nonvolatile), XER (volatile), and CTR (volatile). - As for GPR, only the registers we are treating as reserved are slightly different - r0, r3-r12 are volatile - r1(sp, reserved), r14-31 are nonvolatile - r2(reserved) is TOC pointer in PPC64 ELF/AIX, system-reserved register in PPC32 SysV (AFAIK used as thread pointer in Linux/BSDs) - r13(reserved for non-32-bit-AIX) is thread pointer in PPC64 ELF, small data area pointer register in PPC32 SysV, "reserved under 64-bit environment; not restored across system calls[^r13]" in AIX) - As for FPSCR, volatile in PPC64 ELFv1/AIX, some fields are volatile only in certain situations (rest are volatile) in PPC32 SysV/PPC64 ELFv2. - As for VR (Vector Registers), it is not mentioned in PPC32 SysV, v0-v19 are volatile in both in PPC64 ELF/AIX, v20-v31 are nonvolatile in PPC64 ELF, reserved or nonvolatile depending on the ABI ([vec-extabi vs vec-default in LLVM](https://reviews.llvm.org/D89684), we are [using vec-extabi](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131341#discussion_r1797693299)) in AIX: > When the default Vector enabled mode is used, these registers are reserved and must not be used. > In the extended ABI vector enabled mode, these registers are nonvolatile and their values are preserved across function calls I left [FIXME comment about PPC32 SysV](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131341#discussion_r1790496095) and added ABI check for AIX. - As for VRSAVE, it is not mentioned in PPC32 SysV, nonvolatile in PPC64 ELFv1, reserved in PPC64 ELFv2/AIX - As for VSCR, it is not mentioned in PPC32 SysV/PPC64 ELFv1, some fields are volatile only in certain situations (rest are volatile) in PPC64 ELFv2, volatile in AIX We are currently treating r1-r2, r13 (non-32-bit-AIX), r29-r31, LR, CTR, and VRSAVE as reserved. We are currently not processing anything about FPSCR and VSCR, but I feel those are things that should be processed by `preserves_flags` rather than `clobber_abi` if we need to do something about them. (However, PPCRegisterInfo.td in LLVM does not seem to define anything about them.) Replaces #111335 and #124279 cc `@ecnelises` `@bzEq` `@lu-zero` r? `@Amanieu` `@rustbot` label +O-PowerPC +A-inline-assembly [^r13]: callee-saved, according to [LLVM](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/6a6af0246bd2d68291582e9aefc0543e5c6102fe/llvm/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCCallingConv.td#L322) and [GCC](https://github.com/gcc-mirror/gcc/blob/a9173a50e7e346a218323916e4d3add8552529ae/gcc/config/rs6000/rs6000.h#L859).