We also have to remove the LLVM argument in cast-target-abi.rs for LLVM
21. I'm not really sure what the best approach here is since that test
already uses revisions. We could also fork the test into a copy for LLVM
19-20 and another for LLVM 21, but what I did for now was drop the
lint-abort-on-error flag to LLVM figuring that some coverage was better
than none, but I'm happy to change this if that was a bad direction.
The above also applies for ffi-out-of-bounds-loads.rs.
r? dianqk
@rustbot label llvm-main
The formatting of the command line arguments has been moved to the
frontend in:
e190d074a0
However, the Rust logic introduced in
ad0ecebf43
did not replicate the previous argument quoting behavior.
See llvm/llvm-project#121851
For LLVM 20+, this function (`renameModuleForThinLTO`) has no return
value. For prior versions of LLVM, this never failed, but had a
signature which allowed an error value people were handling.
As described here UseOdrIndicator should be disabled on Windows
since link.exe does not support duplicate weak definitions
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D137227).
Co-Authored-By: Bastian Kersting <bkersting@google.com>
Trim and tidy includes in `rustc_llvm`
These includes tend to accumulate over time, and are usually only removed when something breaks in a new LLVM version, so it's nice to clean them up manually once in a while.
General strategy used for this PR:
- Remove all includes from `LLVMWrapper.h` that aren't needed by the header itself, transplanting them to individual source files as necessary.
- For each source file, temporarily remove each include if doing so doesn't cause a compile error.
- If a “required” include looks like it shouldn't be needed, try replacing it with its sub-includes, then trim that list.
- After doing all of the above, go back and re-add any removed include if the file does actually use things defined in that header, even if the header happens to also be included by something else.
Rollup of 15 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #129329 (Implement `From<&mut {slice}>` for `Box/Rc/Arc<{slice}>`)
- #131377 (Add LowerExp and UpperExp implementations to NonZero)
- #132393 (Docs: added brief colon explanation)
- #132437 (coverage: Regression test for inlining into an uninstrumented crate)
- #132499 (unicode_data.rs: show command for generating file)
- #132503 (better test for const HashMap; remove const_hash leftovers)
- #132511 (stabilize const_arguments_as_str)
- #132520 (NFC add known bug nr to test)
- #132522 (make codegen help output more consistent)
- #132523 (Added regression test for generics index out of bounds)
- #132528 (Use `*_opt` typeck results fns to not ICE in fallback suggestion)
- #132537 (PassWrapper: adapt for llvm/llvm-project@5445edb5d)
- #132540 (Do not format generic consts)
- #132543 (add and update some crashtests)
- #132550 (compiler: Continue introducing rustc_abi to the compiler)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Port most of `--print=target-cpus` to Rust
The logic and formatting needed by `--print=target-cpus` has historically been carried out in C++ code. Originally it used `printf` to write directly to the console, but later it switched over to writing to a `std::ostringstream` and then passing its buffer to a callback function pointer.
This PR replaces that C++ code with a very simple function that writes a list of CPU names to a `&RustString`, with the rest of the logic and formatting being handled by ordinary safe Rust code.
PassWrapper: adapt for llvm/llvm-project@5445edb5d
As with ab5583ed1e, we had been explicitly passing defaults whose type have changed. Rather than do an ifdef, we simply rely on the defaults.
````@rustbot```` label: +llvm-main
PassWrapper: adapt for llvm/llvm-project@b01e2a8b56
A boolean turned into an enum. None matches the old behavior of false, so we pass that.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
As with ab5583ed1e, we had been explicitly
passing defaults whose type have changed. Rather than do an ifdef, we
simply rely on the defaults.
@rustbot label: +llvm-main
We don't see a reason to explicitly pass the default here, so just use
the default instead of explicitly passing it and needing an ifdef.
@rustbot label: +llvm-main
rustc_llvm: adapt to flattened CLI args in LLVM
This changed in
llvm/llvm-project@e190d074a0. I decided to stick with more duplication between the ifdef blocks to make the code easier to read for the next two years before we can plausibly drop LLVM 19.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
try-job: x86_64-msvc
This changed in
llvm/llvm-project@e190d074a0. I decided to
stick with more duplication between the ifdef blocks to make the code
easier to read for the next two years before we can plausibly drop LLVM
19.
@rustbot label: +llvm-main
llvm-wrapper: adapt for LLVM API changes
No functional changes intended.
Updates the wrapper for 21eddfac3d.
````@rustbot```` label: +llvm-main
r? ````@nikic````
Since this codegen flag now only controls LLVM-generated comments rather than
all assembly comments, make the name more accurate (and also match Clang).
If we don't do this, some versions of LLVM (at least 17, experimentally)
will double-emit some error messages, which is how I noticed this. Given
that it seems to be costing some extra work, let's only request the
summary bitcode production if we'll actually bother writing it down,
otherwise skip it.