Most of the Rust community agrees that the vec! macro is clearer when
called using square brackets [] instead of regular brackets (). Most of
these ocurrences are from before macros allowed using different types of
brackets.
There is one left unchanged in a pretty-print test, as the pretty
printer still wants it to have regular brackets.
rustc: Rename rustc_macro to proc_macro
This commit blanket renames the `rustc_macro` infrastructure to `proc_macro`,
which reflects the general consensus of #35900. A follow up PR to Cargo will be
required to purge the `rustc-macro` name as well.
This commit blanket renames the `rustc_macro` infrastructure to `proc_macro`,
which reflects the general consensus of #35900. A follow up PR to Cargo will be
required to purge the `rustc-macro` name as well.
add Thumbs to the compiler
this commit adds 4 new target definitions to the compiler for easier
cross compilation to ARM Cortex-M devices.
- `thumbv6m-none-eabi`
- For the Cortex-M0, Cortex-M0+ and Cortex-M1
- This architecture doesn't have hardware support (instructions) for
atomics. Hence, the `Atomic*` structs are not available for this
target.
- `thumbv7m-none-eabi`
- For the Cortex-M3
- `thumbv7em-none-eabi`
- For the FPU-less variants of the Cortex-M4 and Cortex-M7
- On this target, all the floating point operations will be lowered
software routines (intrinsics)
- `thumbv7em-none-eabihf`
- For the variants of the Cortex-M4 and Cortex-M7 that do have a FPU.
- On this target, all the floating point operations will be lowered
to hardware instructions
No binary releases of standard crates, like `core`, are planned for
these targets because Cargo, in the future, will compile e.g. the `core`
crate on the fly as part of the `cargo build` process. In the meantime,
you'll have to compile the `core` crate yourself. [Xargo] is the easiest
way to do that as in handles the compilation of `core` automatically and
can be used just like Cargo: `xargo build --target thumbv6m-none-eabi`
is all that's needed.
[Xargo]: https://crates.io/crates/xargo
---
cc @brson @alexcrichton
std: Stabilize and deprecate APIs for 1.13
This commit is intended to be backported to the 1.13 branch, and works with the
following APIs:
Stabilized
* `i32::checked_abs`
* `i32::wrapping_abs`
* `i32::overflowing_abs`
* `RefCell::try_borrow`
* `RefCell::try_borrow_mut`
Deprecated
* `BinaryHeap::push_pop`
* `BinaryHeap::replace`
* `SipHash13`
* `SipHash24`
* `SipHasher` - use `DefaultHasher` instead in the `std::collections::hash_map`
module
Closes#28147Closes#34767Closes#35057Closes#35070
This commit is intended to be backported to the 1.13 branch, and works with the
following APIs:
Stabilized
* `i32::checked_abs`
* `i32::wrapping_abs`
* `i32::overflowing_abs`
* `RefCell::try_borrow`
* `RefCell::try_borrow_mut`
* `DefaultHasher`
* `DefaultHasher::new`
* `DefaultHasher::default`
Deprecated
* `BinaryHeap::push_pop`
* `BinaryHeap::replace`
* `SipHash13`
* `SipHash24`
* `SipHasher` - use `DefaultHasher` instead in the `std::collections::hash_map`
module
Closes#28147Closes#34767Closes#35057Closes#35070
rustdoc: Fix documenting rustc-macro crates
This commit adds a "hack" to the session to track whether we're a rustdoc
session or not. If we're rustdoc then we skip the expansion to add the
rustc-macro infrastructure.
Closes#36820
This commit adds a "hack" to the session to track whether we're a rustdoc
session or not. If we're rustdoc then we skip the expansion to add the
rustc-macro infrastructure.
Closes#36820
add a panic-strategy field to the target specification
Now a target can define its panic strategy in its specification. If a
user doesn't specify a panic strategy via the command line, i.e. '-C
panic', then the compiler will use the panic strategy defined by the
target specification.
Custom targets can pick their panic strategy via the "panic-strategy"
field of their target specification JSON file. If omitted in the
specification, the strategy defaults to "unwind".
closes#36647
---
I checked that compiling an executable for a custom target with "panic-strategy" set to "abort" doesn't need the "eh_personality" lang item and also that standard crates compiled for that custom target didn't contained undefined symbols to _Unwind_Resume. But this needs an actual unit test, any suggestion on how to test this?
Most of the noise in the diff is due to moving `PanicStrategy` from the `rustc` to the `rustc_back` crate.
r? @alexcrichton
cc @phil-opp
Now a target can define its panic strategy in its specification. If a
user doesn't specify a panic strategy via the command line, i.e. '-C
panic', then the compiler will use the panic strategy defined by the
target specification.
Custom targets can pick their panic strategy via the "panic-strategy"
field of their target specification JSON file. If omitted in the
specification, the strategy defaults to "unwind".
closes#36647
rustc: implement -C link-arg
this flag lets you pass a _single_ argument to the linker but can be
used _repeatedly_. For example, instead of using:
```
rustc -C link-args='-l bar' (..)
```
you could write
```
rustc -C link-arg='-l' -C link-arg='bar' (..)
```
This new flag can be used with RUSTFLAGS where `-C link-args` has
problems with "nested" spaces:
```
RUSTFLAGS='-C link-args="-Tlayout.ld -nostartfiles"'
```
This passes three arguments to rustc: `-C` `link-args="-Tlayout.ld` and
`-nostartfiles"` to `rustc`. That's not what we meant. But this does
what we want:
```
RUSTFLAGS='-C link-arg=-Tlayout.ld -C link-arg=-nostartfiles`
```
cc rust-lang/rfcs#1509
r? @alexcrichton
cc @Zoxc
This needs a test. Any suggestion?
Fix documentation with 'soft-float' codegen option
This option doesn't cause software FP routines
to be called, it only changes the float ABI.
Additionally, this option is ignored by all targets,
except the ARM eabihf ones.
this flag lets you pass a _single_ argument to the linker but can be
used _repeatedly_. For example, instead of using:
```
rustc -C link-args='-l bar' (..)
```
you could write
```
rustc -C link-arg='-l' -C link-arg='bar' (..)
```
This new flag can be used with RUSTFLAGS where `-C link-args` has
problems with "nested" spaces:
```
RUSTFLAGS='-C link-args="-Tlayout.ld -nostartfiles"'
```
This passes three arguments to rustc: `-C` `link-args="-Tlayout.ld` and
`-nostartfiles"` to `rustc`. That's not what we meant. But this does
what we want:
```
RUSTFLAGS='-C link-arg=-Tlayout.ld -C link-arg=-nostartfiles`
```
cc rust-lang/rfcs#1509
incr. comp.: Take spans into account for ICH
This PR makes the ICH (incr. comp. hash) take spans into account when debuginfo is enabled.
A side-effect of this is that the SVH (which is based on the ICHs of all items in the crate) becomes sensitive to the tiniest change in a code base if debuginfo is enabled. Since we are not trying to model ABI compatibility via the SVH anymore (this is done via the crate disambiguator now), this should be not be a problem.
Fixes#33888.
Fixes#32753.
Replace `_, _` with `..` in patterns
This is how https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/33627 looks in action.
Looks especially nice in leftmost/rightmost positions `(first, ..)`/`(.., last)`.
I haven't touched libsyntax intentionally because the feature is still unstable.
This option doesn't cause software FP routines
to be called it only changes the float ABI.
Additionally, this option is ignored by all targets,
except the ARM eabihf ones.
Add --Zsave-analysis-api
This is a save-analysis variation which can be used with libraries distributed without their source (e.g., libstd). It will allow IDEs and other tools to get info about types and create URLs to docs and source, without the unnecessary clutter of internal-only save-analysis info. I'm sure we'll iterate somewhat on the design, but this is a first draft.
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1681] which adds support to the
compiler for first-class user-define custom `#[derive]` modes with a far more
stable API than plugins have today.
[RFC 1681]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1681-macros-1.1.md
The main features added by this commit are:
* A new `rustc-macro` crate-type. This crate type represents one which will
provide custom `derive` implementations and perhaps eventually flower into the
implementation of macros 2.0 as well.
* A new `rustc_macro` crate in the standard distribution. This crate will
provide the runtime interface between macro crates and the compiler. The API
here is particularly conservative right now but has quite a bit of room to
expand into any manner of APIs required by macro authors.
* The ability to load new derive modes through the `#[macro_use]` annotations on
other crates.
All support added here is gated behind the `rustc_macro` feature gate, both for
the library support (the `rustc_macro` crate) as well as the language features.
There are a few minor differences from the implementation outlined in the RFC,
such as the `rustc_macro` crate being available as a dylib and all symbols are
`dlsym`'d directly instead of having a shim compiled. These should only affect
the implementation, however, not the public interface.
This commit also ended up touching a lot of code related to `#[derive]`, making
a few notable changes:
* Recognized derive attributes are no longer desugared to `derive_Foo`. Wasn't
sure how to keep this behavior and *not* expose it to custom derive.
* Derive attributes no longer have access to unstable features by default, they
have to opt in on a granular level.
* The `derive(Copy,Clone)` optimization is now done through another "obscure
attribute" which is just intended to ferry along in the compiler that such an
optimization is possible. The `derive(PartialEq,Eq)` optimization was also
updated to do something similar.
---
One part of this PR which needs to be improved before stabilizing are the errors
and exact interfaces here. The error messages are relatively poor quality and
there are surprising spects of this such as `#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, MyTrait)]`
not working by default. The custom attributes added by the compiler end up
becoming unstable again when going through a custom impl.
Hopefully though this is enough to start allowing experimentation on crates.io!
syntax-[breaking-change]
Macro expansions produce code tagged with debug locations that are completely different from the surrounding expressions. This wrecks havoc on debugger's ability the step over source lines.
In order to have a good line stepping behavior in debugger, we overwrite debug locations of macro expansions with that of the outermost expansion site.
The 'cfg' in the Options struct is only the commandline-specified
subset of the crate configuration and it's almost always wrong to
read that instead of the CrateConfig in HIR crate node.