Commit Graph

122 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Wood
322cc31504 tests: {Meta,Pointee}Sized in non-minicore tests
As before, add `MetaSized` and `PointeeSized` traits to all of the
non-minicore `no_core` tests so that they don't fail for lack of
language items.
2025-06-16 23:04:33 +00:00
Jubilee Young
643a9d233b tests: Change "fastcall" to "system" in some tests
Lets the test still work on different architectures.
2025-06-09 16:10:21 -07:00
Jacob Pratt
8951c74e2a Rollup merge of #138285 - beetrees:repr128-stable, r=traviscross,bjorn3
Stabilize `repr128`

## Stabilisation report

The `repr128` feature ([tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/56071)) allows the use of `#[repr(u128)]` and `#[repr(i128)]` on enums in the same way that other primitive representations such as `#[repr(u64)]` can be used. For example:

```rust
#[repr(u128)]
enum Foo {
    One = 1,
    Two,
    Big = u128::MAX,
}

#[repr(i128)]
enum Bar {
    HasThing(u16) = 42,
    HasSomethingElse(i64) = u64::MAX as i128 + 1,
    HasNothing,
}
```

This is the final part of adding 128-bit integers to Rust ([RFC 1504](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/1504-int128.html)); all other parts of 128-bit integer support were stabilised in #49101 back in 2018.

From a design perspective, `#[repr(u128)]`/`#[repr(i128)]` function like `#[repr(u64)]`/`#[repr(i64)]` but for 128-bit integers instead of 64-bit integers. The only differences are:

- FFI safety: as `u128`/`i128` are not currently considered FFI safe, neither are `#[repr(u128)]`/`#[repr(i128)]` enums (I discovered this wasn't the case while drafting this stabilisation report, so I have submitted #138282 to fix this).
- Debug info: while none of the major debuggers currently support 128-bit integers, as of LLVM 20 `rustc` will emit valid debuginfo for both DWARF and PDB (PDB makes use of the same natvis that is also used for all enums with fields, whereas DWARF has native support).

Tests for `#[repr(u128)]`/`#[repr(i128)]` enums include:
- [ui/enum-discriminant/repr128.rs](385970f0c1/tests/ui/enum-discriminant/repr128.rs): checks that 128-bit enum discriminants have the correct values.
- [debuginfo/msvc-pretty-enums.rs](385970f0c1/tests/debuginfo/msvc-pretty-enums.rs): checks the PDB debuginfo is correct.
- [run-make/repr128-dwarf](385970f0c1/tests/run-make/repr128-dwarf/rmake.rs): checks the DWARF debuginfo is correct.

Stabilising this feature does not require any changes to the Rust Reference as [the documentation on primitive representations](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/reference/type-layout.html#r-layout.repr.primitive.intro) already includes `u128` and `i128`.

Closes #56071
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/issues/1368

r? lang

```@rustbot``` label +I-lang-nominated +T-lang
2025-05-29 04:50:46 +02:00
beetrees
467eeabbb5 Stabilise repr128 2025-05-28 15:14:34 +01:00
MarcoIeni
1b7a927d84 ci: move tests from x86_64-gnu-llvm-19 job to aarch64 2025-05-26 22:27:20 +02:00
Kyle Huey
caf665e692 Use the fn_span when emitting function calls for better debug info.
This especially improves the developer experience for long chains
of function calls that span multiple lines, which is common with
builder patterns, chains of iterator/future combinators, etc.
2025-05-22 14:06:24 -07:00
Daniel Paoliello
3286d4aad7 [win][arm64] Disable various DebugInfo tests that don't work on Arm64 Windows 2025-05-07 10:49:54 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
68b439c63b Rollup merge of #138599 - adwinwhite:recursive-overflow, r=wesleywiser
avoid overflow when generating debuginfo for expanding recursive types

Fixes #135093
Fixes #121538
Fixes #107362
Fixes #100618
Fixes #115994

The overflow happens because expanding recursive types keep creating new nested types when recurring into sub fields.
I fixed that by returning an empty stub node when expanding recursion is detected.
2025-04-18 05:17:53 +02:00
Jieyou Xu
d1178faa93 tests: refine disable reason for tests/debuginfo/drop-locations.rs 2025-04-17 18:52:57 +08:00
Pietro Albini
cd371b90e2 replace //@ compile-flags: --edition with //@ edition 2025-04-10 09:56:37 +02:00
Adwin White
d5c4ed0484 (re)move fixed crash tests 2025-03-17 19:43:31 +08:00
Adwin White
8e235258f3 fix(debuginfo): avoid overflow when handling expanding recursive type 2025-03-17 18:33:40 +08:00
Jakub Beránek
95d9ade39d Rollup merge of #137967 - mustartt:fix-aix-test-hangs, r=workingjubilee
[AIX] Fix hangs during testing

Fixes all current test hangs experienced during CI runs.
1. ipv6 link-local (the loopback device) gets assigned an automatic zone id of 1, causing the assert to fail and hang in `library/std/src/net/udp/tests.rs`
2. Const alloc does not fail gracefully
3. Debuginfo test has problem with gdb auto load safe path
2025-03-11 13:30:50 +01:00
Henry Jiang
2a7ad952a7 Fix test hangs on AIX 2025-03-04 10:06:28 -05:00
Alice Ryhl
44cccae02a Delete tuple unsizing 2025-02-27 10:26:33 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
307f1609e9 Rollup merge of #135354 - Walnut356:msvc_lldb, r=wesleywiser
[Debuginfo] Add MSVC Synthetic and Summary providers to LLDB

Adds handling for `tuple$<>`, `ref$<slice$2<>`, `ref$<str$>` and `enum2$<>`.

Also fixes a bug in MSVC vec/string handling where the script was unable to determine the element's type due to LLDB ignoring template arg debug information

<details>
<summary>Sample code</summary>

```rust
pub enum Number {
    One = 57,
    Two = 99,
}

#[repr(u8)]
pub enum Container {
    First(u32),
    Second { val: u64, val2: i8 },
    Third,
}

...
    let u8_val = b'a';
    let float = 42.78000000000001;

    let tuple = (u8_val, float);

    let str_val = "eef";
    let mut string = "freef".to_owned();
    let mut_str = string.as_mut_str();
    let array: [u8; 4] = [1, 2, 3, 4];
    let ref_array = array.as_slice();
    let mut array2: [u32; 4] = [1, 2, 3, 4];
    let mut_array = array2.as_mut_slice();
    let enum_val = Number::One;
    let mut enum_val2 = Number::Two;
    let sum_val = Container::First(15);
    let sum_val_2 = Container::Second { val: 0, val2: 0 };
    let sum_val_3 = Container::Third;
    let non_zero = NonZeroU128::new(100).unwrap();
    let large_discr = NonZeroU128::new(255);
```
</details>

Before:

![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/19fd0881-a4c3-4c68-b28f-769a67d95e35)

After:

![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d0479035-17ed-4584-8eb4-71d1314f8f7c)

try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: i686-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-mingw-1
try-job: i686-mingw
try-job: aarch64-gnu
2025-02-23 02:44:16 -05:00
Walnut
d6f5d34744 fix string and tuple struct formatting 2025-02-12 01:30:09 -06:00
joboet
0e5ee891b2 Revert "Remove the Arc rt::init allocation for thread info"
This reverts commit 0747f2898e.
2025-01-14 13:37:25 +01:00
bors
2ae9916816 Auto merge of #135192 - jdupak-ms:cdb-tests, r=wesleywiser
Add and improve debuginfo tests for Windows

Adds new test for closures and function pointers.
Improves robustness of existing tests by sorting wildcard matched outputs.

try-job: i686-msvc
2025-01-13 18:13:53 +00:00
Jakub Dupak
75e9b19d78 Add and improve debuginfo tests for Windows 2025-01-13 09:38:04 +01:00
Scott McMurray
6f2a78345e Update a bunch of library types for MCP807
This greatly reduces the number of places that actually use the `rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_*` attributes down to just 3:
```
library/core\src\ptr\non_null.rs
68:#[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start(1)]

library/core\src\num\niche_types.rs
19:        #[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_start($low)]
20:        #[rustc_layout_scalar_valid_range_end($high)]
```

Everything else -- PAL Nanoseconds, alloc's `Cap`, niched FDs, etc -- all just wrap those `niche_types` types.
2025-01-09 23:47:11 -08:00
Pavel Grigorenko
ee2ad4dfb1 Move some things to std::sync::poison and reexport them in std::sync 2025-01-02 15:21:41 +03:00
Michael Goulet
9a1c5eb5b3 Begin to implement type system layer of unsafe binders 2024-12-22 21:57:57 +00:00
Jakub Beránek
536516f949 Reformat Python code with ruff 2024-12-04 23:03:44 +01:00
Jieyou Xu
dccb6c0f27 Mark numeric-types.rs as 64-bit only for now
This is to unblock the tree, a proper fix will need to be investigated.
I think the debuginfo test suite supports revisions, however debugger
directives do not respect such revisions, which is problematic.

It's that 32-bit and 64-bit msvc of course have different integer widths
for `isize` and `usize`, meaning their underlying integer is different
and thus printed differently.
2024-11-17 04:16:59 +08:00
Jieyou Xu
e70df0909a Update cdb annotations for unit-type.rs with cdb 10.0.26100.2161 2024-11-17 00:50:54 +08:00
Jieyou Xu
94f3dcf601 Update cdb annotations for range-types.rs with cdb 10.0.26100.2161 2024-11-17 00:42:30 +08:00
Jieyou Xu
1503279593 Update cdb annotations for numeric-types with cdb 10.0.26100.2161 2024-11-17 00:33:40 +08:00
bors
f61306d47b Auto merge of #123550 - GnomedDev:remove-initial-arc, r=Noratrieb
Remove the `Arc` rt::init allocation for thread info

Removes an allocation pre-main by just not storing anything in std:🧵:Thread for the main thread.
- The thread name can just be a hard coded literal, as was done in #123433.
- Storing ThreadId and Parker in a static that is initialized once at startup. This uses SyncUnsafeCell and MaybeUninit as this is quite performance critical and we don't need synchronization or to store a tag value and possibly leave in a panic.
2024-10-24 13:35:50 +00:00
bors
4392847410 Auto merge of #131570 - ehuss:update-xcode, r=Mark-Simulacrum
(ci) Update macOS Xcode to 15

This updates the macOS builders to Xcode 15. The aarch64 images will be removing Xcode 14 and 16 very soon (https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/10703), so we will need to make the switch to continue operating. The linked issue also documents GitHub's new policy for how they will be updating Xcode in the future. Also worth being aware of is the future plans for x86 runners documented in https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/9255 and https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/10686, which will impact our future upgrade behaviors.

I decided to also update the Xcode in the x86_64 runners, even though they are not being removed. It felt better to me to have all macOS runners on the same (major) version of Xcode. However, note that the x86_64 runners do not have the latest version of 15 (15.4), so I left them at 15.2 (which is currently the default Xcode of the runner).

Xcode 15 was previously causing problems (see #121058) which seem to be resolved now. `@bjorn3` fixed the `invalid r_symbolnum` issue with cranelift. The issue with clang failing to link seems to be fixed, possibly by the update of the pre-built LLVM from 14 to llvm 15 in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124850, or an update in our source version of LLVM. I have run some try builds and at least LLVM seems to build (I did not run any tests).

Closes #121058
2024-10-21 20:19:06 +00:00
Eric Huss
16b91e887a Update debuginfo test for newer lldb
For reasons I don't understand, lldb in Xcode 15 no longer prints objects as:

(long) $0 = 19

instead, it is printing them as:

(long) 19
2024-10-21 11:40:12 -07:00
GnomedDev
0747f2898e Remove the Arc rt::init allocation for thread info 2024-10-19 14:39:20 +01:00
Michael Goulet
1c799ff05e Rollup merge of #131521 - jdonszelmann:rc, r=joboet
rename RcBox to RcInner for consistency

Arc uses ArcInner too (created in collaboration with `@aDotInTheVoid` and `@WaffleLapkin` )
2024-10-15 12:33:36 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
57be141f8a Rollup merge of #128784 - tdittr:check-abi-on-fn-ptr, r=compiler-errors
Check ABI target compatibility for function pointers

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130260
Related tracking issue: #87678

Compatibility of an ABI for a target was previously only performed on function definitions and `extern` blocks. This PR adds it also to function pointers to be consistent.

This might have broken some of the `tests/ui/` depending on the platform, so a try run seems like a good idea.

Also this might break existing code, because we now emit extra errors. Does this require a crater run?

# Example
```rust
// build with: --target=x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu

// These raise E0570
extern "thiscall" fn foo() {}
extern "thiscall" { fn bar() }

// This did not raise any error
fn baz(f: extern "thiscall" fn()) { f() }
```

# Open Questions
* [x] Should this report a future incompatibility warning like #87678 ?
* [ ] Is this the best place to perform the check?
2024-10-12 23:00:55 +02:00
Jonathan Dönszelmann
0a9c87b1f5 rename RcBox in other places too 2024-10-11 10:04:22 +02:00
Tamme Dittrich
47293c1234 Check ABI target compatibility for function pointers
This check was previously only performed on functions not function pointers.

Co-authored-by: Folkert <folkert@folkertdev.nl>
2024-09-23 14:04:22 +02:00
Kyle Huey
652b502d9c Reorder stack spills so that constants come later.
Currently constants are "pulled forward" and have their stack spills emitted
first. This confuses LLVM as to where to place breakpoints at function
entry, and results in argument values being wrong in the debugger. It's
straightforward to avoid emitting the stack spills for constants until
arguments/etc have been introduced in debug_introduce_locals, so do that.

Example LLVM IR (irrelevant IR elided):
Before:

define internal void @_ZN11rust_1289457binding17h2c78f956ba4bd2c3E(i64 %a, i64 %b, double %c) unnamed_addr #0 !dbg !178 {
start:
  %c.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %b.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %a.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %x.dbg.spill = alloca [4 x i8], align 4
  store i32 0, ptr %x.dbg.spill, align 4, !dbg !192            ; LLVM places breakpoint here.
    #dbg_declare(ptr %x.dbg.spill, !190, !DIExpression(), !192)
  store i64 %a, ptr %a.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %a.dbg.spill, !187, !DIExpression(), !193)
  store i64 %b, ptr %b.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %b.dbg.spill, !188, !DIExpression(), !194)
  store double %c, ptr %c.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %c.dbg.spill, !189, !DIExpression(), !195)
  ret void, !dbg !196
}

After:
define internal void @_ZN11rust_1289457binding17h2c78f956ba4bd2c3E(i64 %a, i64 %b, double %c) unnamed_addr #0 !dbg !178 {
start:
  %x.dbg.spill = alloca [4 x i8], align 4
  %c.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %b.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %a.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  store i64 %a, ptr %a.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %a.dbg.spill, !187, !DIExpression(), !192)
  store i64 %b, ptr %b.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %b.dbg.spill, !188, !DIExpression(), !193)
  store double %c, ptr %c.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %c.dbg.spill, !189, !DIExpression(), !194)
  store i32 0, ptr %x.dbg.spill, align 4, !dbg !195            ; LLVM places breakpoint here.
    #dbg_declare(ptr %x.dbg.spill, !190, !DIExpression(), !195)
  ret void, !dbg !196
}

Note in particular the position of the "LLVM places breakpoint here" comment
relative to the stack spills for the function arguments. LLVM assumes that
the first instruction with with a debug location is the end of the prologue.
As LLVM does not currently offer front ends any direct control over the
placement of the prologue end reordering the IR is the only mechanism available
to fix argument values at function entry in the presence of MIR optimizations
like SingleUseConsts. Fixes #128945
2024-09-17 16:45:26 -07:00
bors
5e842953cc Auto merge of #130052 - khuey:clear-dilocation-after-const-emission, r=michaelwoerister
Don't leave debug locations for constants sitting on the builder indefinitely

Because constants are currently emitted *before* the prologue, leaving the debug location on the IRBuilder spills onto other instructions in the prologue and messes up both line numbers as well as the point LLVM chooses to be the prologue end.

Example LLVM IR (irrelevant IR elided):
Before:
```
define internal { i64, i64 } `@_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17he02116165b0fc08cE(ptr` align 8 %self) !dbg !347 { start:
  %self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
  %residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
    #dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
  store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8, !dbg !357
    #dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)
```
After:
```
define internal { i64, i64 } `@_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17h00b17d08874ddd90E(ptr` align 8 %self) !dbg !347 { start:
  %self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
  %residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
    #dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
  store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)
```
Note in particular how !357 from %residual.dbg.spill's dbg_declare no longer falls through onto the store to %self.dbg.spill. This fixes argument values at entry when the constant is a ZST (e.g. `<Option as Try>::Residual`). This fixes #130003 (but note that it does *not* fix issues with argument values and non-ZST constants, which emit their own stores that have debug info on them, like #128945).

r? `@michaelwoerister`
2024-09-13 08:57:41 +00:00
Scott McMurray
d2309c2a9d Ban non-array SIMD 2024-09-09 19:39:43 -07:00
Kyle Huey
7ed9f945a2 Don't leave debug locations for constants sitting on the builder indefinitely.
Because constants are currently emitted *before* the prologue, leaving the
debug location on the IRBuilder spills onto other instructions in the prologue
and messes up both line numbers as well as the point LLVM chooses to be the
prologue end.

Example LLVM IR (irrelevant IR elided):
Before:

define internal { i64, i64 } @_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17he02116165b0fc08cE(ptr align 8 %self) !dbg !347 {
start:
  %self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
  %residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
    #dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
  store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8, !dbg !357
    #dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)

After:

define internal { i64, i64 } @_ZN3tmp3Foo18var_return_opt_try17h00b17d08874ddd90E(ptr align 8 %self) !dbg !347 {
start:
  %self.dbg.spill = alloca [8 x i8], align 8
  %_0 = alloca [16 x i8], align 8
  %residual.dbg.spill = alloca [0 x i8], align 1
    #dbg_declare(ptr %residual.dbg.spill, !353, !DIExpression(), !357)
  store ptr %self, ptr %self.dbg.spill, align 8
    #dbg_declare(ptr %self.dbg.spill, !350, !DIExpression(), !358)

Note in particular how !357 from %residual.dbg.spill's dbg_declare no longer
falls through onto the store to %self.dbg.spill. This fixes argument values
at entry when the constant is a ZST (e.g. <Option as Try>::Residual). This
fixes #130003 (but note that it does *not* fix issues with argument values and
non-ZST constants, which emit their own stores that have debug info on them,
like #128945).
2024-09-06 23:12:18 +00:00
Mateusz Mikuła
4ee58db2f1 Upgrade CI's mingw-w64 toolchain 2024-09-01 12:37:26 +02:00
Ben Kimock
1a2ec2634e Make option-like-enum.rs UB-free and portable 2024-08-27 19:12:14 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
dea325e583 Rollup merge of #128627 - khuey:DUMMY_SP-line-no, r=nnethercote
Special case DUMMY_SP to emit line 0/column 0 locations on DWARF platforms.

Line 0 has a special meaning in DWARF. From the version 5 spec:

    The compiler may emit the value 0 in cases
    where an instruction cannot be attributed to any
    source line.

DUMMY_SP spans cannot be attributed to any line. However, because rustc internally stores line numbers starting at zero, lookup_debug_loc() adjusts every line number by one. Special casing DUMMY_SP to actually emit line 0 ensures rustc communicates to the debugger that there's no meaningful source code for this instruction, rather than telling the debugger to jump to line 1 randomly.
2024-08-21 18:15:01 +02:00
Kyle Huey
3c735a00f7 Add a test. 2024-08-19 17:10:43 -07:00
Ben Kimock
b2dae987f8 Fixup tests 2024-08-18 17:41:01 -04:00
Ben Kimock
22ed23d680 Convert lldbg- to lldb- 2024-08-18 17:00:33 -04:00
Ben Kimock
41d06f4115 Delete lldbr annotations 2024-08-18 16:59:58 -04:00
Ben Kimock
c5fdc90a73 Delete min-lldb-version: 310 2024-08-18 16:58:26 -04:00
Ben Kimock
156088f8a8 Delete redundant gdb-version requirements and related comments 2024-08-18 16:58:25 -04:00
Ben Kimock
e93e610329 Grep for enabled and clean up those hits 2024-08-18 16:58:00 -04:00