Handle the -fsyntax-only properly from the rust frontend. This flag
allows checking for syntax and stopping after that, skipping further
passes of the pipeline.
The flag was accepted by the frontend, but was not used anywhere.
Co-authored-by: philberty <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
1027: parser: Allow parsing stmts without closing semicolon r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
In certain cases such as macro matching or macro expansion, it is
important to allow the parser to return a valid statement even if no
closing semicolon is given. This commit adds an optional parameter to
the concerned functions to allow a lack of semicolon those special cases
Closes#1011Closes#1010
1032: Add AST kind information r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
Closes#1001
This PR adds a base for adding node information to our AST types. It can be used when requiring to differentiate between multiple kinds of nodes, while not necessarily wanting to do a full static cast. This will open up a lot of cleanup issues and good first issues for Project Pineapple
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
When we setup trait-impls the type-alias are allowed to become any type
this interface was missing a visitor. We also need to support constraining
type-parameters behind slices.
The get_root interface is currently unsafe, it needs a flag for allowing
unsized and for keeping a map of adjustments along the way.
Fixes#1034
1022: attribute expansion: Fix spurious stripping of tail expression r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
This commit fixes the issue reported in #391, but highlights another
one, which will be reported.
Closes#391
1033: Fix bad copy-paste in can equal interface for pointer types r=philberty a=philberty
When we perform method resolution we check if the self arguments can be
matched. Here the bug was that pointer types had a bad vistitor and only
could ever match reference types which is wrong and was a copy paste error.
Fixes#1031
Addresses #849
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
1030: Rewrite our unconstrained type-param error checking r=philberty a=philberty
This is a series of patches that were all required to fix this issue. We
now take advantage of our substitutions abstractions and traits
so that our TypeBoundPredicate's which form the basis of our HRTB code
I think this class is almost akin to rustc existential-trait-references. This now
reuses the same code path to give us the same error checking for generics
as we get with ADT's, functions etc.
With this refactoring in place we can then reuse the abstractions to map the
ID's from the used arguments in the type-bound-predicate, the impl block type
substation mappings and the self type itself.
There are quite a few cases to handle and our testsuite picked up all the regressions
so no behaviour of our existing test-cases have changed now. See each commit for
more detailed information.
Fixes#1019
Addresses #849
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
When we perform method resolution we check if the self arguments can be
matched. Here the bug was that pointer types had a bad vistitor and only
could ever match reference types which is wrong and was a copy paste error.
Fixes#1031
This adds a new base class common to all abstract base classes of the
AST: We can use it to store information shared by all nodes, such as the
newly introduced `AST::Kind` which helps in differentiating nodes.
We could also consider using it to store location info, since all AST
nodes probably need it.
1021: macros: Do not try and re-expand if depth has exceeded recursion limit r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
We need to limit the amount of times that macro get expanded recursively
during macro-expansion. This limits the amount of times an ASTFragment
can be visited by simply incrementing the depth when setting a fragment,
and decreasing it when taking one. This way, recursive expansion which
happens at the expansion level (instead of the matching level) will
still get caught
Fixes#1012
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
This patch removes our old method of checking for unconstrained type
parameters which only worked for the basic cases such as:
impl<T> Foo { }
But checking for unconstrained types is more complex, we need to handle
covariant types such as:
impl<T> *T { }
Or
struct foo<X,Y>(X,Y);
impl<T> foo<&T,*T> {}
This rewrites the algorithm to take advantage of our substition
abstractions and HirIds so we can map the ids of the type-params to be
constrained and look at the trait-references used-arguments when the
generics are applied (or they may be empty) and then do the same for any
used arguments on an algebraic data type.
Fixes#1019
This will allow us to reuse our generic substitions code to manage generic
traits and their substitions better. It will unify the handling in one
path so we get the same error handling.
The TraitReference wrapper is a class that allows us to work with traits
in a query manar. This patch allows us to keep track of the substitution
mappings that are defined on the trait. This will always be non-empty
since traits always contain an implicit Self type parameter so there
is special handling in how we perform monomorphization.
This means TypeBoundPredicate will now be able to inherit all behaviours
of normal generics so we do not duplicate the work in handling generics
it will also allow us to more easily check for unconstrained type
parameters on traits.
In certain cases such as macro matching or macro expansion, it is
important to allow the parser to return a valid statement even if no
closing semicolon is given. This commit adds an optional parameter to
the concerned functions to allow a lack of semicolon those special cases
1025: Fix memory corruption in generation of builtin functions r=philberty a=philberty
This patch removes the pop_fn calls since no fncontext stack is required here for these intrinsic.
More context on the issues is in the commit message.
Fixes#1024
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
When we compile normal language functions we maintain a stack of the
current function declaration and associated return addresses. This is used
while building up the GCC tree graph. When we generate builtin intrinsic
functions such as offset or size_of were missing their associated push_fn
but still performed a pop_fn on completion this resulted in a corrupt
stack which valgrind shown as bad read/writes.
This patch removes the pop_fn calls since no fncontext stack is required here for these intrinsics.
Fixes#1024
We need to limit the amount of times that macro get expanded recursively
during macro-expansion. This limits the amount of times an ASTFragment
can be visited by simply incrementing the depth when setting a fragment,
and decreasing it when taking one. This way, recursive expansion which
happens at the expansion level (instead of the matching level) will
still get caught
1004: Added column!() macro r=CohenArthur a=mvvsmk
Fixes issue #979
1) Added the column!() macro using the LOCATION_COLUMN() from gcc_linemap
2) To-Do: add relevant test cases.
Signed-off-by : M V V S Manoj Kumar <mvvsmanojkumar@gmail.com>
The test case I added always fails, I can't figure out whether there is a problem in my test case or there is something wrong with my implementation of the column!() macro. Do let me know where I am going wrong and also if I missed something . :)
Co-authored-by: M V V S Manoj Kumar <mvvsmanojkumar@gmail.com>
Addresses issue #979
1) Added the column!() macro using the LOCATION_COLUMN() from gcc_linemap
2) Added relevent test cases
Signed-off-by : M V V S Manoj Kumar <mvvsmanojkumar@gmail.com>
1015: Add code generation for the slice type r=philberty a=philberty
This type must respect the layout of the FatPtr type in libcore. Rust
implements slices using Rustc types in libcore and uses a neat trick.
Addresses #849
1018: builtin-macros: Add more documentation for defining builtins r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
`@mvvsmk` you might find this a little more clear. Sorry about the confusion!
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
1017: attr-visitor: Split in its own source and header r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
Split up the 4000 lines rust-macro-expand.cc file containing the
AttrVisitor class and the macro expander implementation
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
This type must respect the layout of the FatPtr type in libcore. Rust
implements slices using Rustc types in libcore and uses a neat trick.
The slice is generated into the FatPtr which contains the pointer and
length of the slice. This is then placed into a union called Repr which
has 3 variants a mutable and immutable pointer to the FatPtr and a final
variant which is the raw FatPtr. This means we can use unsafe access to
the union to gain a pointer to the FatPtr.
Addresses #849
1008: Add const_ptr lang item mappings r=philberty a=philberty
In order to support slices, we need to be able to parse and contain
mappings for the const_ptr lang item. We do not need to do any
special handling of this lang item yet but this adds the mappings
so when we hit it we do not output an unknown lang item error.
Addresses #849
1009: Add missing type resolution to slices and arrays r=philberty a=philberty
This adds in the missing type resolution for slices and generic slices
and arrays. Since Arrays and Slices are both covariant types just like
references and pointers for example they need to handle recursive
substitutions where their element type might be a generic type
that can bind substitution parameters such as functions and ADT's.
Addresses #849
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
1007: Add missing canonicalization of slices and raw pointer types r=philberty a=philberty
This is part of my patch series for slices. This adds the missing visitors
for name canonicalization. More information in the patch, once we get
slice support in we need to start taking advantage of `@dkm's` HIR
visitor refactoring to avoid these issues with missing visitors making
simple bugs hard to track down.
Fixes#1005
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
1003: Add more intrinsics and refactor how we implement them r=philberty a=philberty
This patch series implements:
1. offset
2. size_of
3. unreachable
4. abort
It removes the GCC wrapper mappings to make them much easier to implement. It also demonstrates in single commits
the implementation of each of these intrinsic to make it easy to follow in how we implement them.
Addresses #658#849
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
1002: macros: Add abstraction around multiple matches r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
Adds an extra layer of abstraction around keeping multiple matches for
the same fragment. This avoids ugly code fetching the first match in
order to get the amounf of matches given by the user, while still
allowing zero-matches to exist.
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
998: Parse macro expansion properly r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
This PR adds a base for trying to parse statements or items in macro invocations. We are now able to parse multiple items / expressions / statements properly, but do not lower them properly, which is the last remaining task in #943
New macro parsing logic:
```mermaid
flowchart TD;
has_semi -- Yes --> stmt;
has_semi -- No --> invocation;
invocation -- Is Parens --> expr;
invocation -- Is Square --> expr;
invocation -- Is Curly --> stmt;
```
Closes#943Closes#959Closes#952
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
Different parsing functions need to be called based on the context
surrounding the macro invocation. This commit adds a flowchart trying to
explain the base resolving rules
Macro expansion happens at the same level as stripping, where nodes
might get removed if they are gated behind an unmet predicate. We also
perform macro expansion during this visitor's pass.
What we can do is thus to replace macro invocations with new items that
might have resulted from macro expansion: Since we're already mutating
numerous elements by removing them if they should be stripped, we can
also add elements if they should be expanded.
This commit also "fixes" macro test cases so that they are now accepted
by the new parser, which is more strict than it should for now.
Co-authored-by: SimplyTheOther <simplytheother@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: philberty <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
Adds an extra layer of abstraction around keeping multiple matches for
the same fragment. This avoids ugly code fetching the first match in
order to get the amounf of matches given by the user, while still
allowing zero-matches to exist.
Co-authored-by: philberty <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
Slices and Arrays are covariant types which means they can contain elements
which bind generics such as ADT or FnTypes. This means substitutions can be
recursive and this gives the typechecker a chance to handle this recursion
on these types.
When we intercept impl blocks for slices or raw pointers we must generate
the canonical path for this for name resolution this adds in the missing
visitors which will generate the path. Previously this was defaulting to
empty path segments and then hitting an assertion when we append the
empty segment.
Fixes#1005
This is another type of intrisic since the function contains no parameters
but the argument for the size_of is the generic parameter T. Which uses
TYPE_SIZE_UNIT to get the type size in bytes. GCC will optimize the
function call away when you turn optimizations on.
Addresses #658
Intrinsics were hidden behind the GCC abstract. This removes it by keeping
all of this logic within rust-intrinsic.cc so that we can make mappings of
the rustc name to GCC ones. We have a big comment from the mappings used
over to LLVM builtins which we can use to help guide how we do this for
GCC.
This patch adds the initial support for generic intrinsics these are do not
map directly to GCC builtins and need to be substited with their specificed
types. This patch allows for custom implementation body for these functions
by specifying handler functions which will generate the applicable
intrinsic when asked for.
Addresses #658
999: Refactor ABI options as part of HIR function qualifiers r=philberty a=philberty
This is a refactor to cleanup HIR::ExternBlock and HIR::FunctionQualifiers
to have an enum of ABI options to improve the error handling.
Co-authored-by: Philip Herron <philip.herron@embecosm.com>
994: Parse macro patterns properly in repetitions r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
Closes#966
We actually cannot reuse functions from the parser since we're expanding a macro transcriber. This is fine as the "algorithm" is extremely simple
997: macros: Allow any delimiters for invocation r=CohenArthur a=CohenArthur
Closes#946
Co-authored-by: Arthur Cohen <arthur.cohen@embecosm.com>
The AST has an ABI string as part of the function qualifiers, this was the
same in the HIR as it was initially a copy-paste. This patch changes the
HIR function qualifiers to have an enum of ABI options, during HIR lowering
the enum is setup and if an unknown ABI option is specified an error is
emitted.
It is not necessary for macro invocations to match the delimiters used
in the matcher. A matcher using parentheses can be invoked with curlies
or brackets, as well as any other combination(curlies matcher can be
invoked with parentheses or brackets)