Nit: LLVM & Clang latest version is 4.0
Small nit: since latest Clang version is 4.0 it's nice to reflect this in the documentation.
Also, I couldn't find anything, but there might be any hard-coded check that Clang version matches "3.X" anywhere in the build system; if there is one, it'd be great to bump that one too.
str: Make docs consistently punctuated
Every so slightly pointless one character PR, but this was driving me nuts while reading the docs a moment ago (all the [other public structs](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/str/index.html#structs) have descriptions that end in a full-stop).
Make the filenames of .stamp files generated by compiletest shorter
Otherwise we run into filename length limitations on some file systems. See https://bugs.launchpad.net/ecryptfs/+bug/344878 for an example where we only can have ~145 characters for filenames.
r? @alexcrichton
appveyor: Use Ninja to build LLVM on MinGW
I have a suspicion that MinGW's make is the cause of #40546 rather than anything
else, but that's purely a suspicion without any facts to back it up. In any case
we'll eventually be moving the MSVC build over to Ninja in order to leverage
sccache regardless, so this commit simply jumpstarts that process by downloading
Ninja for use by MinGW anyway.
I'm not sure if this closes#40546 for real, but this is my current best shot at
closing it out, so...
Closes#40546
Forbid conflicts between macros 1.0 exports and macros 2.0 exports
This PR forbids for conflicts between `#[macro_export]`/`#[macro_reexport]` macro exports and `pub use` macro exports. For example,
```rust
// crate A:
pub use macros::foo;
//^ This is allowed today, will be forbidden by this PR.
// crate B:
extern crate A; // This triggers a confusing error today.
use A::foo; // This could refer to refer to either macro export in crate A.
```
r? @nrc
This replaces the `std::collections:#️⃣:table::RevMoveBuckets`
iterator with a simpler `while` loop. This iterator was only used for
dropping the remaining elements of a `RawTable`, so instead we can just
loop through directly and drop them in place.
This should be functionally equivalent to the former code, but a little
easier to read. I was hoping it might have some performance benefit
too, but it seems the optimizer was already good enough to see through
the iterator -- the generated code is nearly the same. Maybe it will
still help if an element type has more complicated drop code.
HirId has a more stable representation than NodeId, meaning that
modifications to one item don't influence (part of) the IDs within
other items. The other part is a DefIndex for which there already
is a way of stable hashing and persistence.
This commit introduces the HirId type and generates a HirId for
every NodeId during HIR lowering, but the resulting values are
not yet used anywhere, except in consistency checks.
This reverts commit dc0bb3f283, reversing
changes made to e879aa43ef.
This is a temporary step intended to fix regressions. A more
comprehensive fix for type inference and dead-code is in the works.
It's fairly common to expose an API which takes an `IntoIterator` and
immediately collects that into a vector. It's also common to buffer
a bunch of items into a vector and then pass that into one of these
APIs. If the iterator hasn't been advanced, we can make this `from_iter`
simply reassemble the original `Vec` with no actual iteration or
reallocation.
I have a suspicion that MinGW's make is the cause of #40546 rather than anything
else, but that's purely a suspicion without any facts to back it up. In any case
we'll eventually be moving the MSVC build over to Ninja in order to leverage
sccache regardless, so this commit simply jumpstarts that process by downloading
Ninja for use by MinGW anyway.
I'm not sure if this closes#40546 for real, but this is my current best shot at
closing it out, so...
Closes#40546
The code example in the trait documentation of ExactSizeIterator
has an incorrect implementation of the len method that does not return
the number of times the example iterator 'Counter' will iterate. This
may confuse readers of the docs as the example code will compile but
doesn't uphold the trait's contract.
This is easily fixed by modifying the implementation of len and changing
the assert statement to actually assert the correct behaviour. I also
slightly modified a code comment to better reflect what the method
returns.
When debugging why builds are taking so long it's often useful to get the
timestamp of all log messages as we're not always timing every tiny step of the
build. I wrote a [utility] for prepending a relative timestamp from the start of
a process which is now downloaded to the builders and is what we wrap the entire
build invocation in.
[utility]: https://github.com/alexcrichton/stamp-rsCloses#40577
This commit alters the translation layer to unconditionally emit the `uwtable`
LLVM attribute on Windows regardless of the `no_landing_pads` setting.
Previously I believe we omitted this attribute as an optimization when the
`-Cpanic=abort` flag was passed, but this unfortunately caused problems for
Gecko.
It [was discovered] that there was trouble unwinding through Rust functions due
to foreign exceptions such as illegal instructions or otherwise in-practice
methods used to abort a process. In testing it looked like the major difference
between a working binary and a non-working binary is indeed this `uwtable`
attribute, but this PR has unfortunately not been thoroughly tested in terms of
compiling Gecko with `-C panic=abort` *and* this PR to see whether it works, so
this is still somewhat working on just suspicion.
[was discovered]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1302078