Ignore -Zprofile when building compiler_builtins
#70846 made the `compiler_builtins` crate ignore the default codegen-units setting and instead always split each function into a different codegen unit.
This unfortunately breaks `-Zprofile` which requires a single codegen unit per crate (see #71283). You can notice this when building with `cargo -Zbuild-std` and `RUSTFLAGS` containing `-Zprofile`.
This PR works around this issue by just ignoring `-Zprofile` for the `compiler-builtins` crate.
Set `--cfg bootstrap` for stage0 rustdoc
Resolves#71455.
With this patch, running `./x.py doc --stage 0 src/libstd` with a clean `build` dir successfully outputs docs for `core`, `alloc` and `std` in under a minute. This kind of turnaround for viewing small changes to the standard library documentation is quite nice, and I think we should endeavour to keep it working. I'm not sure how involved that would be though.
r? @Mark-Simulacrum
Fix typos in docs for keyword "in"
Erroneous .md formatting was causing the link to not work on the currently-nightly keyword docs for `in`, and also there was a simple typo.
Add BinaryHeap::retain as suggested in #42849
This PR implements retain for BinaryHeap as suggested in #42849.
This is my first PR for Rust, so please let me know if I should be doing anything differently, thanks!
Only run dataflow for const qualification if type-based check would fail
This is the optimization discussed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/49146#issuecomment-614012476. We wait for `Qualif::in_any_value_of_ty` to return `true` before running dataflow. For bodies that deal mostly with primitive types, this will avoid running dataflow at all during const qualification.
This also removes the `BitSet` used to cache `in_any_value_of_ty` for each local, which was only necessary for an old version of #64470 that also handled promotability.
The unsafe code can be justified within range_search, as it makes sure to not
overlap the returned references, but from the callers perspective it's an
entirely safe algorithm and there's no need for the caller to know about the
duplication.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #71235 (Tweak `'static` suggestion code)
- #71318 (miri-unleash tests: ensure they fire even with 'allow(const_err)')
- #71428 (Let compiletest recognize gdb 10.x)
- #71475 (Miri Frame: use mir::Location to represent position in function)
- #71476 (more compact way to adjust test sizes for Miri)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
Miri Frame: use mir::Location to represent position in function
I only recently learned that `Location` exists, and it seems to perfectly fit what Miri needs to represent which statement we are currently executing. :)
r? @ecstatic-morse
Let compiletest recognize gdb 10.x
git gdb has moved to version 10. My build prints this as its
--version:
GNU gdb (GDB) 10.0.50.20200420-git
Unfortunately this conflicts with this comment in compiletest:
// We limit major to 1 digit, otherwise, on openSUSE, we parse the openSUSE version
This patch changes the version parsing to follow the GNU coding
standard, which accounts for both the openSUSE case as well as
handling gdb 10.
My debuginfo test run now says:
NOTE: compiletest thinks it is using GDB with native rust support
NOTE: compiletest thinks it is using GDB version 10000050
... where previously it failed to find that gdb 10 had rust support.