Commit Graph

304 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Brian Anderson 0e85e599db mk: Pass the name of the make command to maketest.py
This should make BSD use the proper GNU make.
2014-04-06 15:55:43 -07:00
Brian Anderson 072a920503 Remove check-fast. Closes #4193, #8844, #6330, #7416 2014-04-06 15:55:43 -07:00
bors 0651d2790c auto merge of #13260 : pnkfelix/rust/fsk-fix-13247, r=alexcrichton
Fix #13247.

r? @alexcrichton  (or anyone else, really).
2014-04-05 14:51:32 -07:00
Felix S. Klock II 4edf7b8c34 Fix android problems with newly fixed rpass-full variable definition.
First, documented the existing `CTEST_DISABLE_$(TEST_GROUP)` pattern
for conditionally disabling tests based on missing host features.

Added variant of above, `CTEST_DISABLE_NONSELFHOST_$(TEST_GROUP)`,
which is only queried in contexts where the target is not on the
CFG_HOST list (which I interpret as the list of targets that our host
can compatibly emulate; e.g. the example that i686 and x86_64 can in
theory run each others' tests).

Driveby fix: Remove redundant copy of
check-stage$(1)-T-$(2)-H-$(3)-$(4)-exec dependency declaration.
2014-04-05 21:40:36 +02:00
Alex Crichton 78937b9779 std: Document builtin syntax extensions
These syntax extensions need a place to be documented, and this starts passing a
`--cfg dox` parameter to `rustdoc` when building and testing documentation in
order to document macros so that they have no effect on the compiled crate, but
only documentation.

Closes #5605
2014-04-03 16:17:48 -07:00
Felix S. Klock II 3cbd98e43f Two fixes to get `make check-stage1` working.
1. Fix a long-standing typo in the makefile: the relevant
   CTEST_NAME here is `rpass-full` (with a dash), not
   `rpass_full`.

2. The rpass-full tests depend on the complete set of target
   libraries.  Therefore, the rpass-full tests need to use
   the dependencies held in the CSREQ-prefixed variable, not
   the TLIBRUSTC_DEFAULT-prefixed variable.
2014-04-02 11:47:19 +02:00
Brian Anderson d252539990 mk: Rename CFG_COMPILER to CFG_COMPILER_HOST_TRIPLE
Much clearer
2014-03-25 21:35:10 -07:00
Brian Anderson 6f9b30c6c1 configure: Make rustlibdir non-configurable
Trying to reduce the complexity of installation
2014-03-25 21:35:10 -07:00
Alex Crichton 829df69f9f Add basic backtrace functionality
Whenever a failure happens, if a program is run with
`RUST_LOG=std::rt::backtrace` a backtrace will be printed to the task's stderr
handle. Stack traces are uncondtionally printed on double-failure and
rtabort!().

This ended up having a nontrivial implementation, and here's some highlights of
it:

* We're bundling libbacktrace for everything but OSX and Windows
* We use libgcc_s and its libunwind apis to get a backtrace of instruction
  pointers
* On OSX we use dladdr() to go from an instruction pointer to a symbol
* On unix that isn't OSX, we use libbacktrace to get symbols
* Windows, as usual, has an entirely separate implementation

Lots more fun details and comments can be found in the source itself.

Closes #10128
2014-03-13 00:24:20 -07:00
Huon Wilson 3c4ff1b872 mk: rename `check-...-doc-<crate>` to `check-...-doc-crate-<crate>`.
E.g. this stops check-...-doc rules for `rustdoc.md` and `librustdoc`
from stamping on each other, so that they are correctly built and
tested. (Previously only the rustdoc crate was tested.)
2014-03-09 19:34:40 +11:00
Huon Wilson f7833215b0 mk: rewrite the documentation handling.
This converts it to be very similar to crates.mk, with a single list of
the documentation items creating all the necessary bits and pieces.

Changes include:
- rustdoc is used to render HTML & test standalone docs
- documentation building now obeys NO_REBUILD=1
- testing standalone docs now obeys NO_REBUILD=1
- L10N is slightly less broken (in particular, it shares dependencies
  and code with the rest of the code)
- PDFs can be built for all documentation items, not just tutorial and
  manual
- removes the obsolete & unused extract-tests.py script
- adjust the CSS for standalone docs to use the rustdoc syntax
  highlighting
2014-03-09 19:34:40 +11:00
bors 34a224f4a1 auto merge of #12530 : alexcrichton/rust/make-check-no-rpath, r=brson
This involves passing through LD_LIBRARY_PATH through more places, specifically
in the compiletest, run-make, and doctest runners.
2014-02-25 07:56:35 -08:00
Huon Wilson abde5ed011 mk: restore check-notidy.
tidy has some limitations (e.g. the "checked in binaries" check doesn't
and can't actually check git), and so it's useful to run tests without
running tidy occasionally.
2014-02-22 20:18:29 +11:00
Alex Crichton e26ba3605a mk: Get "make check" passing with --disable-rpath
This involves passing through LD_LIBRARY_PATH through more places, specifically
in the compiletest, run-make, and doctest runners.
2014-02-21 16:35:05 -08:00
Alex Crichton 35c6e22fab Tweak how preference factors into linkage
The new methodology can be found in the re-worded comment, but the gist of it is
that -C prefer-dynamic doesn't turn off static linkage. The error messages
should also be a little more sane now.

Closes #12133
2014-02-19 08:33:08 -08:00
Derek Guenther b609d57b02 Added more scripts to tidy check 2014-02-17 10:36:47 -06:00
Brian Anderson 109673f368 mk: Remove check-notidy, check-full, check-test
Mostly useless
2014-02-15 23:11:56 -08:00
Brian Anderson 8d4b675ced mk: Address review feedback 2014-02-14 19:17:50 -08:00
Brian Anderson 334af011f0 mk: Improve build system help commands 2014-02-14 17:45:54 -08:00
bors d40b537405 auto merge of #12192 : luqmana/rust/fix-cross, r=alexcrichton
Fix some fall out from the big command line option changes.
2014-02-14 01:41:46 -08:00
Luqman Aden ffdda22aa2 mk: Fix non-android cross builds. 2014-02-13 18:11:23 -05:00
Huon Wilson 44e6883d14 mk: make NO_REBUILD more forceful and more general.
Previously crates like `green` and `native` would still depend on their
parents when running `make check-stage2-green NO_REBUILD=1`, this
ensures that they only depend on their source files.

Also, apply NO_REBUILD to the crate doc tests, so, for example,
`check-stage2-doc-std` will use an already compiled `rustdoc` directly.
2014-02-13 12:54:01 -08:00
Vadim Chugunov b7651325eb Build compiler-rt and link it to all crates, similarly to morestack. 2014-02-11 15:59:59 -08:00
Florian Hahn f62460c1f5 Change `xfail` directives in compiletests to `ignore`, closes #11363 2014-02-11 18:23:20 +01:00
bors d440a569bb auto merge of #12084 : alexcrichton/rust/codegen-opts, r=cmr
Move them all behind a new -C switch. This migrates some -Z flags and some
top-level flags behind this -C codegen option.

The -C flag takes values of the form "-C name=value" where the "=value" is
optional for some flags.

Flags affected:

* --llvm-args           => -C llvm-args
* --passes              => -C passes
* --ar                  => -C ar
* --linker              => -C linker
* --link-args           => -C link-args
* --target-cpu          => -C target-cpu
* --target-feature      => -C target-fature
* --android-cross-path  => -C android-cross-path
* --save-temps          => -C save-temps
* --no-rpath            => -C no-rpath
* -Z no-prepopulate     => -C no-prepopulate-passes
* -Z no-vectorize-loops => -C no-vectorize-loops
* -Z no-vectorize-slp   => -C no-vectorize-slp
* -Z soft-float         => -C soft-float
* -Z gen-crate-map      => -C gen-crate-map
* -Z prefer-dynamic     => -C prefer-dynamic
* -Z no-integrated-as   => -C no-integrated-as

As a bonus, this also promotes the -Z extra-debug-info flag to a first class -g
or --debuginfo flag.

* -Z debug-info         => removed
* -Z extra-debug-info   => -g or --debuginfo

Closes #9770
Closes #12000
2014-02-10 01:26:24 -08:00
Alex Crichton 071ee96277 Consolidate codegen-related compiler flags
Move them all behind a new -C switch. This migrates some -Z flags and some
top-level flags behind this -C codegen option.

The -C flag takes values of the form "-C name=value" where the "=value" is
optional for some flags.

Flags affected:

* --llvm-args           => -C llvm-args
* --passes              => -C passes
* --ar                  => -C ar
* --linker              => -C linker
* --link-args           => -C link-args
* --target-cpu          => -C target-cpu
* --target-feature      => -C target-fature
* --android-cross-path  => -C android-cross-path
* --save-temps          => -C save-temps
* --no-rpath            => -C no-rpath
* -Z no-prepopulate     => -C no-prepopulate-passes
* -Z no-vectorize-loops => -C no-vectorize-loops
* -Z no-vectorize-slp   => -C no-vectorize-slp
* -Z soft-float         => -C soft-float
* -Z gen-crate-map      => -C gen-crate-map
* -Z prefer-dynamic     => -C prefer-dynamic
* -Z no-integrated-as   => -C no-integrated-as

As a bonus, this also promotes the -Z extra-debug-info flag to a first class -g
or --debuginfo flag.

* -Z debug-info         => removed
* -Z extra-debug-info   => -g or --debuginfo

Closes #9770
Closes #12000
2014-02-10 00:50:39 -08:00
Brian Anderson 3062d0f6bb mk: Replace 'compile_and_link' with 'oxidize' 2014-02-09 02:42:28 -08:00
bors b2c1a81649 auto merge of #12099 : alexcrichton/rust/rpath-tests, r=thestinger
This way when you disable rpaths you can still run `make check`
2014-02-07 22:01:30 -08:00
Alex Crichton 28b72cdae4 Set the LD_LIBRARY_PATH when running tests
This way when you disable rpaths you can still run `make check`
2014-02-07 16:04:57 -08:00
Derek Guenther 730bdb6403 Added tests to make tidy 2014-02-07 12:49:24 -06:00
bors 87fe3ccf09 auto merge of #12039 : alexcrichton/rust/no-conditions, r=brson
This has been a long time coming. Conditions in rust were initially envisioned
as being a good alternative to error code return pattern. The idea is that all
errors are fatal-by-default, and you can opt-in to handling the error by
registering an error handler.

While sounding nice, conditions ended up having some unforseen shortcomings:

* Actually handling an error has some very awkward syntax:

        let mut result = None;                                        
        let mut answer = None;                                        
        io::io_error::cond.trap(|e| { result = Some(e) }).inside(|| { 
            answer = Some(some_io_operation());                       
        });                                                           
        match result {                                                
            Some(err) => { /* hit an I/O error */ }                   
            None => {                                                 
                let answer = answer.unwrap();                         
                /* deal with the result of I/O */                     
            }                                                         
        }                                                             

  This pattern can certainly use functions like io::result, but at its core
  actually handling conditions is fairly difficult

* The "zero value" of a function is often confusing. One of the main ideas
  behind using conditions was to change the signature of I/O functions. Instead
  of read_be_u32() returning a result, it returned a u32. Errors were notified
  via a condition, and if you caught the condition you understood that the "zero
  value" returned is actually a garbage value. These zero values are often
  difficult to understand, however.

  One case of this is the read_bytes() function. The function takes an integer
  length of the amount of bytes to read, and returns an array of that size. The
  array may actually be shorter, however, if an error occurred.

  Another case is fs::stat(). The theoretical "zero value" is a blank stat
  struct, but it's a little awkward to create and return a zero'd out stat
  struct on a call to stat().

  In general, the return value of functions that can raise error are much more
  natural when using a Result as opposed to an always-usable zero-value.

* Conditions impose a necessary runtime requirement on *all* I/O. In theory I/O
  is as simple as calling read() and write(), but using conditions imposed the
  restriction that a rust local task was required if you wanted to catch errors
  with I/O. While certainly an surmountable difficulty, this was always a bit of
  a thorn in the side of conditions.

* Functions raising conditions are not always clear that they are raising
  conditions. This suffers a similar problem to exceptions where you don't
  actually know whether a function raises a condition or not. The documentation
  likely explains, but if someone retroactively adds a condition to a function
  there's nothing forcing upstream users to acknowledge a new point of task
  failure.

* Libaries using I/O are not guaranteed to correctly raise on conditions when an
  error occurs. In developing various I/O libraries, it's much easier to just
  return `None` from a read rather than raising an error. The silent contract of
  "don't raise on EOF" was a little difficult to understand and threw a wrench
  into the answer of the question "when do I raise a condition?"

Many of these difficulties can be overcome through documentation, examples, and
general practice. In the end, all of these difficulties added together ended up
being too overwhelming and improving various aspects didn't end up helping that
much.

A result-based I/O error handling strategy also has shortcomings, but the
cognitive burden is much smaller. The tooling necessary to make this strategy as
usable as conditions were is much smaller than the tooling necessary for
conditions.

Perhaps conditions may manifest themselves as a future entity, but for now
we're going to remove them from the standard library.

Closes #9795
Closes #8968
2014-02-06 17:11:33 -08:00
Alex Crichton 454882dcb7 Remove std::condition
This has been a long time coming. Conditions in rust were initially envisioned
as being a good alternative to error code return pattern. The idea is that all
errors are fatal-by-default, and you can opt-in to handling the error by
registering an error handler.

While sounding nice, conditions ended up having some unforseen shortcomings:

* Actually handling an error has some very awkward syntax:

    let mut result = None;
    let mut answer = None;
    io::io_error::cond.trap(|e| { result = Some(e) }).inside(|| {
        answer = Some(some_io_operation());
    });
    match result {
        Some(err) => { /* hit an I/O error */ }
        None => {
            let answer = answer.unwrap();
            /* deal with the result of I/O */
        }
    }

  This pattern can certainly use functions like io::result, but at its core
  actually handling conditions is fairly difficult

* The "zero value" of a function is often confusing. One of the main ideas
  behind using conditions was to change the signature of I/O functions. Instead
  of read_be_u32() returning a result, it returned a u32. Errors were notified
  via a condition, and if you caught the condition you understood that the "zero
  value" returned is actually a garbage value. These zero values are often
  difficult to understand, however.

  One case of this is the read_bytes() function. The function takes an integer
  length of the amount of bytes to read, and returns an array of that size. The
  array may actually be shorter, however, if an error occurred.

  Another case is fs::stat(). The theoretical "zero value" is a blank stat
  struct, but it's a little awkward to create and return a zero'd out stat
  struct on a call to stat().

  In general, the return value of functions that can raise error are much more
  natural when using a Result as opposed to an always-usable zero-value.

* Conditions impose a necessary runtime requirement on *all* I/O. In theory I/O
  is as simple as calling read() and write(), but using conditions imposed the
  restriction that a rust local task was required if you wanted to catch errors
  with I/O. While certainly an surmountable difficulty, this was always a bit of
  a thorn in the side of conditions.

* Functions raising conditions are not always clear that they are raising
  conditions. This suffers a similar problem to exceptions where you don't
  actually know whether a function raises a condition or not. The documentation
  likely explains, but if someone retroactively adds a condition to a function
  there's nothing forcing upstream users to acknowledge a new point of task
  failure.

* Libaries using I/O are not guaranteed to correctly raise on conditions when an
  error occurs. In developing various I/O libraries, it's much easier to just
  return `None` from a read rather than raising an error. The silent contract of
  "don't raise on EOF" was a little difficult to understand and threw a wrench
  into the answer of the question "when do I raise a condition?"

Many of these difficulties can be overcome through documentation, examples, and
general practice. In the end, all of these difficulties added together ended up
being too overwhelming and improving various aspects didn't end up helping that
much.

A result-based I/O error handling strategy also has shortcomings, but the
cognitive burden is much smaller. The tooling necessary to make this strategy as
usable as conditions were is much smaller than the tooling necessary for
conditions.

Perhaps conditions may manifest themselves as a future entity, but for now
we're going to remove them from the standard library.

Closes #9795
Closes #8968
2014-02-06 15:48:56 -08:00
Alex Crichton 6e7968b10a Redesign output flags for rustc
This commit removes the -c, --emit-llvm, -s, --rlib, --dylib, --staticlib,
--lib, and --bin flags from rustc, adding the following flags:

* --emit=[asm,ir,bc,obj,link]
* --crate-type=[dylib,rlib,staticlib,bin,lib]

The -o option has also been redefined to be used for *all* flavors of outputs.
This means that we no longer ignore it for libraries. The --out-dir remains the
same as before.

The new logic for files that rustc emits is as follows:

1. Output types are dictated by the --emit flag. The default value is
   --emit=link, and this option can be passed multiple times and have all
   options stacked on one another.
2. Crate types are dictated by the --crate-type flag and the #[crate_type]
   attribute. The flags can be passed many times and stack with the crate
   attribute.
3. If the -o flag is specified, and only one output type is specified, the
   output will be emitted at this location. If more than one output type is
   specified, then the filename of -o is ignored, and all output goes in the
   directory that -o specifies. The -o option always ignores the --out-dir
   option.
4. If the --out-dir flag is specified, all output goes in this directory.
5. If -o and --out-dir are both not present, all output goes in the current
   directory of the process.
6. When multiple output types are specified, the filestem of all output is the
   same as the name of the CrateId (derived from a crate attribute or from the
   filestem of the crate file).

Closes #7791
Closes #11056
Closes #11667
2014-02-06 11:14:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton 50bdeb9a34 Run all target crate tests on the windows/try bots
Previously, the check-fast and check-lite test suites weren't picking up all
target crates, rather just std/extra. In order to ensure that all of our crates
work on windows, I've modified these rules to build the test suites for all
TARGET_CRATES members. Note that this still excludes rustc/syntax/rustdoc.
2014-02-04 18:05:13 -08:00
Alex Crichton 22a421fa02 Rewrite the doc makefile for doc => src/doc
This continues to generate all documentation into doc, but it now looks for
source files in src/doc

Closes #11860
Closes #11970
2014-02-02 10:59:27 -08:00
Corey Richardson 25fe2cadb1 Remove rustpkg.
I'm sorry :'(

Closes #11859
2014-02-02 03:08:56 -05:00
Alex Crichton 55280598a8 Fix android test deps
This changes android testing to upload *all* target crates rather than just a
select subset. This should unblock #11867 which is introducing a libglob
dependency in testing.
2014-01-29 00:16:32 -08:00
Alex Crichton 0d38e1f9c1 Depend on libnative when testing
The stdtest binary uses both libnative and libgreen to test the two
implementations

Closes #11843
2014-01-27 09:16:55 -08:00
Alex Crichton cdfdc1eb6b Move extra::flate to libflate
This is hopefully the beginning of the long-awaited dissolution of libextra.
Using the newly created build infrastructure for building libraries, I decided
to move the first module out of libextra.

While not being a particularly meaty module in and of itself, the flate module
is required by rustc and additionally has a native C dependency. I was able to
very easily split out the C dependency from rustrt, update librustc, and
magically everything gets installed to the right locations and built
automatically.

This is meant to be a proof-of-concept commit to how easy it is to remove
modules from libextra now. I didn't put any effort into modernizing the
interface of libflate or updating it other than to remove the one glob import it
had.
2014-01-26 15:42:15 -08:00
Alex Crichton 2611483894 Refactor the build system for easily adding crates
Before this patch, if you wanted to add a crate to the build system you had to
change about 100 lines across 8 separate makefiles. This is highly error prone
and opaque to all but a few. This refactoring is targeted at consolidating this
effort so adding a new crate adds one line in one file in a way that everyone
can understand it.
2014-01-26 00:53:41 -08:00
Alex Crichton bd469341eb test: Add the ability to force a host target
The new macro loading infrastructure needs the ability to force a
procedural-macro crate to be built with the host architecture rather than the
target architecture (because the compiler is just about to dlopen it).
2014-01-17 11:13:22 -08:00
bors dd8b011319 auto merge of #11521 : dguenther/rust/hide_libdir_relative, r=alexcrichton
Renamed `LIBDIR_RELATIVE` to `CFG_LIBDIR_RELATIVE`. It's not a configurable variable, but it looks out of place without the `CFG_` prefix.

Fixes #11420
2014-01-14 15:11:30 -08:00
Derek Guenther a599d897fc Renamed LIBDIR_RELATIVE to CFG_LIBDIR_RELATIVE 2014-01-14 15:52:57 -06:00
bors 77eeddaa48 auto merge of #11501 : alexcrichton/rust/dox, r=brson
The official documentation sorely needs an explanation of the rust runtime and what it is exactly, and I want this guide to provide that information.

I'm unsure of whether I've been too light on some topics while too heavy on others. I also feel like a few things are still missing. As always, feedback is appreciated, especially about things you'd like to see written about!
2014-01-13 23:26:36 -08:00
Alex Crichton 289ba105ae dox: Write a guide to the rust runtime 2014-01-13 23:22:07 -08:00
Brian Anderson 279366a0b2 mk: Make TESTNAME and VERBOSE work with android. Closes #10957 2014-01-13 19:45:37 -08:00
Brian Anderson 77ec04487b mk: Start testing the cheatsheet 2014-01-07 17:01:07 -08:00
bors aa1839bd69 auto merge of #11364 : brson/rust/docs, r=alexcrichton
This reorganizes the documentation index to be more focused on the in-tree docs, and to clean up the style, and it also adds @steveklabnik's pointer guide.
2014-01-07 15:46:38 -08:00
Jan Niklas Hasse 116773a4eb Make CFG_LIBDIR configurable. Fixes #5223 2014-01-07 17:51:15 +01:00
Steve Klabnik 6f09d80f97 Add Pointer tutorial, rename borrowed pointer tutorial. 2014-01-06 19:37:26 -08:00