This commit adds support to rustbuild to run crate unit tests (those defined by
`#[test]`) as well as documentation tests. All tests are powered by `cargo test`
under the hood.
Each step requires the `libtest` library is built for that corresponding stage.
Ideally the `test` crate would be a dev-dependency, but for now it's just easier
to ensure that we sequence everything in the right order.
Currently no filtering is implemented, so there's not actually a method of
testing *only* libstd or *only* libcore, but rather entire swaths of crates are
tested all at once.
A few points of note here are:
* The `coretest` and `collectionstest` crates are just listed as `[[test]]`
entires for `cargo test` to naturally pick up. This mean that `cargo test -p
core` actually runs all the tests for libcore.
* Libraries that aren't tested all mention `test = false` in their `Cargo.toml`
* Crates aren't currently allowed to have dev-dependencies due to
rust-lang/cargo#860, but we can likely alleviate this restriction once
workspaces are implemented.
cc #31590
This commit is an implementation of [RFC 1513] which allows applications to
alter the behavior of panics at compile time. A new compiler flag, `-C panic`,
is added and accepts the values `unwind` or `panic`, with the default being
`unwind`. This model affects how code is generated for the local crate, skipping
generation of landing pads with `-C panic=abort`.
[RFC 1513]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1513-less-unwinding.md
Panic implementations are then provided by crates tagged with
`#![panic_runtime]` and lazily required by crates with
`#![needs_panic_runtime]`. The panic strategy (`-C panic` value) of the panic
runtime must match the final product, and if the panic strategy is not `abort`
then the entire DAG must have the same panic strategy.
With the `-C panic=abort` strategy, users can expect a stable method to disable
generation of landing pads, improving optimization in niche scenarios,
decreasing compile time, and decreasing output binary size. With the `-C
panic=unwind` strategy users can expect the existing ability to isolate failure
in Rust code from the outside world.
Organizationally, this commit dismantles the `sys_common::unwind` module in
favor of some bits moving part of it to `libpanic_unwind` and the rest into the
`panicking` module in libstd. The custom panic runtime support is pretty similar
to the custom allocator support with the only major difference being how the
panic runtime is injected (takes the `-C panic` flag into account).
This commit adds support to rustbuild to run all documentation tests, basically
running `rustdoc --test` over all our documentation. This also includes support
for running the error index tests.
rustbuild: Fix handling of the bootstrap key
Bring the calculation logic in line with the makefiles and also set the
RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP_KEY environment variable to enable the bootstrap on the stable
compiler.
This verifies that the crates listed in the `[dependencies]` section of
`Cargo.toml` are a subset of the crates listed in `lib.rs` for our in-tree
crates. This should help ensure that when we refactor crates over time we keep
these dependency lists in sync.
Bring the calculation logic in line with the makefiles and also set the
RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP_KEY environment variable to enable the bootstrap on the stable
compiler.
rustbuild: Fix compile on OSX for 10.7
This commit should help configure our OSX rustbuild builder for targeting 10.7.
A key part of this is using `libc++` instead of `libstdc++` as apparently it's
more filled out and otherwise LLVM's cmake configuration would fail.
The `rust-std` package that we produce is expected to have not only the standard
library but also libtest for compiling unit tests. Unfortunately this does not
currently happen due to the way rustbuild is structured.
There are currently two main stages of compilation in rustbuild, one for the
standard library and one for the compiler. This is primarily done to allow us to
fill in the sysroot right after the standard library has finished compiling to
continue compiling the rest of the crates. Consequently the entire compiler does
not have to explicitly depend on the standard library, and this also should
allow us to pull in crates.io dependencies into the build in the future because
they'll just naturally build against the std we just produced.
These phases, however, do not represent a cross-compiled build. Target-only
builds also require libtest, and libtest is currently part of the
all-encompassing "compiler build". There's unfortunately no way to learn about
just libtest and its dependencies (in a great and robust fashion) so to ensure
that we can copy the right artifacts over this commit introduces a new build
step, libtest.
The new libtest build step has documentation, dist, and link steps as std/rustc
already do. The compiler now depends on libtest instead of libstd, and all
compiler crates can now assume that test and its dependencies are implicitly
part of the sysroot (hence explicit dependencies being removed). This makes the
build a tad less parallel as in theory many rustc crates can be compiled in
parallel with libtest, but this likely isn't where we really need parallelism
either (all the time is still spent in the compiler).
All in all this allows the `dist-std` step to depend on both libstd and libtest,
so `rust-std` packages produced by rustbuild should start having both the
standard library and libtest.
Closes#32523
This commit should help configure our OSX rustbuild builder for targeting 10.7.
A key part of this is using `libc++` instead of `libstdc++` as apparently it's
more filled out and otherwise LLVM's cmake configuration would fail.
This commit implements the `make dist` command in the new rustbuild build
system, porting over `dist.mk` and `prepare.mk` into Rust. There's a huge amount
of complexity between those two files, not all of which is likely justified, so
the Rust implementation is *much* smaller.
Currently the implementation still shells out to rust-installer as well as some
python scripts, but ideally we'd rewrite it all in the future to not shell out
and be in Rust proper.
The facet of a stage is rarely relevant when running a tool or building
something, it's all a question of what stage the *compiler* is built in. We've
already got a nice handy `Compiler` structure to carry this information, so
let's use it!
This refactors the signature of the `Build::cargo` function two ways:
1. The `stage` argument is removed, this was just duplicated with the `compiler`
argument's stage field.
2. The `target` argument is now required. This was a bug where if the `--target`
flag isn't passed then the snapshot stage0 compiler is always used, so we
won't pick up any changes.
Much of the other changes in this commit are just propagating these decisions
outwards. For example many of the `Step` variants no longer have a stage
argument as they're baked into the compiler.
The standard library doesn't depend on rustc_bitflags, so move it to explicit
dependencies on all other crates. Additionally, the arena/fmt_macros deps could
be dropped from libsyntax.
This commit is the start of a series of commits which start to replace the
makefiles with a Cargo-based build system. The aim is not to remove the
makefiles entirely just yet but rather just replace the portions that invoke the
compiler to do the bootstrap. This commit specifically adds enough support to
perform the bootstrap (and all the cross compilation within) along with
generating documentation.
More commits will follow up in this series to actually wire up the makefiles to
call this build system, so stay tuned!
Fixes#1896 which was never truly fixed, just masked.
The given tests would have failed had they used `~fn()` and
not `@fn()`. They now result in compilation errors.
Fixes#2978.
Necessary first step for #2202, #2263.
Maintain explicit "paren" nodes in the AST so we can pretty-print
without having to guess where parens should go. We may revisit this
in the future.
r=graydon