Commit Graph

133 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
mark
6556c84e3f Add a link to the rustc docs 2018-07-04 17:24:43 -05:00
Dhirendra Kumar Kashyap
b0a55554ac
Update README.md 2018-06-13 23:20:50 +05:30
Dhirendra Kumar Kashyap
3eaa4a3fad
Update README.md
Corrected the grammar of the document.
2018-06-13 22:53:50 +05:30
Abhishek koserwal
bad9fefdae Update build instructions 2018-05-31 23:53:23 +05:30
Alex Crichton
d69b24805b rust: Import LLD for linking wasm objects
This commit imports the LLD project from LLVM to serve as the default linker for
the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target. The `binaryen` submoule is consequently
removed along with "binaryen linker" support in rustc.

Moving to LLD brings with it a number of benefits for wasm code:

* LLD is itself an actual linker, so there's no need to compile all wasm code
  with LTO any more. As a result builds should be *much* speedier as LTO is no
  longer forcibly enabled for all builds of the wasm target.
* LLD is quickly becoming an "official solution" for linking wasm code together.
  This, I believe at least, is intended to be the main supported linker for
  native code and wasm moving forward. Picking up support early on should help
  ensure that we can help LLD identify bugs and otherwise prove that it works
  great for all our use cases!
* Improvements to the wasm toolchain are currently primarily focused around LLVM
  and LLD (from what I can tell at least), so it's in general much better to be
  on this bandwagon for bugfixes and new features.
* Historical "hacks" like `wasm-gc` will soon no longer be necessary, LLD
  will [natively implement][gc] `--gc-sections` (better than `wasm-gc`!) which
  means a postprocessor is no longer needed to show off Rust's "small wasm
  binary size".

LLD is added in a pretty standard way to rustc right now. A new rustbuild target
was defined for building LLD, and this is executed when a compiler's sysroot is
being assembled. LLD is compiled against the LLVM that we've got in tree, which
means we're currently on the `release_60` branch, but this may get upgraded in
the near future!

LLD is placed into rustc's sysroot in a `bin` directory. This is similar to
where `gcc.exe` can be found on Windows. This directory is automatically added
to `PATH` whenever rustc executes the linker, allowing us to define a `WasmLd`
linker which implements the interface that `wasm-ld`, LLD's frontend, expects.

Like Emscripten the LLD target is currently only enabled for Tier 1 platforms,
notably OSX/Windows/Linux, and will need to be installed manually for compiling
to wasm on other platforms. LLD is by default turned off in rustbuild, and
requires a `config.toml` option to be enabled to turn it on.

Finally the unstable `#![wasm_import_memory]` attribute was also removed as LLD
has a native option for controlling this.

[gc]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42511
2018-03-03 20:21:35 -08:00
Tobias Stolzmann
6edbe37437
Fix link to rustc guide in README.md 2018-03-01 03:13:17 +01:00
Mark Mansi
a05c5538d4 Start moving to the rustc guide! 2018-02-23 13:20:56 -06:00
Basile Desloges
513910e321 Update MSVC compilation instructions regarding path length on Windows 2017-11-25 11:38:10 +01:00
Joe Rattazzi
6500b3d069 Add "Buidling on *nix" sub-header 2017-10-14 16:59:58 -05:00
johnthagen
c3ff62863d Clarify RAM usage during build 2017-10-09 10:02:50 -04:00
Garrett Berg
daf3ed5651 Add links to headers in README and CONTRIBUTING and dependencies to CONTRIBUTING 2017-09-29 17:44:55 -06:00
Matt Ickstadt
081f32ab67 Clarify windows build instructions in README
The old wording made me think you were supposed to do `python x.py --build=msvc`, which is not the case. Specify that you need to use the target triple.
2017-08-22 13:28:39 -05:00
Steven Fackler
1126a85e87 Move config.toml.example to the root dir
It's way more discoverable here.
2017-08-11 22:24:25 -07:00
Lee Bousfield
857d9dbaba
README: note how to enable debugging for rustc 2017-07-03 22:06:43 -04:00
Fuqiao Xue
09ac478c5c Update TRPL link in README.md 2017-06-09 13:37:22 +08:00
Marc-Antoine Perennou
150d644c21 rustbuild: split Install out of Dist subcommand
only create source tarball for the Dist subcommand
mark install rule as default for Kind::Install
split install-docs
split install-std
factor out empty_dir handling
split install-cargo
split install-analysis
split install-src
rework install-rustc
properly handle cross-compilation setups for install
use pkgname in install
split plain source tarball generation from rust-src dist
document src-tarball in config.toml.exmaple

Signed-off-by: Marc-Antoine Perennou <Marc-Antoine@Perennou.com>
2017-05-22 22:10:12 +02:00
Maxwell Paul Brickner
f7e9041cd2 Updated links to use https
I just updated a few links to use https instead of http. 

Thank you! ^ _ ^
2017-04-19 17:45:48 -04:00
omtcyfz
71020e3836 Nit: LLVM & Clang latest version is 4.0 2017-03-21 16:26:35 -04:00
projektir
6b7b262288 Updating README.md to point to the correct doc location 2017-03-13 01:04:59 -04:00
Mátyás Mustoha
f121e6180b Fix text formatting in README 2017-03-06 12:29:52 +01:00
Josh Driver
fb2d763eee Replace ./configure with config.toml in README.md and CONTRIBUTING.md 2017-02-28 21:40:00 +10:30
Corey Farwell
273cc30fb2 Clarify phrasing of MSYS2 dependencies in README.md.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/36115.
2016-12-21 14:21:49 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0e272de69f mk: Switch rustbuild to the default build system
This commit switches the default build system for Rust from the makefiles to
rustbuild. The rustbuild build system has been in development for almost a year
now and has become quite mature over time. This commit is an implementation of
the proposal on [internals] which slates deletion of the makefiles on
2016-01-02.

[internals]: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/proposal-for-promoting-rustbuild-to-official-status/4368

This commit also updates various documentation in `README.md`,
`CONTRIBUTING.md`, `src/bootstrap/README.md`, and throughout the source code of
rustbuild itself.

Closes #37858
2016-12-07 00:30:23 -08:00
Alex Crichton
a270b8014c rustbuild: Rewrite user-facing interface
This commit is a rewrite of the user-facing interface to the rustbuild build
system. The intention here is to make it much easier to compile/test the project
without having to remember weird rule names and such. An overall view of the new
interface is:

    # build everything
    ./x.py build

    # document everyting
    ./x.py doc

    # test everything
    ./x.py test

    # test libstd
    ./x.py test src/libstd

    # build libcore stage0
    ./x.py build src/libcore --stage 0

    # run stage1 run-pass tests
    ./x.py test src/test/run-pass --stage 1

The `src/bootstrap/bootstrap.py` script is now aliased as a top-level `x.py`
script. This `x` was chosen to be both short and easily tab-completable (no
collisions in that namespace!). The build system now accepts a "subcommand" of
what to do next, the main ones being build/doc/test.

Each subcommand then receives an optional list of arguments. These arguments are
paths in the source repo of what to work with. That is, if you want to test a
directory, you just pass that directory as an argument.

The purpose of this rewrite is to do away with all of the arcane renames like
"rpass" is the "run-pass" suite, "cfail" is the "compile-fail" suite, etc. By
simply working with directories and files it's much more intuitive of how to run
a test (just pass it as an argument).

The rustbuild step/dependency management was also rewritten along the way to
make this easy to work with and define, but that's largely just a refactoring of
what was there before.

The *intention* is that this support is extended for arbitrary files (e.g.
`src/test/run-pass/my-test-case.rs`), but that isn't quite implemented just yet.
Instead directories work for now but we can follow up with stricter path
filtering logic to plumb through all the arguments.
2016-11-02 17:57:28 -07:00
Danny Hua
2ebef83f52 add (missing) tar to list of packages to get under mingw 2016-10-13 19:38:49 -07:00
c4rlo
66ae481055 README.md: fix a "\" in table heading to be "/" 2016-09-01 22:42:51 +01:00
Neil Williams
4254b31078 Update minimum CMake version in README
The minimum got bumped in the LLVM upgrade of #34743.
2016-08-16 21:30:17 -07:00
Alex Crichton
b67f23c847 Clarify rustbuild + msvc + vcvars in README
The invocation of vcvars is only needed for versions of Visual Studio that
rustbuild or cmake doesn't understand, but if older versions are installed then
there's no need to call vcvars.

Closes #34576
2016-07-07 09:34:46 -07:00
bors
20183f498f Auto merge of #34504 - retep998:patch-1, r=alexcrichton
Instructions on how to build Rust with rustbuild

This is a much simpler option for those on Windows who use msvc.
2016-07-03 05:02:51 -07:00
Peter Atashian
be43c654b3
Instructions on how to build Rust with rustbuild
This is a much simpler option for those on Windows who use msvc.

Signed-off-by: Peter Atashian <retep998@gmail.com>
2016-07-02 06:50:35 -04:00
bors
8a50e295fa Auto merge of #34611 - Manishearth:rollup, r=Manishearth
Rollup of 7 pull requests

- Successful merges: #34531, #34545, #34551, #34566, #34567, #34574, #34583
- Failed merges:
2016-07-02 03:18:59 -07:00
Joachim Viide
b18ed5b221 Fix README.md command consistency
The ./configure command in README.md's Building Documentation section was
missing the $ prefix. Add the prefix to be consistent with other commands in the
document.
2016-06-30 16:15:17 +03:00
Alex Crichton
cb74a5874f configure: Check for valid Python on MinGW as well
The LLVM build system is somewhat picky about which Python is used to build it
as it's known to be incompatible with the default `python2` package that ships
with MinGW. This was previously detected for MSVC builds but the logic was left
out for MinGW by accident (now that we've switched to cmake builds for LLVM
everywhere).

This corrects the `./configure` check and also updates the `README.md`
accordingly. Additionally, a number of instructions were updated to work with
the most recent copy of MSYS2.

Closes #34489
2016-06-27 18:14:54 -07:00
Brian Anderson
59db95b499 Convert makefiles to build LLVM/compiler-rt with CMake 2016-06-21 19:54:28 -07:00
Seo Sanghyeon
633b2597cc Rollup merge of #34184 - euclio:patch-1, r=steveklabnik
fix indentation in README
2016-06-10 21:16:46 +09:00
Andy Russell
300a5d7d71 fix indentation in README 2016-06-09 16:12:12 -04:00
Morten H. Solvang
d592675de6 Updated README to account for changes in MSYS2
One of the newest versions of MSYS2 now only has one .cmd file which replaces the old bat files. It has to be used to launch the mingw32/64 shell.
2016-06-08 11:27:31 +02:00
Demetri Obenour
08207c9b52 Note that later versions of G++ are okay
G++ 4.7 is the minimum requirement, but later versions are also okay.
2016-04-30 17:21:18 -04:00
David AO Lozano
c233f2ee29 Adding #rust-beginners to README and pointing the two channels on getting-started 2016-03-31 02:49:05 -06:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
90474c7930 Correct Windows build instructions in README.md
http://mingw-w64.org/doku.php/download/mingw-builds now provides GCC 5.x as a default version, but avoiding 5.x is exactly the reason why Mingw-builds is recommended instead of MSYS2's own mingw toolchain. One of the 4.9.x versions has to manually chosen during installation.
2016-03-20 23:36:48 +03:00
John Talling
aac9454505 Add note about avoiding spaces in MinGW install path
Using spaces in the install path causes the issue in #31293.
2016-03-05 14:10:25 +01:00
Robin Kruppe
999051dbe3 configure: require Python 2.7
In other words, enforce what was documented in #30626 (and also stop blaming it on LLVM, we have at least one Python script of our own).

Also, there is no Python later than 2.7 and there never will be.
2016-02-13 22:20:42 +01:00
Andrew Barchuk
1339ca9bf2 Fix link to Installing Rust section of the book 2016-01-29 10:45:37 +01:00
Joshua Olson
797e6fc41b added link for issue mentioned in readme
‌ ‌ ▲
▲‌ ▲
2016-01-15 20:50:03 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
40f06b4bb1 Rollup merge of #30626 - steveklabnik:gh30618, r=luqmana
Fixes #30618
2016-01-14 11:04:39 +05:30
Steve Klabnik
011a23e8bc Update MinGW details in the README
Fixes #29649
2016-01-05 11:36:15 -05:00
Steve Klabnik
cf23dae2ee We actually require python 2.7
Fixes #30618
2015-12-29 17:44:30 -05:00
petevine
5294f2080b README.md - RAM requirement on 32-bit *nix
Running `/usr/bin/time -v make` to build rust (using local llvm) shows the maximum memory usage at 715 megabytes on 32-bit x86 (on arm linux it's even less @ 580M).

Reworded according to @brson's input.
2015-12-07 01:12:53 +01:00
Brian Anderson
7793829877 Redo the README intro again 2015-11-09 13:32:30 -08:00
Vadim Chugunov
363deb0864 Formatting 2015-11-01 16:24:51 -08:00