Commit graph

525 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton 3d74fbd496 configure: Fix LLVM output dir on MSVC
If LLVM assertions are enabled for MSVC, it looks like the output directory is
still just `Release` (or assertions are just always ignored on MSVC).
2015-06-03 22:08:47 -07:00
bors 5b56d73dc0 Auto merge of #25984 - Manishearth:rollup, r=Manishearth
- Successful merges: #25939, #25963, #25970, #25971, #25974
- Failed merges:
2015-06-03 09:44:26 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar 27dd5e9ce9 Rollup merge of #25971 - richo:configurable-python, r=alexcrichton
r? @alexcrichton
2015-06-03 14:46:41 +05:30
Manish Goregaokar 3fd41d61ab Rollup merge of #25939 - wca:fix-freebsd-configure, r=alexcrichton
Bug fixes for configure on FreeBSD:
- Don't ban using gcc; newer versions can be installed and other checks should enforce its suitability.
- Don't force Rust to link itself with /usr/local/lib{,gcc4[46]}, which causes builds to fail if Rust is already installed.  I've not been able to find an use case where this is actually necessary.
2015-06-03 14:46:40 +05:30
bors a5979be9fe Auto merge of #25938 - wca:fix-clang-check-compatibility, r=alexcrichton
Not all /bin/sh have [[ available, so for compatibility using case..esac
for pattern matching is better.
2015-06-03 06:07:44 +00:00
Richo Healey de4a1dca2b configure: Allow specifying your python with --python 2015-06-02 15:16:30 -07:00
bors a49ae5bd43 Auto merge of #25858 - alexcrichton:disable-os-tls, r=brson
This commit adds a ./configure option called `--disable-elf-tls` which disables
ELF based TLS (that which is communicated to LLVM) on platforms which already
support it. OSX 10.6 does not support this form of TLS, and some users of Rust
need to target 10.6 and are unable to do so due to the usage of TLS. The
standard library will continue to use ELF based TLS on OSX by default (as the
officially supported platform is 10.7+), but this adds an option to compile the
standard library in a way that is compatible with 10.6.

Closes #25342
2015-06-01 19:51:57 +00:00
Andrew Foote d4389c52ab remove duplicate "don't" 2015-05-30 18:13:51 -07:00
Alex Crichton 1b5f9cb1f1 std: Add an option to disable ELF based TLS
This commit adds a ./configure option called `--disable-elf-tls` which disables
ELF based TLS (that which is communicated to LLVM) on platforms which already
support it. OSX 10.6 does not support this form of TLS, and some users of Rust
need to target 10.6 and are unable to do so due to the usage of TLS. The
standard library will continue to use ELF based TLS on OSX by default (as the
officially supported platform is 10.7+), but this adds an option to compile the
standard library in a way that is compatible with 10.6.
2015-05-28 10:14:42 -07:00
Kubilay Kocak d323c14f63 Remove redundant compiler check. Allow CC override
Currently, there are two conditional blocks that exist to check for "clang or gcc"

On line 866:

```
if [ -z "$CFG_ENABLE_CLANG" -a -z "$CFG_GCC" ]
then
    err "either clang or gcc is required"
fi
```
and on line 1019:

```
if [ -z "$CC" -a -z "$CFG_ENABLE_CLANG" -a -z "$CFG_GCC" ]
then
    err "either clang or gcc is required"
fi
```

Given the order of the clauses, this results in the "either clang or gcc is required" error from the earlier block, (even) when CC is set. 

The expected behaviour is to honour user-flags, in this case CC.

Aside from removing all hand-holdy compiler checks in favour of actual compiler *feature* checks, this change removes the redundant former block in favour of the latter block, which appears designed to allow the expected behaviour.
2015-05-26 18:23:33 +10:00
Will Andrews bc85eb49f5 Use case..esac instead of [[.
Not all /bin/sh have [[ available, so for compatibility using case..esac
for pattern matching is better.
2015-05-23 14:11:50 -06:00
Will Andrews 31764a98ff Don't force FreeBSD to use clang.
Newer gcc can be installed, so it should be used if possible.  Checks
elsewhere in configure should enforce this.
2015-05-23 14:09:11 -06:00
Oliver Schneider a650075f89 Rollup merge of #25722 - nickdesaulniers:configureClang37, r=brson
Was able to successfully configure.  Building and testing now.
2015-05-23 19:03:20 +02:00
Nick Desaulniers 64f8640164 allow clang 3.7 to be used when configuring Fixes #25720 2015-05-22 16:07:25 -07:00
Geoffrey Thomas dfacdcf25d configure: Fix printing of commands from run
The `run` function passed its argument to `msg` via `"$@"`, but `msg`
only printed its first argument. I think the intention was for `msg` to
print all its arguments. (If not, `run` should only `msg "$1"`.)
2015-05-22 00:39:24 -04:00
Geoffrey Thomas 1e180b809f configure: Clarify error message about missing dependencies
Took me a moment to figure out that the appropriate response to
"need program file" was to install the program named "file", not
to think "If I didn't need the program file, why would I be
compiling things?".
2015-05-22 00:38:49 -04:00
Sébastien Marie 0cac79181b use posix command to extract first 8 chars
the "-c" option of head isn't a posix option, and it isn't supported
under openbsd.

prefer the use of cut -c 1-8 (which is posix) to extract the first 8
chars.
2015-05-20 13:54:14 +02:00
bors 43cf733bfa Auto merge of #25350 - alexcrichton:msvc, r=brson
Special thanks to @retep998 for the [excellent writeup](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/1061) of tasks to be done and @ricky26 for initially blazing the trail here!

# MSVC Support

This goal of this series of commits is to add MSVC support to the Rust compiler
and build system, allowing it more easily interoperate with Visual Studio
installations and native libraries compiled outside of MinGW.

The tl;dr; of this change is that there is a new target of the compiler,
`x86_64-pc-windows-msvc`, which will not interact with the MinGW toolchain at
all and will instead use `link.exe` to assemble output artifacts.

## Why try to use MSVC?

With today's Rust distribution, when you install a compiler on Windows you also
install `gcc.exe` and a number of supporting libraries by default (this can be
opted out of). This allows installations to remain independent of MinGW
installations, but it still generally requires native code to be linked with
MinGW instead of MSVC. Some more background can also be found in #1768 about the
incompatibilities between MinGW and MSVC.

Overall the current installation strategy is quite nice so long as you don't
interact with native code, but once you do the usage of a MinGW-based `gcc.exe`
starts to get quite painful.

Relying on a nonstandard Windows toolchain has also been a long-standing "code
smell" of Rust and has been slated for remedy for quite some time now. Using a
standard toolchain is a great motivational factor for improving the
interoperability of Rust code with the native system.

## What does it mean to use MSVC?

"Using MSVC" can be a bit of a nebulous concept, but this PR defines it as:

* The build system for Rust will build as much code as possible with the MSVC
  compiler, `cl.exe`.
* The build system will use native MSVC tools for managing archives.
* The compiler will link all output with `link.exe` instead of `gcc.exe`.

None of these are currently implemented today, but all are required for the
compiler to fluently interoperate with MSVC.

## How does this all work?

At the highest level, this PR adds a new target triple to the Rust compiler:

    x86_64-pc-windows-msvc

All logic for using MSVC or not is scoped within this triple and code can
conditionally build for MSVC or MinGW via:

    #[cfg(target_env = "msvc")]

It is expected that auto builders will be set up for MSVC-based compiles in
addition to the existing MinGW-based compiles, and we will likely soon start
shipping MSVC nightlies where `x86_64-pc-windows-msvc` is the host target triple
of the compiler.

# Summary of changes

Here I'll explain at a high level what many of the changes made were targeted
at, but many more details can be found in the commits themselves. Many thanks to
@retep998 for the excellent writeup in rust-lang/rfcs#1061 and @rick26 for a lot
of the initial proof-of-concept work!

## Build system changes

As is probably expected, a large chunk of this PR is changes to Rust's build
system to build with MSVC. At a high level **it is an explicit non goal** to
enable building outside of a MinGW shell, instead all Makefile infrastructure we
have today is retrofitted with support to use MSVC instead of the standard MSVC
toolchain. Some of the high-level changes are:

* The configure script now detects when MSVC is being targeted and adds a number
  of additional requirements about the build environment:
  * The `--msvc-root` option must be specified or `cl.exe` must be in PATH to
    discover where MSVC is installed. The compiler in use is also required to
    target x86_64.
  * Once the MSVC root is known, the INCLUDE/LIB environment variables are
    scraped so they can be reexported by the build system.
  * CMake is required to build LLVM with MSVC (and LLVM is also configured with
    CMake instead of the normal configure script).
  * jemalloc is currently unconditionally disabled for MSVC targets as jemalloc
    isn't a hard requirement and I don't know how to build it with MSVC.
* Invocations of a C and/or C++ compiler are now abstracted behind macros to
  appropriately call the underlying compiler with the correct format of
  arguments, for example there is now a macro for "assemble an archive from
  objects" instead of hard-coded invocations of `$(AR) crus liboutput.a ...`
* The output filenames for standard libraries such as morestack/compiler-rt are
  now "more correct" on windows as they are shipped as `foo.lib` instead of
  `libfoo.a`.
* Rust targets can now depend on native tools provided by LLVM, and as you'll
  see in the commits the entire MSVC target depends on `llvm-ar.exe`.
* Support for custom arbitrary makefile dependencies of Rust targets has been
  added. The MSVC target for `rustc_llvm` currently requires a custom `.DEF`
  file to be passed to the linker to get further linkages to complete.

## Compiler changes

The modifications made to the compiler have so far largely been minor tweaks
here and there, mostly just adding a layer of abstraction over whether MSVC or a
GNU-like linker is being used. At a high-level these changes are:

* The section name for metadata storage in dynamic libraries is called `.rustc`
  for MSVC-based platorms as section names cannot contain more than 8
  characters.
* The implementation of `rustc_back::Archive` was refactored, but the
  functionality has remained the same.
* Targets can now specify the default `ar` utility to use, and for MSVC this
  defaults to `llvm-ar.exe`
* The building of the linker command in `rustc_trans:🔙:link` has been
  abstracted behind a trait for the same code path to be used between GNU and
  MSVC linkers.

## Standard library changes

Only a few small changes were required to the stadnard library itself, and only
for minor differences between the C runtime of msvcrt.dll and MinGW's libc.a

* Some function names for floating point functions have leading underscores, and
  some are not present at all.
* Linkage to the `advapi32` library for crypto-related functions is now
  explicit.
* Some small bits of C code here and there were fixed for compatibility with
  MSVC's cl.exe compiler.

# Future Work

This commit is not yet a 100% complete port to using MSVC as there are still
some key components missing as well as some unimplemented optimizations. This PR
is already getting large enough that I wanted to draw the line here, but here's
a list of what is not implemented in this PR, on purpose:

## Unwinding

The revision of our LLVM submodule [does not seem to implement][llvm] does not
support lowering SEH exception handling on the Windows MSVC targets, so
unwinding support is not currently implemented for the standard library (it's
lowered to an abort).

[llvm]: https://github.com/rust-lang/llvm/blob/rust-llvm-2015-02-19/lib/CodeGen/Passes.cpp#L454-L461

It looks like, however, that upstream LLVM has quite a bit more support for SEH
unwinding and landing pads than the current revision we have, so adding support
will likely just involve updating LLVM and then adding some shims of our own
here and there.

## dllimport and dllexport

An interesting part of Windows which MSVC forces our hand on (and apparently
MinGW didn't) is the usage of `dllimport` and `dllexport` attributes in LLVM IR
as well as native dependencies (in C these correspond to
`__declspec(dllimport)`).

Whenever a dynamic library is built by MSVC it must have its public interface
specified by functions tagged with `dllexport` or otherwise they're not
available to be linked against. This poses a few problems for the compiler, some
of which are somewhat fundamental, but this commit alters the compiler to attach
the `dllexport` attribute to all LLVM functions that are reachable (e.g. they're
already tagged with external linkage). This is suboptimal for a few reasons:

* If an object file will never be included in a dynamic library, there's no need
  to attach the dllexport attribute. Most object files in Rust are not destined
  to become part of a dll as binaries are statically linked by default.
* If the compiler is emitting both an rlib and a dylib, the same source object
  file is currently used but with MSVC this may be less feasible. The compiler
  may be able to get around this, but it may involve some invasive changes to
  deal with this.

The flipside of this situation is that whenever you link to a dll and you import
a function from it, the import should be tagged with `dllimport`. At this time,
however, the compiler does not emit `dllimport` for any declarations other than
constants (where it is required), which is again suboptimal for even more
reasons!

* Calling a function imported from another dll without using `dllimport` causes
  the linker/compiler to have extra overhead (one `jmp` instruction on x86) when
  calling the function.
* The same object file may be used in different circumstances, so a function may
  be imported from a dll if the object is linked into a dll, but it may be
  just linked against if linked into an rlib.
* The compiler has no knowledge about whether native functions should be tagged
  dllimport or not.

For now the compiler takes the perf hit (I do not have any numbers to this
effect) by marking very little as `dllimport` and praying the linker will take
care of everything. Fixing this problem will likely require adding a few
attributes to Rust itself (feature gated at the start) and then strongly
recommending static linkage on Windows! This may also involve shipping a
statically linked compiler on Windows instead of a dynamically linked compiler,
but these sorts of changes are pretty invasive and aren't part of this PR.

## CI integration

Thankfully we don't need to set up a new snapshot bot for the changes made here as our snapshots are freestanding already, we should be able to use the same snapshot to bootstrap both MinGW and MSVC compilers (once a new snapshot is made from these changes).

I plan on setting up a new suite of auto bots which are testing MSVC configurations for now as well, for now they'll just be bootstrapping and not running tests, but once unwinding is implemented they'll start running all tests as well and we'll eventually start gating on them as well.

---

I'd love as many eyes on this as we've got as this was one of my first interactions with MSVC and Visual Studio, so there may be glaring holes that I'm missing here and there!

cc @retep998, @ricky26, @vadimcn, @klutzy 

r? @brson
2015-05-20 00:31:55 +00:00
Alex Crichton b56d47cc80 mk: Enable building LLVM targeting MSVC
This commit modifies the makefiles to enable building LLVM with cmake and Visual
Studio to generate an LLVM that targets MSVC. Rust's configure script requires
cmake to be installed when targeting MSVC and will configure LLVM with cmake
instead of the normal `./configure` script LLVM provides. The build will then
run cmake to execute the build instead of the normal `make`.

Currently `make clean-llvm` isn't supported on MSVC as I can't figure out how to
run a "clean" target for the Visual Studio files.
2015-05-19 10:52:57 -07:00
Alex Crichton 7cf0b1798b configure: Start adding MSVC support
This commit starts to add MSVC support to the ./configure script to enable the
build system to detect and build an MSVC target with the cl.exe compiler and
toolchain. The primary change here is a large sanity check when an MSVC target
is requested (and currently only `x86_64-pc-windows-msvc` is recognized).

When building an MSVC target, the configure script either requires the
`--msvc-root` argument or for `cl.exe` to be in `PATH`. It also requires that if
in the path `cl.exe` is the 64-bit version of the compiler.

Once detected the configure script will run the `vcvarsall.bat` script provided
by Visual Studio to learn about the `INCLUDE` and `LIB` variables needed by the
`cl.exe` compiler to run (the default include/lib paths for the
compiler/linker). These variables are then reexported when running `make` to
ensure that our own compiles are running the same toolchain.

The purpose of this detection and environment variable scraping is to avoid
requiring the build itself to be run inside of a `cmd.exe` shell but rather
allow it to run in the currently expected MinGW/MSYS shell.
2015-05-19 10:52:55 -07:00
bors e5394240a2 Auto merge of #25208 - lfairy:version-hash, r=brson
The code takes a prefix of the MD5 hash of the version string.

Since the hash command differs across GNU and BSD platforms, we scan for
the right one in the configure script.

Closes #25007
2015-05-14 00:42:32 +00:00
Ricky Taylor 315750ac92 Very hacky MSVC hacks.
Conflicts:
	mk/platform.mk
	src/librustc/session/config.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/aarch64_apple_ios.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/aarch64_linux_android.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/arm_linux_androideabi.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/arm_unknown_linux_gnueabi.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/arm_unknown_linux_gnueabihf.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/armv7_apple_ios.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/armv7s_apple_ios.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/i386_apple_ios.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/i686_apple_darwin.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/i686_pc_windows_gnu.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/i686_unknown_dragonfly.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/i686_unknown_linux_gnu.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/mips_unknown_linux_gnu.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/mipsel_unknown_linux_gnu.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/mod.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/powerpc_unknown_linux_gnu.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/x86_64_apple_darwin.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/x86_64_apple_ios.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/x86_64_pc_windows_gnu.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/x86_64_unknown_dragonfly.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/x86_64_unknown_freebsd.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/x86_64_unknown_linux_gnu.rs
	src/librustc_back/target/x86_64_unknown_openbsd.rs
	src/librustc_llvm/lib.rs
	src/librustc_trans/back/link.rs
	src/librustc_trans/trans/base.rs
	src/libstd/os.rs
	src/rustllvm/RustWrapper.cpp
2015-05-12 14:50:36 -07:00
bors 8c9dc18355 Auto merge of #24859 - richo:valgrind-tests, r=brson
This stung me more than once in dev.

Bonus DRY'ing up of configure that I did on my way past.
2015-05-09 02:07:18 +00:00
Chris Wong 939c53ea42 configure: display correct version for md5sum
The old code simply scanned for the first digit, then munched anything
after that. This didn't work for md5sum, as it would see the "5" and
treat "5sum" as the version instead.

This patch tweaks the algorithm so that it looks for a second
consecutive digit (or dot) after the first. Since "md5sum" has only one
digit, the new code skips over it as intended.
2015-05-08 22:52:02 +12:00
Chris Wong 535040aab8 Generate CFG_FILENAME_EXTRA from the version
The code takes a prefix of the MD5 hash of the version string.

Since the hash command differs across GNU and BSD platforms, we scan for
the right one in the configure script.

Closes #25007
2015-05-08 22:26:26 +12:00
Carol Nichols 468cb052b8 Expand OS X versions referenced in configure message
10.10 is out, so it's weird to see a message that says you're on 10.9.
Change the message to be >=10.9.
2015-05-07 19:35:58 -04:00
bors 2f613bfaeb Auto merge of #24902 - bombless:configure, r=pnkfelix
Closes #24840
2015-04-30 15:16:24 +00:00
York Xiang 98b7aaf3ef Mention --enable-optimize for --enable-debug 2015-04-30 21:39:52 +08:00
Felix S. Klock II bd4b984537 add --enable-debuginfo-tests, analogous to --disable-optimize-tests.
Then, decouple the question of whether the compiler/stdlib carry
debuginfo (which is controlled via `--enable-debuginfo` and implied by
`--enable-debug`) from the question of whether the tests carry
debuginfo (which now no longer is implied by `--enable-debug` nor
`--enable-debuginfo`, and is off by default).
2015-04-29 17:18:44 +02:00
bors cadc67e8fd Auto merge of #24777 - alexcrichton:musl, r=brson
These commits build on [some great work on reddit](http://www.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/33boew/weekend_experiment_link_rust_programs_against/) for adding MUSL support to the compiler. This goal of this PR is to enable a `--target x86_64-unknown-linux-musl` argument to the compiler to work A-OK. The outcome here is that there are 0 compile-time dependencies for a MUSL-targeting build *except for a linker*. Currently this also assumes that MUSL is being used for statically linked binaries so there is no support for dynamically linked binaries with MUSL.

MUSL support largely just entailed munging around with the linker and where libs are located, and the major highlights are:

* The entirety of `libc.a` is included in `liblibc.rlib` (statically included as an archive).
* The entirety of `libunwind.a` is included in `libstd.rlib` (like with liblibc).
* The target specification for MUSL passes a number of ... flavorful options! Each option is documented in the relevant commit.
* The entire test suite currently passes with MUSL as a target, except for:
  * Dynamic linking tests are all ignored as it's not supported with MUSL
  * Stack overflow detection is not working MUSL yet (I'm not sure why)
* There is a language change included in this PR to add a `target_env` `#[cfg]` directive. This is used to conditionally build code for only MUSL (or for linux distros not MUSL). I highly suspect that this will also be used by Windows to target MSVC instead of a MinGW-based toolchain.

To build a compiler targeting MUSL you need to follow these steps:

1. Clone the current MUSL repo from `git://git.musl-libc.org/musl`. Build this as usual and install it.
2. Clone and build LLVM's [libcxxabi](http://libcxxabi.llvm.org/) library. Only the `libunwind.a` artifact is needed. I have tried using upstream libunwind's source repo but I have not gotten unwinding to work with it unfortunately. Move `libunwind.a` adjacent to MUSL's `libc.a`
3. Configure a Rust checkout with `--target=x86_64-unknown-linux-musl --musl-root=$MUSL_ROOT` where `MUSL_ROOT` is where you installed MUSL in step 1.

I hope to improve building a copy of libunwind as it's still a little sketchy and difficult to do today, but other than that everything should "just work"! This PR is not intended to include 100% comprehensive support for MUSL, as future modifications will probably be necessary.
2015-04-28 20:12:59 +00:00
Richo Healey fc7faafae7 configure: Fail iff valgrind is explicitly requested but not available 2015-04-27 23:54:30 -07:00
bors da2276e293 Auto merge of #24835 - rprichard:rfail-full, r=alexcrichton
This commit gets `make check-stage1` working again after #24718.

cc @tamird

r? @alexcrichton
2015-04-28 05:37:48 +00:00
Alex Crichton cd980b3bee mk: Add support for musl-based builds
This commit adds support to the makefiles, configuration script, and build
system to understand MUSL. This is broken up into a few parts:

* Any target of the form `*-musl` requires the `--musl-root` option to
  `./configure` which will indicate the root of the MUSL installation. It is
  also expected that there is a libunwind build inside of that installation
  built against that MUSL.

* Objects from MUSL are copied into the build tree for Rust to be statically
  linked into the appropriate Rust library.

* Objects for binary startup and shutdown are included in each Rust installation
  by default for MUSL. This requires MUSL to only be installed on the machine
  compiling rust. Only a linker will be necessary for compiling against MUSL on
  a target machine.

Eventually a MUSL and/or libunwind build may be integrated by default into the
build but for now they are just always assumed to exist externally.
2015-04-27 10:11:15 -07:00
Richo Healey b982a751f4 configure: Disable valgrind-rpass if there's no valgrind 2015-04-27 01:04:22 -07:00
Richo Healey a8ea78bc35 configure: generic run command 2015-04-27 00:58:31 -07:00
bors 314b1f16b7 Auto merge of #24679 - tamird:enable-debug, r=pnkfelix
r? @alexcrichton
2015-04-26 15:04:33 +00:00
Ryan Prichard 5e37729036 Add a new test group, rfail-full that runs rfail tests with fulldeps.
In most places in mk/tests.mk, it's positioned after rpass-full and
before cfail-full (because rfail comes before cfail). The order of tests
seems a little inconsistent, but reordering everywhere would obscure this
commit.
2015-04-26 06:05:38 -07:00
Brian Anderson 0c196fd44c configure: Fix CDPATH bug 2015-04-22 14:52:35 -07:00
Tamir Duberstein 98f4221d49 --enable-debug adds -g. Closes #7205 2015-04-22 07:16:38 -07:00
Tamir Duberstein 0f1bfda006 Alphabetize 2015-04-22 07:16:38 -07:00
Richo Healey fd69ac160b configure: Turn optimization back on iff --enable-optimize 2015-04-14 00:58:57 -07:00
Richo Healey 87efd2cd74 configure: Set CFG_<FOO>_PROVIDED if it was supplied
This allows you to distinguish between an option that defaulted, and an
option selected by the user
2015-04-14 00:58:51 -07:00
Richo Healey 71a4ea56c2 configure: Don't disable optimizations when enabling debug
Optimization is now on by default. Closes #24405
2015-04-14 00:07:27 -07:00
bors c897ac04e2 Auto merge of #24177 - alexcrichton:rustdoc, r=aturon
This commit series starts out with more official test harness support for rustdoc tests, and then each commit afterwards adds a test (where appropriate). Each commit should also test and finish independently of all others (they're all pretty separable).

I've uploaded a [copy of the documentation](http://people.mozilla.org/~acrichton/doc/std/) generated after all these commits were applied, and a double check on issues being closed would be greatly appreciated! I'll also browse the docs a bit and make sure nothing regressed too horribly.
2015-04-10 16:18:44 +00:00
Brian Anderson 0e0c841bd5 Nightly gets LLVM assertions 2015-04-09 11:51:46 -07:00
Brian Anderson a725426ec8 Don't deoptimize llvm when --enable-debug
libLTO fails to link here.
2015-04-08 18:01:46 -07:00
Brian Anderson 6d17c35cd5 configure: Add --enable-debug-jemalloc 2015-04-08 15:12:08 -07:00
Brian Anderson 1002155c75 Add --enable-debug to control multiple perf options 2015-04-08 14:21:36 -07:00
Brian Anderson 7cbf823353 configure: Add --enable-debuginfo 2015-04-08 13:57:37 -07:00
Brian Anderson 8545d2ce53 configure: Disable LLVM asserts by default 2015-04-08 13:27:12 -07:00
Brian Anderson 2cdfd372e2 configure: Clarify help message for --enable-debug-assertions 2015-04-08 13:25:20 -07:00
Brian Anderson 59e332bd2f configure: Disable debug assertions by default 2015-04-08 13:23:44 -07:00
Brian Anderson ed8eebd99b configure: Rename --enable-debug to --enable-debug-assertions 2015-04-08 13:22:56 -07:00
Brian Anderson bc9f16c599 configure: Remove obsolete --disable-verify option
rust-installer never verifies.
2015-04-08 12:16:47 -07:00
Brian Anderson 45eb54c870 configure: Remove obsolete --nightly flag 2015-04-08 12:07:35 -07:00
Alex Crichton 10359de405 compiletest: Add support for running rustdoc tests
Add a new test directory called 'rustdoc' where all files inside are documented
and run against the `htmldocck` script to have assertions about the output.
2015-04-07 17:54:33 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar 3058eede7b Rollup merge of #23990 - dhuseby:bitrig_fixing_jemalloc_config, r=alexcrichton
Until I can figure out the correct way to configure jemalloc for Bitrig, this patch will correctly disable it.  All other build targets remain unchanged.
2015-04-04 10:54:58 +05:30
Dave Huseby 787c6cda00 this correctly disables jemalloc on Bitrig 2015-04-03 08:54:08 -07:00
Andrea Canciani 0621a83ba5 Workaround javac popup on MacOS X
MacOS X does not ship with Java installed by default. Instead it
includes binary stubs that upon execution pop up a message suggesting
the installation of the JDK.

Since `javac` is only used when `antlr4` is available, it is possible
to work around the popup by only probing for `javac` if `antlr4` has
been successfully detected (in which case the JDK is probably already
installed on the system).

Fixes #23138.
2015-04-03 15:10:59 +02:00
bors 14192d6df5 Auto merge of #23848 - cmr:no-compiler-docs, r=huonw
This saves a bunch of a time and will make distributions smaller, as well as
avoiding filling the implementors page with internal garbage. Turn it back on
with `--enable-compiler-docs` if you want them.

(Crates behind the facade are not documented at all)

[breaking-change]
2015-03-30 11:35:52 +00:00
Corey Richardson e64b677ca6 mk: don't build docs for internal or behind-the-facade crates in beta/stable
This saves a bunch of a time and will make distributions smaller, as well as
avoiding filling the implementors page with internal garbage. Turn it back on
with `--enable-compiler-docs` if you want compiler docs during development.

Crates behind the facade are only documented on nightly/dev builds (where they
can be used).

[breaking-change]

Closes #23772
Closes #21297
2015-03-29 06:15:51 -04:00
Vadim Petrochenkov 1accaa9f86 Fix some typos 2015-03-28 18:09:51 +03:00
Brian Anderson 1aa75cea1d configure: Fix detection of 32-bit Linux userspace
The variable '$SHELL' is not actually defined by 'sh'.
2015-03-23 14:27:09 -07:00
Richo Healey a0297cbe12 powerpc: Support configure on native ppc[64] hosts 2015-03-15 20:04:04 -07:00
Björn Steinbrink bb18a3cfe7 Drop support for LLVM < 3.5 and fix compile errors with 3.5
LLVM older that 3.6 has a bug that cause assertions when compiling certain
constructs. For 3.5 there's still a chance that the bug might get fixed
in 3.5.2, so let's keep allowing to compile with it for it for now.
2015-03-14 13:14:04 +01:00
Dave Huseby 8e082f77cf disabling jemalloc on bitrig 2015-03-10 23:39:49 -07:00
Dave Huseby d0ae7caa49 fixing configure so that it works on bitrig/openbsd 2015-03-09 16:25:50 -07:00
Chloe 9f28f7249f added support for CYGWIN 6.3 into configure script
Not checking for 32/64 bit, since `uname -s` no longer contains an indicator (and `uname -m` returns correct results)
2015-03-07 03:44:02 -05:00
bors 4d716decb5 Auto merge of #22474 - iKevinY:pandoc-version-check, r=brson
Executing `configure` seems to create the following error due to how the script [parses Pandoc's version](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/configure#L705):

```text
./configure: line 705: [: pandoc: integer expression expected
./configure: line 705: [: 1.12.4.2: integer expression expected
```

This issue seems to stem from a discrepancy between BSD and GNU versions of sed. This patch changes the sed command to use an extended regex, which works with both flavours of sed.
2015-03-06 19:04:53 +00:00
Kevin Yap 4349fa4756 Fix Pandoc version check in configure
Using an extended regex fixes pattern matching on BSD sed.
2015-03-02 22:49:33 -08:00
Björn Steinbrink 8b263f7566 Drop support for clang < 3.2
Fixes #20467
2015-02-28 17:53:12 +01:00
bors 2b01a37ec3 Auto merge of #21959 - dhuseby:bitrig-support, r=brson
This patch adds the necessary pieces to support rust on Bitrig https://bitrig.org
2015-02-21 09:20:48 +00:00
Florian Hahn 6824f1365d Add pfail targets for parse-fail tests 2015-02-16 20:52:39 +01:00
bors 95b228ab95 Auto merge of #22041 - semarie:configure-compat, r=alexcrichton
the sed option `--in-place` (or `-i`) is a GNU extension, and it is not
portable to BSD system (openbsd and freebsd checked).

use an alternate construction in order to keep the semantic.
2015-02-14 07:10:52 +00:00
Dave Huseby 34590d6def restore the clobber behavior during config 2015-02-11 14:49:09 -08:00
Dave Huseby cd8f31759f bitrig integration 2015-02-11 14:49:06 -08:00
Björn Steinbrink 6e8b8733c9 Add a flag to skip the LLVM version check in configure
When trying to build against a newer, local LLVM version it might be
preferable to have a flag to disable the LLVM version check instead of
having to modify the configure script.

Fixes #21998
2015-02-10 16:31:46 +01:00
Sébastien Marie 04b7976c2f sed -i option isn't portable
the sed option `--in-place` (or `-i`) is a GNU extension, and it is not
portable to BSD system (openbsd and freebsd checked).

use an alternate construction in order to keep the semantic.
2015-02-07 08:55:37 +01:00
Steve Klabnik 7d4f068919 Only accept xelatex for building PDF docs
None of the others work, so let's remove them.

Fixes #17220.
2015-02-05 23:21:12 -05:00
Sébastien Marie fcb30a0b67 openbsd support 2015-02-01 14:41:38 +01:00
bors 102ab57d80 Auto merge of #21582 - FlaPer87:rollup, r=brson
- Successful merges: #21108, #21445, #21498, #21504, #21532, #21535, #21539, #21540, #21541, #21550, #21560, #21573, #21579
- Failed merges:
2015-01-25 13:33:18 +00:00
bors 4e4e8cff16 Auto merge of #21452 - bleibig:bison-grammar, r=nikomatsakis
This adds a new lexer/parser combo for the entire Rust language can be generated with with flex and bison, taken from my project at https://github.com/bleibig/rust-grammar. There is also a testing script that runs the generated parser with all *.rs files in the repository (except for tests in compile-fail or ones that marked as "ignore-test" or "ignore-lexer-test"). If you have flex and bison installed, you can run these tests using the new "check-grammar" make target.

This does not depend on or interact with the existing testing code in the grammar, which only provides and tests a lexer specification.

OS X users should take note that the version of bison that comes with the Xcode toolchain (2.3) is too old to work with this grammar, they need to download and install version 3.0 or later.

The parser builds up an S-expression-based AST, which can be displayed by giving the "-v" argument to parser-lalr (normally it only gives output on error). It is only a rough approximation of what is parsed and doesn't capture every detail and nuance of the program.

Hopefully this should be sufficient for issue #2234, or at least a good starting point.
2015-01-24 22:14:14 +00:00
Flavio Percoco Premoli 8a2eee6095 Rollup merge of #21541 - steveklabnik:gh13179, r=huonw
Fixes #13179
2015-01-24 10:42:41 +01:00
Steve Klabnik 7aa3ed1ee8 Check for make in configure
Fixes #13179
2015-01-22 22:44:43 -05:00
Steve Klabnik a80807028a Language tweak in configure
Fixes #13082
2015-01-22 22:35:28 -05:00
Alex Crichton 81504f211c rollup merge of #21413: ahmedcharles/remove-test-features
This isn't the entire set of changes, there are more coming. #19145
2015-01-21 09:15:57 -08:00
bors 6869645e86 Auto merge of #21242 - richo:no-perl, r=brson
There's only one build-critical path in which perl is used, and it was to do a text replacement trivially achievable with sed(1).

I ported the indenter script because it [appears to be used][indenter], but removed check links because it appears to be entirely out of date.

[indenter]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/src/librustc/util/common.rs#L60-70
2015-01-21 11:07:31 +00:00
Brian Leibig f39297f991 Add a LALR grammar for Rust with testing support 2015-01-20 18:47:17 -08:00
Ahmed Charles d7b30f9c0a Remove ratchet-bench from configure. 2015-01-19 23:40:27 -08:00
Brian Anderson 3e38926ff4 configure: Use a more portable 'date' command to create the bootstrap key 2015-01-17 16:38:04 -08:00
Richo Healey 948dcaa72b Remove perl as a dependency 2015-01-16 08:49:54 -08:00
Richo Healey 31d232e204 powerpc: Add support to configure 2015-01-11 21:14:23 -08:00
Steve Klabnik 16a6ebd1f6 "The Rust Programming Language"
This pulls all of our long-form documentation into a single document,
nicknamed "the book" and formally titled "The Rust Programming
Language."

A few things motivated this change:

* People knew of The Guide, but not the individual Guides. This merges
  them together, helping discoverability.
* You can get all of Rust's longform documentation in one place, which
  is nice.
* We now have rustbook in-tree, which can generate this kind of
  documentation. While its style is basic, the general idea is much
  better: a table of contents on the left-hand side.
* Rather than a almost 10,000-line guide.md, there are now smaller files
  per section.
2015-01-08 12:02:11 -05:00
Brian Anderson c27133e2ce Preliminary feature staging
This partially implements the feature staging described in the
[release channel RFC][rc]. It does not yet fully conform to the RFC as
written, but does accomplish its goals sufficiently for the 1.0 alpha
release.

It has three primary user-visible effects:

* On the nightly channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of unstable APIs generates a warning.
* On the beta channel, use of feature gates generates a warning.

Code that does not trigger these warnings is considered 'stable',
modulo pre-1.0 bugs.

Disabling the warnings for unstable APIs continues to be done in the
existing (i.e. old) style, via `#[allow(...)]`, not that specified in
the RFC. I deem this marginally acceptable since any code that must do
this is not using the stable dialect of Rust.

Use of feature gates is itself gated with the new 'unstable_features'
lint, on nightly set to 'allow', and on beta 'warn'.

The attribute scheme used here corresponds to an older version of the
RFC, with the `#[staged_api]` crate attribute toggling the staging
behavior of the stability attributes, but the user impact is only
in-tree so I'm not concerned about having to make design changes later
(and I may ultimately prefer the scheme here after all, with the
`#[staged_api]` crate attribute).

Since the Rust codebase itself makes use of unstable features the
compiler and build system to a midly elaborate dance to allow it to
bootstrap while disobeying these lints (which would otherwise be
errors because Rust builds with `-D warnings`).

This patch includes one significant hack that causes a
regression. Because the `format_args!` macro emits calls to unstable
APIs it would trigger the lint.  I added a hack to the lint to make it
not trigger, but this in turn causes arguments to `println!` not to be
checked for feature gates. I don't presently understand macro
expansion well enough to fix. This is bug #20661.

Closes #16678

[rc]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/0507-release-channels.md
2015-01-07 15:34:56 -08:00
Akos Kiss 6e5fb8bd1b Initial version of AArch64 support.
Adds AArch64 knowledge to:
* configure,
* make files,
* sources,
* tests, and
* documentation.
2015-01-03 15:16:10 +00:00
Steve Klabnik 3cb10ef147 Remove mentions of sundown. 2014-12-11 16:36:11 -05:00
bors 3c89031e1f auto merge of #18613 : steveklabnik/rust/ownership_guide, r=huonw
This is a work in progress, but this should get *extensive* review, so I'm putting it up early and often.

This is the start of a draft of the new 'ownership guide,' which explains ownership, borrowing, etc. I'm feeling better about this framing than last time's, but we'll see.
2014-12-04 04:52:37 +00:00
Steve Klabnik 5a2048f7bb remove two unneccesary directories from configure 2014-12-02 09:21:28 -05:00
Steve Klabnik e2fe7a083e Lifetime guide -> ownership guide 2014-11-26 15:03:12 -05:00
Steve Klabnik ba9e02f862 remove the generation of grammar from the reference 2014-11-24 17:23:55 -05:00