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Tracking issue for LLVM 6 upgrade #47683

Closed
18 tasks done
alexcrichton opened this issue Jan 23, 2018 · 2 comments · Fixed by #47828
Closed
18 tasks done

Tracking issue for LLVM 6 upgrade #47683

alexcrichton opened this issue Jan 23, 2018 · 2 comments · Fixed by #47828
Labels
A-LLVM Area: Code generation parts specific to LLVM. Both correctness bugs and optimization-related issues. C-enhancement Category: An issue proposing an enhancement or a PR with one. T-compiler Relevant to the compiler team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue.

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@alexcrichton
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alexcrichton commented Jan 23, 2018

An LLVM release candidate for 6.0.0 has been tagged, and despite not having upgraded to LLVM 5 we should start weeding out bugs for LLVM 6!

test results:

Issues with no diagnosis/resolution

  • None!

I'm sure this list will expand over time! I'll try to keep it updated.

Issues with a diagnosis/resolution that hasn't landed

Fixed issues:

PRs:

@alexcrichton alexcrichton added the A-LLVM Area: Code generation parts specific to LLVM. Both correctness bugs and optimization-related issues. label Jan 23, 2018
@alexcrichton
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The most recent Travis run is now all green. I've manually tested on OSX locally and we're all good there, and we're also good on MinGW Windows. The last remaining bug is the MSVC archive regression. Still hunting that down.

alexcrichton added a commit to alexcrichton/rust that referenced this issue Jan 25, 2018
…atsakis

First round of LLVM 6.0.0 compatibility

This includes a number of commits for the first round of upgrading to LLVM 6. There are still [lingering bugs](rust-lang#47683) but I believe all of this will nonetheless be necessary!
@cuviper cuviper added C-enhancement Category: An issue proposing an enhancement or a PR with one. T-compiler Relevant to the compiler team, which will review and decide on the PR/issue. labels Jan 27, 2018
alexcrichton added a commit to alexcrichton/rust that referenced this issue Jan 28, 2018
The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The current set of custom rustc-specific patches included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@27174447533), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782febb7b9), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de63c42), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0abb).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c252db
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by rust-lang#47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes rust-lang#43370
Closes rust-lang#43418
Closes rust-lang#47015
Closes rust-lang#47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
bors added a commit that referenced this issue Jan 28, 2018
rustc: Upgrade to LLVM 6

The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The current set of custom rustc-specific patches included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@2717444), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782feb), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de6), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0a).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c25
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by #47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes #43370
Closes #43418
Closes #47015
Closes #47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
alexcrichton added a commit to alexcrichton/rust that referenced this issue Jan 29, 2018
The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The current set of custom rustc-specific patches included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@27174447533), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782febb7b9), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de63c42), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0abb).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c252db
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by rust-lang#47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes rust-lang#43370
Closes rust-lang#43418
Closes rust-lang#47015
Closes rust-lang#47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
bors added a commit that referenced this issue Jan 30, 2018
rustc: Upgrade to LLVM 6

The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The [current set of custom rustc-specific patches](rust-lang/llvm@f128612...rust-llvm-release-6-0-0) included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@2717444), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782feb), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de6), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0a).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c25
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by #47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes #43370
Closes #43418
Closes #47015
Closes #47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
@lilianmoraru
Copy link

@alexcrichton It seems that all the mark boxes should now be ticked?(PRs merged)

alexcrichton added a commit to alexcrichton/rust that referenced this issue Feb 5, 2018
The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The current set of custom rustc-specific patches included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@27174447533), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782febb7b9), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de63c42), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0abb).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c252db
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by rust-lang#47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes rust-lang#43370
Closes rust-lang#43418
Closes rust-lang#47015
Closes rust-lang#47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
bors added a commit that referenced this issue Feb 5, 2018
rustc: Upgrade to LLVM 6

The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The [current set of custom rustc-specific patches](rust-lang/llvm@f128612...rust-llvm-release-6-0-0) included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@2717444), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782feb), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de6), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0a).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c25
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by #47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes #43370
Closes #43418
Closes #47015
Closes #47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
alexcrichton added a commit that referenced this issue Feb 7, 2018
The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The current set of custom rustc-specific patches included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@27174447533), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782febb7b9), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de63c42), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0abb).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c252db
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by #47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes #43370
Closes #43418
Closes #47015
Closes #47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
alexcrichton added a commit to alexcrichton/rust that referenced this issue Feb 9, 2018
The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The current set of custom rustc-specific patches included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@27174447533), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782febb7b9), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de63c42), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0abb).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c252db
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by rust-lang#47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes rust-lang#43370
Closes rust-lang#43418
Closes rust-lang#47015
Closes rust-lang#47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
bors added a commit that referenced this issue Feb 9, 2018
rustc: Upgrade to LLVM 6

The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The [current set of custom rustc-specific patches](rust-lang/llvm@f128612...rust-llvm-release-6-0-0) included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@2717444), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782feb), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de6), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0a).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c25
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by #47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes #43370
Closes #43418
Closes #47015
Closes #47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
alexcrichton added a commit to alexcrichton/rust that referenced this issue Feb 10, 2018
The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The current set of custom rustc-specific patches included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@27174447533), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782febb7b9), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de63c42), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0abb).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c252db
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by rust-lang#47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes rust-lang#43370
Closes rust-lang#43418
Closes rust-lang#47015
Closes rust-lang#47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
bors added a commit that referenced this issue Feb 10, 2018
rustc: Upgrade to LLVM 6

The following submodules have been updated for a new version of LLVM:

- `src/llvm`
- `src/libcompiler_builtins` - transitively contains compiler-rt
- `src/dlmalloc`

This also updates the docker container for dist-i686-freebsd as the old 16.04
container is no longer capable of building LLVM. The
compiler-rt/compiler-builtins and dlmalloc updates are pretty routine without
much interesting happening, but the LLVM update here is of particular note.
Unlike previous updates I haven't cherry-picked all existing patches we had on
top of our LLVM branch as we have a [huge amount][patches4] and have at this
point forgotten what most of them are for. Instead I started from the current
`release_60` branch in LLVM and only applied patches that were necessary to get
our tests working and building.

The [current set of custom rustc-specific patches](rust-lang/llvm@f128612...rust-llvm-release-6-0-0) included in this LLVM update are:

* rust-lang/llvm@1187443 - this is how we actually implement
  `cfg(target_feature)` for now and continues to not be upstreamed. While a
  hazard for SIMD stabilization this commit is otherwise keeping the status
  quo of a small rustc-specific feature.
* rust-lang/llvm@013f2ec - this is a rustc-specific optimization that we haven't
  upstreamed, notably teaching LLVM about our allocation-related routines (which
  aren't malloc/free). Once we stabilize the global allocator routines we will
  likely want to upstream this patch, but for now it seems reasonable to keep it
  on our fork.
* rust-lang/llvm@a65bbfd - I found this necessary to fix compilation of LLVM in
  our 32-bit linux container. I'm not really sure why it's necessary but my
  guess is that it's because of the absolutely ancient glibc that we're using.
  In any case it's only updating pieces we're not actually using in LLVM so I'm
  hoping it'll turn out alright. This doesn't seem like something we'll want to
  upstream.c
* rust-lang/llvm@77ab1f0 - this is what's actually enabling LLVM to build in our
  i686-freebsd container, I'm not really sure what's going on but we for sure
  probably don't want to upstream this and otherwise it seems not too bad for
  now at least.
* rust-lang/llvm@9eb9267 - we currently suffer on MSVC from an [upstream bug]
  which although diagnosed to a particular revision isn't currently fixed
  upstream (and the bug itself doesn't seem too active). This commit is a
  partial revert of the suspected cause of this regression (found via a
  bisection). I'm sort of hoping that this eventually gets fixed upstream with a
  similar fix (which we can replace in our branch), but for now I'm also hoping
  it's a relatively harmless change to have.

After applying these patches (plus one [backport] which should be [backported
upstream][llvm-back]) I believe we should have all tests working on all
platforms in our current test suite. I'm like 99% sure that we'll need some more
backports as issues are reported for LLVM 6 when this propagates through
nightlies, but that's sort of just par for the course nowadays!

In any case though some extra scrutiny of the patches here would definitely be
welcome, along with scrutiny of the "missing patches" like a [change to pass
manager order](rust-lang/llvm@2717444), [another change to pass manager
order](rust-lang/llvm@c782feb), some [compile fixes for
sparc](rust-lang/llvm@1a83de6), and some [fixes for
solaris](rust-lang/llvm@c2bfe0a).

[patches4]: rust-lang/llvm@5401fdf...rust-llvm-release-4-0-1
[backport]: rust-lang/llvm@5c54c25
[llvm-back]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36114
[upstream bug]: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36096

---

The update to LLVM 6 is desirable for a number of reasons, notably:

* This'll allow us to keep up with the upstream wasm backend, picking up new
  features as they start landing.
* Upstream LLVM has fixed a number of SIMD-related compilation errors,
  especially around AVX-512 and such.
* There's a few assorted known bugs which are fixed in LLVM 5 and aren't fixed
  in the LLVM 4 branch we're using.
* Overall it's not a great idea to stagnate with our codegen backend!

This update is mostly powered by #47730 which is allowing us to update LLVM
*independent* of the version of LLVM that Emscripten is locked to. This means
that when compiling code for Emscripten we'll still be using the old LLVM 4
backend, but when compiling code for any other target we'll be using the new
LLVM 6 target. Once Emscripten updates we may no longer need this distinction,
but we're not sure when that will happen!

Closes #43370
Closes #43418
Closes #47015
Closes #47683
Closes rust-lang/stdarch#157
Closes rust-lang-nursery/rust-wasm#3
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