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Rollup of 7 pull requests #59678
Rollup of 7 pull requests #59678
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This commit switches the wasi target to loading CLI arguments via the syscalls provided by wasi rather than through the argc/argv passed to the main function. While serving the same purpose it's hoped that using syscalls will make us a bit more portable (less reliance from libstd on an external C library) as well as avoiding the need for a lock!
I've since learned that the mapping between libc fds and wasi fds are expected to be one-to-one, so we can use the raw syscalls for writing to stdout/stderr and reading from stdin! This should help ensure that we don't depend on a C library too unnecessarily.
This routes the `error_string` API to `strerror` in libc which should have more human readable descriptions.
Functions with uninhabited return values are already marked `noreturn`, but we were still generating return instructions for this. When running with `C passes=lint`, LLVM prints: Unusual: Return statement in function with noreturn attribute The LLVM manual makes a stronger statement about `noreturn` though: > This produces undefined behavior at runtime if the function ever does dynamically return. We now mark such return values with a new `IgnoreMode::Uninhabited`, and emit an `abort` anywhere that would have returned.
Turns out we needed to exclude a number of math functions on the `wasm32-unknown-wasi` target, and this was fixed in 0.1.9 of compiler-builtins and this is pulling in the fix to libstd's own build.
This commit fills out the `std::fs` module and implementation for WASI. Not all APIs are implemented, such as permissions-related ones and `canonicalize`, but all others APIs have been implemented and very lightly tested so far. We'll eventually want to run a more exhaustive test suite! For now the highlights of this commit are: * The `std::fs::File` type is now backed by `WasiFd`, a raw WASI file descriptor. * All APIs in `std::fs` (except permissions/canonicalize) have implementations for the WASI target. * A suite of unstable extension traits were added to `std::os::wasi::fs`. These traits expose the raw filesystem functionality of WASI, namely `*at` syscalls (opening a file relative to an already opened one, for example). Additionally metadata only available on wasi is exposed through these traits. Perhaps one of the most notable parts is the implementation of path-taking APIs. WASI actually has no fundamental API that just takes a path, but rather everything is relative to a previously opened file descriptor. To allow existing APIs to work (that only take a path) WASI has a few syscalls to learn about "pre opened" file descriptors by the runtime. We use these to build a map of existing directory names to file descriptors, and then when using a path we try to anchor it at an already-opened file. This support is very rudimentary though and is intended to be shared with C since it's likely to be so tricky. For now though the C library doesn't expose quite an API for us to use, so we implement it for now and will swap it out as soon as one is available.
wasi: Implement more of the standard library This commit fills out more of the `wasm32-unknown-wasi` target's standard library, notably the `std::fs` module and all of its internals. A few tweaks were made along the way to non-`fs` modules, but the last commit contains the bulk of the work which is to wire up all APIs to their equivalent on WASI targets instead of unconditionally returning "unsupported". After this some basic filesystem operations and such should all be working in WASI!
Never return uninhabited values at all Functions with uninhabited return values are already marked `noreturn`, but we were still generating return instructions for this. When running with `C passes=lint`, LLVM prints: Unusual: Return statement in function with noreturn attribute The LLVM manual makes a stronger statement about `noreturn` though: > This produces undefined behavior at runtime if the function ever does dynamically return. We now mark such return values with a new `IgnoreMode::Uninhabited`, and emit an `abort` anywhere that would have returned. Fixes rust-lang#48227 cc rust-lang#7463 rust-lang#48229 r? @eddyb
std: Upgrade `compiler_builtins` to fix wasi linkage Turns out we needed to exclude a number of math functions on the `wasm32-unknown-wasi` target, and this was fixed in 0.1.9 of compiler-builtins and this is pulling in the fix to libstd's own build.
Be more direct about borrow contract I always was confused by the difference between Borrow and AsRef, despite the fact that I've read all available docs at least a dozen of times. I finally grokked the difference between the two when I realized the Borrow invariant: > If you implement Borrow, you **must** make sure that Eq, Ord and Hash implementations are equivalent for borrowed and owned data My problem was that this invariant is not stated explicitly in documentation, and instead some vague and philosophical notions are used. So I suggest to mention the requirements of `Borrow` very explicitly: instead of "use Borrow when X and use AsRef when Y", let's phrase this as `Borrow` differs from `AsRef` in `W`, so that's why `Borrow` is for `X` and `AsRef` is for `Y`. Note that this change could be seen as tightening contract of the Borrow. Let's say Alice has written the following code: ```rust #[derive(PartialEq, Eq, Hash, PartialOrd, Ord)] struct Person { first_name: String, last_name: String, } impl Borrow<str> for Person { fn borrow(&self) -> &str { self.first_name.as_str() } } ``` Now Bob uses this `Person` struct, puts it into `HashMap` and tries to look it up using `&str` for the first name. Bob's code naturally fails. The question is, who is to blame: Alice, who has written the impl, or Bob, who uses the HashMap. If I read the current docs literally, I would say that `Bob` is to blame: `Eq` and `Hash` bounds appear on HashMap, so it is the HashMap which requires that they are consistent. By using a type for which the `Borrow` impl does not yield well-behaved `Eq`, Bob is violating contract of HashMap. If, as this PR proposes, we unconditionally require that Eq & friends for borrow should be valid, then the blame shifts to Alice, which I think is more reasonable. closes rust-lang#44868
… r=alexcrichton Updated the documentation of spin_loop and spin_loop_hint # Description - Updated the description of `core::hints::spin_loop` - Updated the description of `core::async::spin_loop_hint` Both documentation is rewritten to better reflect when one should prefer using a busy-wait spin-loop (and the `spin_loop` and `spin_loop_hint` functions) over `yield_now`. It also dives a little bit deeper on what the function actually does. closes rust-lang#55418
…criptions, r=GuillaumeGomez Updated the environment description in rustc. # Description - Updated the "environment" description in the `rustc` man pages The old wording suggested that all the mentioned flags influenced the output of the compiler, where this was not the case. closes rust-lang#59504
Revert rust-lld place changes Fixes rust-lang#59661. Instead of rust-lang#59668 it reverts only failed part.
@bors r+ p=7 |
📌 Commit 4688691 has been approved by |
⌛ Testing commit 4688691 with merge 2a2ab083d41667fd03beb73b65a3f55fb2da15cf... |
💔 Test failed - checks-travis |
The job Click to expand the log.
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@bors retry Spurious |
⌛ Testing commit 4688691 with merge b1434c9a09cc72cf957899a644ab56b78983dccb... |
@bors r- retry |
Killing because of r- in #59639 |
Successful merges:
compiler_builtins
to fix wasi linkage #59643 (std: Upgradecompiler_builtins
to fix wasi linkage)Failed merges:
r? @ghost