Apparently the standard --build and --host flags don't actually
_do_ anything. This re-uses the libuv flags, since they are the
same for getting jemalloc to cross-compile
Fix#6805: add --enable-ccache configure option to prefix compiler invocations with `ccache` to attempt to reuse common results, e.g. for LLVM (re)builds.
The information at developer [Note-ccache](../../wiki/Note-ccache) and at [ccache and clang concerns](http://petereisentraut.blogspot.fr/2011/09/ccache-and-clang-part-2.html) were what drove my introduction of the `-Qunused-arguments` and `CCACHE_CPP2` options. (Though I did confirm first-hand that at least the first really is necessary.)
Yes, one certainly can re-route how `gcc` and `clang` are resolved in one's PATH and use that as a way to invoke `ccache`. But I personally do not want to introduce that change to my own PATH, and this seems like a small enough change that it does not hurt to add it, at least for now. (I don't know what form it would take when we move over to `rustpkg`.)
Most of the relevant information can be found in the commit messages.
r? @brson - I just wanted to make sure the make changes aren't completely bogus
This would close#2400, #6517, and #6489 (although a run through incoming-full on linux would have to confirm the latter two)
This way a cross-compiled rustc's answer to host_triple() is correct. The return
value of host_triple() reflects the actual host triple that the compiler was
build for, not the triple the compiler is being built on
Refactor the optimization passes to explicitly use the passes. This commit
just re-implements the same passes as were already being run.
It also adds an option (behind `-Z`) to run the LLVM lint pass on the
unoptimized IR.
This updates the bundled linenoise library, and explicitly builds it with UTF8 support. This way rusti correctly handles utf8 characters when doing line operations.
Closes#6681
This lets us use #ifdefs to determine which stage of the build we happen
to be in, which is useful in the event we need to make changes to rustrt
that are incompatible with the code generated by stage0.
This should help pave the way to completing #6575, which will likely
require changes to type signatures for spawn_fn & glue_fn in rustrt.
It uses the private field of TCB head to store stack limit. I tested on my Raspberry PI. A simple hello world program ran without any problem. However, for a more complex program, it segfaulted as #6231.
* They didn't work before, because the location of the tests caused the
'sysroot' option to crate lookup to be wrong for finding the correct stage's
core/std libraries. This moves the compiled tests from the $host/test
directory into a $host/$stage/test directory. This means that the sysroot will
be correct and the core/std libraries can actually be found
* The LLVM bindings apparently aren't threadsafe, so we can't run multiple tests
in parallel.
fix for #6279#6253
mk: rt.mk regression patch for mingw32 after #6176
currently do not pass optimization option just make it works only
mk: target.mk host.mk fix for duplicated rules of mingw32 after #6235
It can be simply fixed with CFG_LIB check whether bin or lib however considering multiple target triples with linux and windows, CFG_LIB needs to configurable #5223 and #5577
Support #5297
install.mk : install-runtime-target added for conveneice
automatically push runtime library to android device
test.mk : expanded to support android test automation with adb
compiletest : expanded to support android test automation with adb
This is an attempt to address Issue #3326 by adding [*order-only*][1]
prerequsites of each build product on the directory where it is to go.
It is important that the prerequisites be order-only, since the
timestamp on a parent directory is not relevant to whether a product
is out of date; the parent directory merely needs to exist.
(This use case of generating target directories was provided as an
[example][2] of how order-only prequisites are used.)
[1]: http://www.gnu.org/software/make/manual/html_node/Prerequisite-Types.html
[2]: http://www.kolpackov.net/pipermail/notes/2004-January/000001.html
Most of our documentation requires both pandoc and node.js.
This simplifies the logic around those checks and fixes an
error when building without node.js but with pandoc.
This also reverts some changes to TLS that were leaking memory.
Conflicts:
src/libcore/rt/uv/net.rs
src/libcore/task/local_data_priv.rs
src/libcore/unstable/lang.rs