All Zig code is eligible to `@import("builtin")` which is mapped to a
generated file, build.zig, based on the target and other settings.
Zig invocations which share the same target settings will generate the
same builtin.zig file and thus the path to builtin.zig is in a shared
cache folder, and different projects can sometimes use the same file.
Before this commit, this led to race conditions where multiple
invocations of `zig` would race to write this file. If one process
wanted to *read* the file while the other process *wrote* the file, the
reading process could observe a truncated or partially written
builtin.zig file.
This commit makes the following improvements:
- limitations:
- avoid clobbering the inode, mtime in the hot path
- avoid creating a partially written file
- builtin.zig needs to be on disk for debug info / stack trace purposes
- don't mark the task as complete until the file is finished being populated
(possibly by an external process)
- strategy:
- create the `@import("builtin")` `Module.File` during the AstGen
work, based on generating the contents in memory rather than
loading from disk.
- write builtin.zig in a separate task that doesn't have
to complete until the end of the AstGen work queue so that it
can be done in parallel with everything else.
- when writing the file, first stat the file path. If it exists, we are done.
- otherwise, write the file to a temp file in the same directory and atomically
rename it into place (clobbering the inode, mtime in the cold path).
- summary:
- all limitations respected
- hot path: one stat() syscall that happens in a worker thread
This required adding a missing function to the standard library:
`std.fs.Dir.statFile`. In this commit, it does open() and then fstat()
which is two syscalls. It should be improved in a future commit to only
make one.
Fixes#9439.
Not sure why this warning is being emitted; let's reexamine it on the
next libunwind upgrade. I triggered it with this:
zig c++ -o hello hello.cpp -target x86_64-windows
The console test# label [test#/#tests] was being generated inside
refreshWithHeldLock (in lib/std/Progress.zig), using the number of
completed items. This was being incremented by 1 when displayed,
which is not required.
- Correctly load slice value on stack
- Implement WrapErrorUnionErr and payload
- Implement trunc, fix sliceLen and write undefined
- Implement slice as return type and argument
Note: This also fixes a memory leak for inferred error sets, and for usingnamespace
This reverts commit 725267f7c20f0ba588b472048a8c1fe1a328c714, reversing
changes made to 2dae860de3494f97c9477af9282fe0131ff5c4cb.
This test is failing:
```zig
pub fn main() u8 {
var e = foo();
const i = e catch 69;
return i;
}
fn foo() anyerror!u8 {
return 5;
}
```
It's returning 69 instead of the expected value 5.
Adds the `tcflag_t` type to the termios constants.
This is made to allow bitwise operations on the termios
constants without an integer cast, e.g.:
```zig
var raw = try std.os.tcgetattr(std.os.STDIN_FILENO);
raw.lflag &= std.os.linux.ECHO | std.os.linux.ICANON;
```
instead of
```zig
var raw = try std.os.tcgetattr(std.os.STDIN_FILENO);
raw.lflag &= ~@intCast(u32, std.os.linux.ECHO | std.os.linux.ICANON);
```
Contributes to #10181
This branch introduced std.Target.TargetAbi when we already had
std.Target.Abi which was, unsurprisingly, already suited for this task.
Also pull out the -mabi= cc flag addition to the common area instead of
duplicating it for assembly and c files.
The target abi can also be set in build.zig via LibExeObjStep.target_abi
The value passed in is checked that it is a valid value in
std.Target.TargetAbi
The target abi is also validated against the target cpu
I'm working on a build.zig file where I'm leveraging InstallRawStep but I'd like to change the install dir. This allows the install dir to be changd and also enhances InstallRawStep to add more options in the future by putting them into a struct with default values. This also removes the need for an extra addInstallStepWithFormat function in build.zig.
`getExternalExecutor` is moved from `std.zig.CrossTarget` to
`std.zig.system.NativeTargetInfo.getExternalExecutor`.
The function also now communicates a bit more information about *why*
the host is unable to execute a binary. The CLI is updated to report
this information in a useful manner.
`getExternalExecutor` is also improved to detect such patterns as:
* x86_64 is able to execute x86 binaries
* aarch64 is able to execute arm binaries
* etc.
Added qemu-hexagon support to `getExternalExecutor`.
`std.Target.canExecBinaries` of is removed; callers should use the more
powerful `getExternalExecutor` instead.
Now that `zig test` tries to run the resulting binary no matter what,
this commit has a follow-up change to the build system and docgen to
utilize the `getExternalExecutor` function and pass `--test-no-exec`
in some cases to avoid getting the error.
Additionally:
* refactor: extract NativePaths and NativeTargetInfo into their own
files named after the structs.
* small improvement to langref to reduce the complexity of the `callconv`
expression in a couple examples.
Previously when using `zig run` or `zig test`, zig would try to guess
whether the host system was capable of running the target binaries. Now,
it will always try. If it fails, then Zig emits a helpful warning to
explain the probable cause.