Previously, breaking from an outer block at comptime would result in
incorrect control flow. Now there is a mechanism, `error.ComptimeBreak`,
similar to `error.ComptimeReturn`, to send comptime control flow further
up the stack, to its matching block.
This commit also introduces a new log scope. To use it, pass
`--debug-log sema_zir` and you will see 1 line per ZIR instruction
semantically analyzed. This is useful when you want to understand what
comptime control flow is doing while debugging the compiler.
One more `switch` test case is passing.
* implement `genSetStack` for `ptr_stack_offset`
* handle `ptr_add`
* implement storing from register into pointer in register
* split alignment and array tests into those that pass on x86_64 and
those that do not
* pass more tests on x86_64
* Fix incorrect result when the first digit after the decimal point is not 0-9 - eg 0x0.ap0
* Fix compiler panic when the number starts with `0X` with a capital `X` - eg 0X0p0
* Fix compiler panic when the number has a decimal point immediately after `0x` - eg 0x.0p0
Calling `insert` on a `std.MultiArrayList` currently fails with a compiler error due to using a `try` without the `!` annotation on the return type
```zig
this.list.insert(allocator, 0, listener);
```
```zig
/Users/jarred/Build/zig/lib/std/multi_array_list.zig:192:13: error: expected type 'void', found '@typeInfo(@typeInfo(@TypeOf(std.multi_array_list.MultiArrayList(src.javascript.jsc.node.types.Listener).ensureUnusedCapacity)).Fn.return_type.?).ErrorUnion.error_set'
try self.ensureUnusedCapacity(gpa, 1);
```
Beyond adding default zero-initialization, this commit changes undefined
initialization to zero, as some cases reserved the padding and on other
cases, I've found some systems act strange when giving uninit instead of
zero even when it shouldn't be an issue, one example being
FileProtocol.Open's attributes, which *should* be ignored when not
creating a file, but ended up giving an unrelated error.
There is a mechanism to avoid redundant `as` ZIR instructions which is
to pass `ResultLoc.coerced_ty` instead of `ResultLoc.ty` when it is
known by AstGen that Sema will do the coercion.
This commit downgrades `coerced_ty` to `ty` when a result location
passes through an expression that branches, such as `if`, `switch`,
`while`, and `for`, causing the `as` ZIR instruction to be emitted.
This ensures that the type of a result location will be applied to, e.g.
a `comptime_int` on either side of a branch on a runtime condition.
I've seen having this be wrong break some cross-compilers, and it's
also how it is in other files so it's best to be consistent.
It's also just the actual casing of the file.
It is the job of codegen backends to mark Decls that are referenced as
alive so that the frontend does not sweep them with the garbage. This
commit unifies the code between the backends with an added method on
Decl.
The implementation is more complete than before, switching on the Decl
val tag and recursing into sub-values.
As a result, two more array tests are passing.
also use the common naming convention for glibc versions ("2.33" rather
than "2-33").
I also verified that these files are exactly identical to the previous
files from before zig updated to glibc 2.34.
__libc_start_main() from glibc.2.33.so or older needs to have a __libc_csu_init function callback parameter.
glibc-2.34 on the other hand has a different __libc_start_main() that does not use it,
and the start.S file from glibc-2.34 no longer construct the init function and pass null when calling __libc_start_main.
So, When targetting an older glibc, use the start.s files as they were in glibc-2.33 and construct the __libc_csu_init function.
fixes#10386#10512