* add zig build option `-Dskip-libc` to skip tests that build libc
(e.g. if you don't want to wait for musl to build)
* add `-Denable-wine` option which uses wine to run cross compiled
windows tests on non-windows hosts
* add `-Denable-qemu` option which uses qemu to run cross compiled
foreign architecture tests
* add `-Denable-foreign-glibc=path` option which combined with
`-Denable-qemu` enables running cross compiled tests that link
against glibc. See
https://github.com/ziglang/zig/wiki/Updating-libc#glibc for how to
produce this directory.
* the test matrix is done manually. release test builds are only
enabled by default for the native target. this should save us some CI
time, while still providing decent coverage of release builds.
- add test coverage for `x86_64-linux-musl -lc` (building musl libc)
- add test coverage for `x86_64-linux-gnu -lc` (building glibc)
- add test coverage for `aarch64v8_5a-linux-none`
- add test coverage for `aarch64v8_5a-linux-musl -lc` (building musl libc)
- add test coverage for `aarch64v8_5a-linux-gnu -lc` (building glibc)
- add test coverage for `arm-linux-none`
- test coverage for `arm-linux-musleabihf -lc` (building musl libc) is
disabled due to #3286
- test coverage for `arm-linux-gnueabihf -lc` (building glibc) is disabled
due to #3287
- test coverage for `x86_64-windows-gnu -lc` (building mingw-w64) is
disabled due to #3285
* enable qemu testing on the Linux CI job. There's not really a good
reason to enable wine, since we have a Windows CI job as well.
* remove the no longer needed `--build-file ../build.zig` from CI
scripts
* fix bug in glibc compilation where it wasn't properly reading the abi
list txt files, resulting in "key not found" error.
* std.build.Target gains:
- isNetBSD
- isLinux
- osRequiresLibC
- getArchPtrBitWidth
- getExternalExecutor
* zig build system gains support for enabling wine and enabling qemu.
`artifact.enable_wine = true;`, `artifact.enable_qemu = true;`. This
communicates that the system has these tools installed and the build
system will use them to run tests.
* zig build system gains support for overriding the dynamic linker of
an executable artifact.
* fix std.c.lseek prototype. makes behavior tests for
arm-linux-musleabihf pass.
* disable std lib tests that are failing on ARM. See #3288, #3289
* provide `std.os.off_t`.
* disable some of the compiler_rt symbols for arm 32 bit. Fixes
compiler_rt tests for arm 32 bit
* add __stack_chk_guard when linking against glibc. Fixes std lib tests
for aarch64-linux-gnu
* workaround for "unable to inline function" using `@inlineCall`. Fixes
compiler_rt tests for arm 32 bit.
This was incorrectly translated as a u64. binary_exponent is an
unadjusted value so can be negative. In becomes unconditionally positive
when adding the bias.
* CLI: `-target [name]` instead of `--target-*` args.
This matches clang's API.
* `builtin.Environ` renamed to `builtin.Abi`
- likewise `builtin.environ` renamed to `builtin.abi`
* stop hiding the concept of sub-arch. closes#1526
* `zig targets` only shows available targets. closes#438
* include all targets in readme, even those that don't
print with `zig targets` but note they are Tier 4
* refactor target.cpp and make the naming conventions
more consistent
* introduce the concept of a "default C ABI" for a given
OS/Arch combo. As a rule of thumb, if the system compiler
is clang or gcc then the default C ABI is the gnu ABI.
This is not intended to be the long-term implementation as it doesn't
provide various properties that we eventually will want (e.g.
round-tripping, denormal support). It also uses f64 internally so the
wider f128 will be inaccurate.
Previously, std.debug.assert would `@panic` in test builds,
if the assertion failed. Now, it's always `unreachable`.
This makes release mode test builds more accurately test
the actual code that will be run.
However this requires tests to call `std.testing.expect`
rather than `std.debug.assert` to make sure output is correct.
Here is the explanation of when to use either one, copied from
the assert doc comments:
Inside a test block, it is best to use the `std.testing` module
rather than assert, because assert may not detect a test failure
in ReleaseFast and ReleaseSafe mode. Outside of a test block, assert
is the correct function to use.
closes#1304
From IEEE-754 standard:
Conversion of a quiet NaN in a supported format to an external character sequence
shall produce a language-defined one of “nan” or a sequence that is equivalent except
for case (e.g., “NaN”), with an optional preceding sign. (This standard does not interpret
the sign of a NaN.)
* Handle unions differently in std.fmt
Print the active tag's value in tagged unions. Untagged unions considered unsafe to print and treated like a pointer or an array.
Caused by struct printing behavior. Enums are different enough from structs and unions that the field iteration behavior doesn't do what we want even if @memberName didn't error on enums.
If fmt was called on with a [*]u8 or [*]const u8 argument, but the fmt string did not specify 's' to treat it as a string, it produced a compile error due to accessing index 1 of a 0 length slice.
This is akin to channels in Go, except:
* implemented in userland
* they are lock-free and thread-safe
* they integrate with the userland event loop
The self hosted compiler is changed to use a channel for events,
and made to stay alive, watching files and performing builds when
things change, however the main.zig file exits after 1 build.
Note that nothing is actually built yet, it just parses the input
and then declares that the build succeeded.
Next items to do:
* add windows and macos support for std.event.Loop
* improve the event loop stop() operation
* make the event loop multiplex coroutines onto kernel threads
* watch source file for updates, and provide AST diffs
(at least list the top level declaration changes)
* top level declaration analysis
* add assertion for trying to do @typeInfo on global error set
* remove TypeInfo.Slice
* add TypeInfo.Pointer.Size with possible values
- One
- Many
- Slice
See #770