This commit updates stage2 to enforce the property that the syntax
`fn()void` is a function *body* not a *pointer*. To get a pointer, the
syntax `*const fn()void` is required.
ZIR puts function alignment into the func instruction rather than the
decl because this way it makes it into function types. LLVM backend
respects function alignments.
Struct and Union have methods `fieldSrcLoc` to help look up source
locations of their fields. These trigger full loading, tokenization, and
parsing of source files, so should only be called once it is confirmed
that an error message needs to be printed.
There are some nice new error hints for explaining why a type is
required to be comptime, particularly for structs that contain function
body types.
`Type.requiresComptime` is now moved into Sema because it can fail and
might need to trigger field type resolution. Comptime pointer loading
takes into account types that do not have a well-defined memory layout
and does not try to compute a byte offset for them.
`fn()void` syntax no longer secretly makes a pointer. You get a function
body type, which requires comptime. However a pointer to a function body
can be runtime known (obviously).
Compile errors that report "expected pointer, found ..." are factored
out into convenience functions `checkPtrOperand` and `checkPtrType` and
have a note about function pointers.
Implemented `Value.hash` for functions, enum literals, and undefined values.
stage1 is not updated to this (yet?), so some workarounds and disabled
tests are needed to keep everything working. Should we update stage1 to
these new type semantics? Yes probably because I don't want to add too
much conditional compilation logic in the std lib for the different
backends.
This reverts commit 1f10cf4edf2b645e63dedc42f5d7475914bf2311.
Re-opens #10618
I want to solve this a different way. `align(S)` where S is a 0-byte
type should work in this context.
This also caused issues such as
https://github.com/Vexu/arocc/issues/221
An attempt to normalize some of the function names in build.zig. Normalize add*Dir to add*Path. Also use "Library" instead of the "Lib" abbreviation.
The PR does not remove the old names, only adds the new normalized ones to faciliate a transition period.
The size of a GUID is not platform-dependent, it's always a fixed number of bits. So I've updated guid to use fixed bit integer types rather than platform-dependent C integer types.
* AstGen: use Ast.zig helper methods to avoid copy pasting token counting logic
- take advantage of the `first_doc_comment` field we already have for
param AST nodes
* Add missing ZIR docs
Looking at the BufferedWriter assembly generated, one can see that is
has to do a lot of work, just to copy over some bytes and increase an
offset. This is because the LinearFifo is a much more general construct
than what BufferedWriter needs and the optimizer cannot prove that we
don't need to do this extra work.
Replaces the inflate API from `inflateStream(reader: anytype, window_slice: []u8)` to
`decompressor(allocator: mem.Allocator, reader: anytype, dictionary: ?[]const u8)` and
`compressor(allocator: mem.Allocator, writer: anytype, options: CompressorOptions)`
Read bytes to check expected values instead of reading and hashing them.
Hashing is a waste of time when we can just read and compare.
This also removes a dependency on std.crypto.hash.sha2.Sha256 for tests.
This was originally introduced in 4d48948b526337947ef59a83f7dbc81b70aa5723
but broken immediately afterwards in c8af00c66e8b6f62e4dd6ac4d86a3de03e9ea354.
* rename `entry` to `entry_symbol_name` for the zig build API
* integrate with `zig cc` command line options
* integrate with COFF linking with LLD
* integrate with self-hosted ELF linker
* don't put it in the hash for MachO since it is ignored
This reverts commit d48e4245b68bf25c7f41804a5012ac157a5ee546.
I have no idea why this is failing Drone CI, but in a branch, reverting
this commit solved the problem.
Instead use the standarized option for communicating the
zig compiler backend at comptime, which is `zig_backend`. This was
introduced in commit 1c24ef0d0b09a12a1fe98056f2fc04de78a82df3.
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.
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.
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