`castTruncatedData` was a poorly worded error (all shrinking casts
"truncate bits", it's just that we assume those bits to be zext/sext of
the other bits!), and `negativeToUnsigned` was a pointless distinction
which forced the compiler to emit worse code (since two separate safety
checks were required for casting e.g. 'i32' to 'u16') and wasn't even
implemented correctly. This commit combines those safety panics into one
function, `integerOutOfBounds`. The name maybe isn't perfect, but that's
not hugely important; what matters is the new default message, which is
clearer than the old ones: "integer does not fit in destination type".
This defines a WinMain() function that can be potentially problematic when it
isn't wanted. If we add back support for this library in the future, it should
be built separately from mingw32.lib and on demand.
Pointers to thread-local variables do not have their addresses known
until runtime, so it is nonsensical for them to be comptime-known. There
was logic in the compiler which was essentially attempting to treat them
as not being comptime-known despite the pointer being an interned value.
This was a bit of a mess, the check was frequent enough to actually show
up in compiler profiles, and it was very awkward for backends to deal
with, because they had to grapple with the fact that a "constant" they
were lowering might actually require runtime operations.
So, instead, do not consider these pointers to be comptime-known in
*any* way. Never intern such a pointer; instead, when the address of a
threadlocal is taken, emit an AIR instruction which computes the pointer
at runtime. This avoids lots of special handling for TLVs across
basically all codegen backends; of all somewhat-functional backends, the
only one which wasn't improved by this change was the LLVM backend,
because LLVM pretends this complexity around threadlocals doesn't exist.
This change simplifies Sema and codegen, avoids a potential source of
bugs, and potentially improves Sema performance very slightly by
avoiding a non-trivial check on a hot path.
In a compiler built with debug extensions, pass `--debug-incremental` to
spawn the "incremental debug server". This is a TCP server exposing a
REPL which allows querying a bunch of compiler state, some of which is
stored only when that flag is passed. Eventually, this will probably
move into `std.zig.Server`/`std.zig.Client`, but this is easier to work
with right now. The easiest way to interact with the server is `telnet`.
The doc comment here agreed with the implementation, but not with *any*
`Step` which populates a `GeneratedFile`, where they are treated as
cwd-relative. This is the obvious correct choice, because these paths
usually come from joining onto a cache root, and those are cwd-relative
if not absolute.
This was a pre-existing bug, but #23836 caused it to trigger more often,
because the compiler now commonly passes the local cache directory to
the build runner process as a relative path where it was previously an
absolute path.
Resolves: #23954
Right now, if you override the build root with `--build-root`, then
`Run` steps can fail to execute because of incorrect path handling in
the compiler: `std.process.Child` gets a cwd-relative path, but also has
its cwd set to the build root. The latter behavior is really weird; it
doesn't match my expectations, nor does it match how we spawn child
`zig` processes. So, this commit makes the child process inherit the
build runner's cwd, as `LazyPath.getPath2` *expects* it to.
After investigating, this behavior dates all the way back to 2017; it
was introduced in 4543413. So, there isn't any clear/documented reason
for this; it should be safe to revert, since under the modern `LazyPath`
system it is strictly a bug AFAICT.
* libc: implement common `abs` for various integer sizes
* libc: move imaxabs to inttypes.zig and don't use cInclude
* libc: delete `fabs` c implementations because already implemented in compiler_rt
* libc: export functions depending on the target libc
Previously all the functions that were exported were handled equally,
though some may exist and some not inside the same file. Moving the
checks inside the file allows handling different functions differently
* remove empty ifs in inttypes
Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
* remove empty ifs in stdlib
Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
* libc: use `@abs` for the absolute value calculation
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Rønne Petersen <alex@alexrp.com>
Nothing interesting here; literally just the bare minimum so I can work on this
on and off in a branch without worrying about merge conflicts in the non-backend
code.
This function was broken, because it took ownership of the buffer on
error *sometimes*, in a way which the caller could not tell. Rather than
trying to be clever, it's easier to just follow the same interface as
all other `addFilePost` methods, and not take ownership of the path.
This is a breaking change. The next commits will apply it to the
compiler, which is the only user of this function in the ziglang/zig
repository.
This code applies to ~any POSIX OS where we don't link libc. For example, it'll
be useful for FreeBSD and NetBSD.
As part of this, move std.os.linux.pie to std.pie since there's really nothing
Linux-specific about what that file is doing.
Error messages never contain periods or grave accents.
Get rid of the periods and use apostrophes instead in
probably the only two error messages that had them.