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Rollup of 2 pull requests #59635
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Rollup of 2 pull requests #59635
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Uses relative libdir to place libraries on all stages. Adds verbose installation output.
By using 'impl trait', it's possible to create a self-referential type as follows: fn foo() -> impl Copy { foo } This is a function which returns itself. Normally, the signature of this function would be impossible to write - it would look like 'fn foo() -> fn() -> fn() ...' e.g. a function which returns a function, which returns a function... Using 'impl trait' allows us to avoid writing this infinitely long type. While it's useless for practical purposes, it does compile and run However, issues arise when we try to generate llvm debuginfo for such a type. All 'impl trait' types (e.g. ty::Opaque) are resolved when we generate debuginfo, which can lead to us recursing back to the original 'fn' type when we try to process its return type. To resolve this, I've modified debuginfo generation to account for these kinds of weird types. Unfortunately, there's no 'correct' debuginfo that we can generate - 'impl trait' does not exist in debuginfo, and this kind of recursive type is impossible to directly represent. To ensure that we emit *something*, this commit emits dummy debuginfo/type names whenever it encounters a self-reference. In practice, this should never happen - it's just to ensure that we can emit some kind of debuginfo, even if it's not particularly meaningful Fixes rust-lang#58463
…ulacrum Fix custom relative libdir While working on rust-lang#58947 I found out relative libdir ignored during setting LD_LIBRARY_PATH.
…=oli-obk Fix stack overflow when generating debuginfo for 'recursive' type By using 'impl trait', it's possible to create a self-referential type as follows: fn foo() -> impl Copy { foo } This is a function which returns itself. Normally, the signature of this function would be impossible to write - it would look like 'fn foo() -> fn() -> fn() ...' e.g. a function which returns a function, which returns a function... Using 'impl trait' allows us to avoid writing this infinitely long type. While it's useless for practical purposes, it does compile and run However, issues arise when we try to generate llvm debuginfo for such a type. All 'impl trait' types (e.g. ty::Opaque) are resolved when we generate debuginfo, which can lead to us recursing back to the original 'fn' type when we try to process its return type. To resolve this, I've modified debuginfo generation to account for these kinds of weird types. Unfortunately, there's no 'correct' debuginfo that we can generate - 'impl trait' does not exist in debuginfo, and this kind of recursive type is impossible to directly represent. To ensure that we emit *something*, this commit emits dummy debuginfo/type names whenever it encounters a self-reference. In practice, this should never happen - it's just to ensure that we can emit some kind of debuginfo, even if it's not particularly meaningful Fixes rust-lang#58463
Your PR failed on Travis (raw log). Through arcane magic we have determined that the following fragments from the build log may contain information about the problem. Click to expand the log.
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r? @ghost