Added std.coff.MachineType
Added image characteristic and section flag valued to std.coff
Added std.Target.Cpu.Arch.toCoffMachine
Fixed stage2 --watch flag on windows
* move SPU code from std to self hosted compiler
* change std lib comments to be descriptive rather than prescriptive
* avoid usingnamespace
* fix case style of error codes
* remove duplication of producer_string
* generalize handling of less than 64 bit arch pointers
* clean up SPU II related test harness code
* AST: flatten ControlFlowExpression into Continue, Break, and Return.
* AST: unify identifiers and literals into the same AST type: OneToken
* AST: ControlFlowExpression uses TrailerFlags to optimize storage
space.
* astgen: support `var` as well as `const` locals, and support
explicitly typed locals. Corresponding Module and codegen code is not
implemented yet.
* astgen: support result locations.
* ZIR: add the following instructions (see the corresponding doc
comments for explanations of semantics):
- alloc
- alloc_inferred
- bitcast_result_ptr
- coerce_result_block_ptr
- coerce_result_ptr
- coerce_to_ptr_elem
- ensure_result_used
- ensure_result_non_error
- ret_ptr
- ret_type
- store
- param_type
* the skeleton structure for result locations is set up. It's looking
pretty clean so far.
* add compile error for unused result and compile error for discarding
errors.
* astgen: split builtin calls up to implemented manually, and implement
`@as`, `@bitCast` (and others) with respect to result locations.
* add CLI support for hex and raw object formats. They are not
supported by the self-hosted compiler yet, and emit errors.
* rename `--c` CLI to `-ofmt=[objectformat]` which can be any of the
object formats. Only ELF and C are supported so far. Also added missing
help to the help text.
* Remove hard tabs from C backend test cases. Shame on you Noam, you
are grounded, you should know better, etc. Bad boy.
* Delete C backend code and test case that relied on comptime_int
incorrectly making it all the way to codegen.
Add std.Target.Cpu.Model.generic which is even more empty than baseline.
CPU model and feature detection uses this rather than baseline.
Rename cpu_detected to cpu_detection_unimplemented and flip the logic.
It can be relied on by stage2.zig to decide whether the LLVM workaround
is needed without also checking the CrossTarget.
Move the CPU detection to after the OS detection, and use the detected
OS for the CPU detection. This is relevant because operating systems
sometimes emulate certain CPU features, so knowing the OS and version is
relevant for determining CPU features.
Prepare for #4592 by passing the CPU arch to the detection code, instead
of having it rely on Target.current.
The CPU model & feature detection logic is modified. Before:
* Detect actual features
* Use as hint when detecting CPU model
* Populate dependencies of CPU model features
* Merge that into the actual features set
After:
* Detect actual features
* Use as hint when detecting CPU model
* Add known CPU model features to actual features
* Detect actual features again, overriding known CPU model features
* Populate dependencies
* `std.Target.getStandardDynamicLinkerPath` =>
`std.Target.standardDynamicLinkerPath`
* it now takes a pointer to fixed size array rather than an allocator
* `std.zig.system.NativeTargetInfo.detect` now supports reading
PT_INTERP from /usr/bin/env
Zig now supports a more fine-grained sense of what is native and what is
not. Some examples:
This is now allowed:
-target native
Different OS but native CPU, default Windows C ABI:
-target native-windows
This could be useful for example when running in Wine.
Different CPU but native OS, native C ABI.
-target x86_64-native -mcpu=skylake
Different C ABI but otherwise native target:
-target native-native-musl
-target native-native-gnu
Lots of breaking changes to related std lib APIs.
Calls to getOs() will need to be changed to getOsTag().
Calls to getArch() will need to be changed to getCpuArch().
Usage of Target.Cross and Target.Native need to be updated to use
CrossTarget API.
`std.build.Builder.standardTargetOptions` is changed to accept its
parameters as a struct with default values. It now has the ability to
specify a whitelist of targets allowed, as well as the default target.
Rather than two different ways of collecting the target, it's now always
a string that is validated, and prints helpful diagnostics for invalid
targets. This feature should now be actually useful, and contributions
welcome to further improve the user experience.
`std.build.LibExeObjStep.setTheTarget` is removed.
`std.build.LibExeObjStep.setTarget` is updated to take a CrossTarget
parameter.
`std.build.LibExeObjStep.setTargetGLibC` is removed. glibc versions are
handled in the CrossTarget API and can be specified with the `-target`
triple.
`std.builtin.Version` gains a `format` method.
* re-introduce `std.build.Target` which is distinct from `std.Target`.
`std.build.Target` wraps `std.Target` so that it can be annotated as
"the native target" or an explicitly specified target.
* `std.Target.Os` is moved to `std.Target.Os.Tag`. The former is now a
struct which has the tag as well as version range information.
* `std.elf` gains some more ELF header constants.
* `std.Target.parse` gains the ability to parse operating system
version ranges as well as glibc version.
* Added `std.Target.isGnuLibC()`.
* self-hosted dynamic linker detection and glibc version detection.
This also adds the improved logic using `/usr/bin/env` rather than
invoking the system C compiler to find the dynamic linker when zig
is statically linked. Related: #2084
Note: this `/usr/bin/env` code is work-in-progress.
* `-target-glibc` CLI option is removed in favor of the new `-target`
syntax. Example: `-target x86_64-linux-gnu.2.27`
closes#1907
See e381a42de9c0f0c5439a926b0ac99026a0373f49 for more details.
This is set up so that if we wish to make "baseline" depend on the
OS in the future, it is possible to do that.
I think this is working correctly. Without also removing sse2 from the
feature set, sse gets added back into the set because sse2 is part of
the x86_64 baseline (which is the cpu provided) and sse2 depends on sse.