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2025-10-30std.debug.lockStderrWriter: also return ttyconfMatthew Lugg
`std.Io.tty.Config.detect` may be an expensive check (e.g. involving syscalls), and doing it every time we need to print isn't really necessary; under normal usage, we can compute the value once and cache it for the whole program's execution. Since anyone outputting to stderr may reasonably want this information (in fact they are very likely to), it makes sense to cache it and return it from `lockStderrWriter`. Call sites who do not need it will experience no significant overhead, and can just ignore the TTY config with a `const w, _` destructure.
2025-10-29compiler: update for introduction of std.IoAndrew Kelley
only thing remaining is using libc dns resolution when linking libc
2025-10-03Support generating import libraries from mingw .def files without LLVMRyan Liptak
For the supported COFF machine types of X64 (x86_64), I386 (x86), ARMNT (thumb), and ARM64 (aarch64), this new Zig implementation results in byte-for-byte identical .lib files when compared to the previous LLVM-backed implementation.
2025-09-24update aro and translate-c sourcesVeikka Tuominen
2025-09-24compiler: update aro and translate-c to latest; delete clang translate-cAndrew Kelley
2025-08-29std.Io: delete GenericReaderAndrew Kelley
and delete deprecated alias std.io
2025-08-28aro: update to not use GenericWriterAndrew Kelley
2025-08-28more updates to not use GenericWriterAndrew Kelley
2025-08-28compiler: update to not use GenericWriterAndrew Kelley
2025-08-28libc: delete superfluous c and assembly trunc implementationsDavid Senoner
2025-08-28libc: delete superfluous c and assembly ceil implementationDavid Senoner
2025-08-27libc: use zig isnan and derivates for mingwDavid Senoner
2025-08-11std.ArrayList: make unmanaged the defaultAndrew Kelley
2025-08-08compiler: improve error reportingmlugg
The functions `Compilation.create` and `Compilation.update` previously returned inferred error sets, which had built up a lot of crap over time. This meant that certain error conditions -- particularly certain filesystem errors -- were not being reported properly (at best the CLI would just print the error name). This was also a problem in sub-compilations, where at times only the error name -- which might just be something like `LinkFailed` -- would be visible. This commit makes the error handling here more disciplined by introducing concrete error sets to these functions (and a few more as a consequence). These error sets are small: errors in `update` are almost all reported via compile errors, and errors in `create` are reported through a new `Compilation.CreateDiagnostic` type, a tagged union of possible error cases. This allows for better error reporting. Sub-compilations also report errors more correctly in several cases, leading to more informative errors in the case of compiler bugs. Also fixes some race conditions in library building by replacing calls to `setMiscFailure` with calls to `lockAndSetMiscFailure`. Compilation of libraries such as libc happens on the thread pool, so the logic must synchronize its access to shared `Compilation` state.
2025-08-06Revert "Sema: Stop adding Windows implib link inputs for `extern "..."` syntax."Alex Rønne Petersen
This reverts commit b461d07a5464aec86c533434dab0b58edfffb331. After some discussion in the team, we've decided that this is too disruptive, especially because the linker errors are less than helpful. That's a fixable problem, so we might reconsider this in the future, but revert it for now.
2025-07-07std.fmt: breaking API changesAndrew Kelley
added adapter to AnyWriter and GenericWriter to help bridge the gap between old and new API make std.testing.expectFmt work at compile-time std.fmt no longer has a dependency on std.unicode. Formatted printing was never properly unicode-aware. Now it no longer pretends to be. Breakage/deprecations: * std.fs.File.reader -> std.fs.File.deprecatedReader * std.fs.File.writer -> std.fs.File.deprecatedWriter * std.io.GenericReader -> std.io.Reader * std.io.GenericWriter -> std.io.Writer * std.io.AnyReader -> std.io.Reader * std.io.AnyWriter -> std.io.Writer * std.fmt.format -> std.fmt.deprecatedFormat * std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeLower -> std.ascii.hexEscape * std.fmt.fmtSliceEscapeUpper -> std.ascii.hexEscape * std.fmt.fmtSliceHexLower -> {x} * std.fmt.fmtSliceHexUpper -> {X} * std.fmt.fmtIntSizeDec -> {B} * std.fmt.fmtIntSizeBin -> {Bi} * std.fmt.fmtDuration -> {D} * std.fmt.fmtDurationSigned -> {D} * {} -> {f} when there is a format method * format method signature - anytype -> *std.io.Writer - inferred error set -> error{WriteFailed} - options -> (deleted) * std.fmt.Formatted - now takes context type explicitly - no fmt string
2025-07-07std.io: move getStdIn, getStdOut, getStdErr functions to fs.FileAndrew Kelley
preparing to rearrange std.io namespace into an interface how to upgrade: std.io.getStdIn() -> std.fs.File.stdin() std.io.getStdOut() -> std.fs.File.stdout() std.io.getStdErr() -> std.fs.File.stderr()
2025-07-07zig fmtAndrew Kelley
2025-07-06Sema: Stop adding Windows implib link inputs for `extern "..."` syntax.Alex Rønne Petersen
Closes #23971.
2025-07-04delete superfluous assembly libc floor implementationsDavid Senoner
2025-06-19Target: pass and use locals by pointer instead of by valueJacob Young
This struct is larger than 256 bytes and code that copies it consistently shows up in profiles of the compiler.
2025-06-11mingw: Fix def file preprocessing.Alex Rønne Petersen
This needs to actually set the target on the aro.Compilation so that we get the expected target-specific preprocessor macros defined.
2025-06-11mingw: Update MinGW-w64 sources to 38c8142f660b6ba11e7c408f2de1e9f8bfaf839e.Alex Rønne Petersen
2025-06-01libc: replace MinGW's trigonometric functions with compiler_rt'sKoki Ueha
- sinf - cosf - sincos - sincosf - tanf
2025-05-30mingw: Remove libscrnsav(e,w) support.Alex Rønne Petersen
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.
2025-05-21libc: implement common `abs` for various integer sizes (#23893)David
* 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>
2025-05-18compiler: refactor `Zcu.File` and path representationmlugg
This commit makes some big changes to how we track state for Zig source files. In particular, it changes: * How `File` tracks its path on-disk * How AstGen discovers files * How file-level errors are tracked * How `builtin.zig` files and modules are created The original motivation here was to address incremental compilation bugs with the handling of files, such as #22696. To fix this, a few changes are necessary. Just like declarations may become unreferenced on an incremental update, meaning we suppress analysis errors associated with them, it is also possible for all imports of a file to be removed on an incremental update, in which case file-level errors for that file should be suppressed. As such, after AstGen, the compiler must traverse files (starting from analysis roots) and discover the set of "live files" for this update. Additionally, the compiler's previous handling of retryable file errors was not very good; the source location the error was reported as was based only on the first discovered import of that file. This source location also disappeared on future incremental updates. So, as a part of the file traversal above, we also need to figure out the source locations of imports which errors should be reported against. Another observation I made is that the "file exists in multiple modules" error was not implemented in a particularly good way (I get to say that because I wrote it!). It was subject to races, where the order in which different imports of a file were discovered affects both how errors are printed, and which module the file is arbitrarily assigned, with the latter in turn affecting which other files are considered for import. The thing I realised here is that while the AstGen worker pool is running, we cannot know for sure which module(s) a file is in; we could always discover an import later which changes the answer. So, here's how the AstGen workers have changed. We initially ensure that `zcu.import_table` contains the root files for all modules in this Zcu, even if we don't know any imports for them yet. Then, the AstGen workers do not need to be aware of modules. Instead, they simply ignore module imports, and only spin off more workers when they see a by-path import. During AstGen, we can't use module-root-relative paths, since we don't know which modules files are in; but we don't want to unnecessarily use absolute files either, because those are non-portable and can make `error.NameTooLong` more likely. As such, I have introduced a new abstraction, `Compilation.Path`. This type is a way of representing a filesystem path which has a *canonical form*. The path is represented relative to one of a few special directories: the lib directory, the global cache directory, or the local cache directory. As a fallback, we use absolute (or cwd-relative on WASI) paths. This is kind of similar to `std.Build.Cache.Path` with a pre-defined list of possible `std.Build.Cache.Directory`, but has stricter canonicalization rules based on path resolution to make sure deduplicating files works properly. A `Compilation.Path` can be trivially converted to a `std.Build.Cache.Path` from a `Compilation`, but is smaller, has a canonical form, and has a digest which will be consistent across different compiler processes with the same lib and cache directories (important when we serialize incremental compilation state in the future). `Zcu.File` and `Zcu.EmbedFile` both contain a `Compilation.Path`, which is used to access the file on-disk; module-relative sub paths are used quite rarely (`EmbedFile` doesn't even have one now for simplicity). After the AstGen workers all complete, we know that any file which might be imported is definitely in `import_table` and up-to-date. So, we perform a single-threaded graph traversal; similar to what `resolveReferences` plays for `AnalUnit`s, but for files instead. We figure out which files are alive, and which module each file is in. If a file turns out to be in multiple modules, we set a field on `Zcu` to indicate this error. If a file is in a different module to a prior update, we set a flag instructing `updateZirRefs` to invalidate all dependencies on the file. This traversal also discovers "import errors"; these are errors associated with a specific `@import`. With Zig's current design, there is only one possible error here: "import outside of module root". This must be identified during this traversal instead of during AstGen, because it depends on which module the file is in. I tried also representing "module not found" errors in this same way, but it turns out to be much more useful to report those in Sema, because of use cases like optional dependencies where a module import is behind a comptime-known build option. For simplicity, `failed_files` now just maps to `?[]u8`, since the source location is always the whole file. In fact, this allows removing `LazySrcLoc.Offset.entire_file` completely, slightly simplifying some error reporting logic. File-level errors are now directly built in the `std.zig.ErrorBundle.Wip`. If the payload is not `null`, it is the message for a retryable error (i.e. an error loading the source file), and will be reported with a "file imported here" note pointing to the import site discovered during the single-threaded file traversal. The last piece of fallout here is how `Builtin` works. Rather than constructing "builtin" modules when creating `Package.Module`s, they are now constructed on-the-fly by `Zcu`. The map `Zcu.builtin_modules` maps from digests to `*Package.Module`s. These digests are abstract hashes of the `Builtin` value; i.e. all of the options which are placed into "builtin.zig". During the file traversal, we populate `builtin_modules` as needed, so that when we see this imports in Sema, we just grab the relevant entry from this map. This eliminates a bunch of awkward state tracking during construction of the module graph. It's also now clearer exactly what options the builtin module has, since previously it inherited some options arbitrarily from the first-created module with that "builtin" module! The user-visible effects of this commit are: * retryable file errors are now consistently reported against the whole file, with a note pointing to a live import of that file * some theoretical bugs where imports are wrongly considered distinct (when the import path moves out of the cwd and then back in) are fixed * some consistency issues with how file-level errors are reported are fixed; these errors will now always be printed in the same order regardless of how the AstGen pass assigns file indices * incremental updates do not print retryable file errors differently between updates or depending on file structure/contents * incremental updates support files changing modules * incremental updates support files becoming unreferenced Resolves: #22696
2025-05-10compiler: Move vendored library support to `libs` subdirectory.Alex Rønne Petersen