The rustc `-Zhint-mostly-unused` flag tells rustc that most of a crate
will go unused. This is useful for speeding up compilation of large
dependencies from which you only use a few items. Plumb that option
through as a profile option, to allow specifying it for specific
dependencies:
```toml
[profile.dev.package.huge-mostly-unused-dependency]
hint-mostly-unused = true
```
To enable this feature, pass `-Zprofile-hint-mostly-unused`. However,
since this option is a hint, using it without passing
`-Zprofile-hint-mostly-unused` will only warn and ignore the profile
option. Versions of Cargo prior to the introduction of this feature will
give an "unused manifest key" warning, but will otherwise function
without erroring. This allows using the hint in a crate's `Cargo.toml`
without mandating the use of a newer Cargo to build it.
Add a test verifying that the profile option gets ignored with a warning
without passing `-Zprofile-hint-mostly-unused`, and another test
verifying that it gets handled when passing
`-Zprofile-hint-mostly-unused`.
This is for `cargo generate-lockfile` and when syncing the lockfile with
the manifest.
We still show it for `cargo update` because of `cargo update
--workspace`.
We hacked around this previously by filtering out the `num_pkgs==1` case
for single packages but this didn't help with workspaces.
We now include the prelude in so many places, this simplifies how we can
present how `cargo-test-support` works.
Yes, this included some `use` clean ups but its already painful enough
walking through every test file, I didn't want to do it twice.
This reverts commit fa619a9d16ca0d4dc58431808c08b7c1fee72bfa, reversing
changes made to 1f6857dcfbe84ce3e8edd26f861ee8bae0c5da2b.
See also <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115120>
While this is noisy and hides other deprecations, I figured deprecations would
make it easier for people to discover what tasks remain and allow us to
divide and conquer this work rather than doing a heroic PR.
In theory, this will be short lived and we'll go back to seeing
deprecations in our tests.
This is to help with #9930
Example changes:
```diff
-[LOCKING] 4 packages
+[LOCKING] 4 packages to latest version
-[LOCKING] 2 packages
+[LOCKING] 2 packages to latest Rust 1.60.0 compatible versions
-[LOCKING] 2 packages
+[LOCKING] 2 packages to earliest versions
```
Benefits
- The package count is of "added" packages and this makes that more
logically clear
- This gives users transparency into what is happening, especially with
- what rust-version is use
- the transition to this feature in the new edition
- whether the planned config was applied or not (as I don't want it to
require an MSRV bump)
- Will make it easier in tests to show what changed
- Provides more motiviation to show this message in `cargo update` and
`cargo install` (that will be explored in a follow up PR)
This does come at the cost of more verbose output but hopefully not too
verbose. This is why I left off other factors, like avoid-dev-deps.
It was unnecessary to pass `spilt-debuginfo` if there is no debuginfo.
Tests are touched here only for matching rustflags invocation stderr
in the original test suite.
Previously, `Debuginfo::None` meant "don't pass -C debuginfo" and `Explicit(None)` meant
"-C debuginfo=0", which occasionally led to caching bugs where cargo would sometimes pass
`-C debuginfo=0` and sometimes not. There are no such bugs currently that we know of, but
representing them the same within cargo avoids the possibility of the bug popping up again in the
future.
I tested the `with_stderr_does_not_contain_tests` with this diff to ensure they did not pass:
```diff
diff --git a/src/cargo/core/compiler/mod.rs b/src/cargo/core/compiler/mod.rs
index 55ec17182..c186dd00a 100644
--- a/src/cargo/core/compiler/mod.rs
+++ b/src/cargo/core/compiler/mod.rs
@@ -1073,9 +1073,7 @@ fn build_base_args(
let debuginfo = debuginfo.into_inner();
// Shorten the number of arguments if possible.
- if debuginfo != TomlDebugInfo::None {
cmd.arg("-C").arg(format!("debuginfo={}", debuginfo));
- }
cmd.args(unit.pkg.manifest().lint_rustflags());
if !rustflags.is_empty() {
```
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90058/ stabilized `-Z strip` as
`-C strip`. Stabilize the corresponding Cargo option.
Update the documentation to move it from the unstable reference to the
profiles documentation.
Update the tests to account for stabilization, but make them no-ops on
stable/beta for now until rustc 1.58 releases.
This follows the convention of `lto` and `debug` that allow `true` for
the highest level, and `false` for disabled.
Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com>
This commit is targeted at further improving the error messages
generated from git errors. For authentication errors the actual URL
fetched is now printed out as well if it's different from the original
URL. This should help handle `insteadOf` logic where SSH urls are used
instead of HTTPS urls and users can know to track that down.
Otherwise the logic about recommending `net.git-fetch-with-cli` was
tweaked a bit and moved to the same location as the rest of our error
reporting.
Note that a change piggy-backed here as well is that `Caused by:` errors
are now automatically all tabbed over a bit instead of only having the
first line tabbed over. This required a good number of tests to be
updated, but it's just an updated in renderings.
This commit is the Cargo half of support necessary for
rust-lang/rust#70458. Today the compiler emits embedded bytecode in
rlibs by default, but compresses it. This is both extraneous disk space
and wasted build time for almost all builds, so the PR in question there
is changing rustc to have a `-Cembed-bitcode` flag which, when enabled,
places the bitcode in the object file rather than an auxiliary file (no
extra compression), but also enables `-Cembed-bitcode=no` to disable
bitcode emission entirely.
This Cargo support changes Cargo to pass `-Cembed-bitcode=no` for almost
all compilations. Cargo will keep `lto = true` and such working by not
passing this flag (and thus allowing bitcode to get embedded), but by
default `cargo build` and `cargo build --release` will no longer have
any bitcode in rlibs which should result in speedier builds!
Most of the changes here were around the test suite and various
assertions about the `rustc` command lines we spit out. One test was
hard-disabled until we can get `-Cembed-bitcode=no` into nightly, and
then we can make it a nightly-only test. The test will then be stable
again once `-Cembed-bitcode=no` hits stable.
Note that this is intended to land before the upstream `-Cembed-bitcode`
change. The thinking is that we'll land everything in rust-lang/rust all
at once so there's no build time regressions for anyone. If we were to
land the `-Cembed-bitcode` PR first then there would be a build time
regression until we land Cargo changes because rustc would be emitting
uncompressed bitcode by default and Cargo wouldn't be turning it off.