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mark some target features as 'forbidden' so they cannot be (un)set with -Ctarget-feature #129884

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merged 1 commit into from
Nov 5, 2024

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@RalfJung RalfJung commented Sep 2, 2024

The context for this is #116344: some target features change the way floats are passed between functions. Changing those target features is unsound as code compiled for the same target may now use different ABIs.

So this introduces a new concept of "forbidden" target features (on top of the existing "stable " and "unstable" categories), and makes it a hard error to (un)set such a target feature. For now, the x86 and ARM feature soft-float is on that list. We'll have to make some effort to collect more relevant features, and similar features from other targets, but that can happen after the basic infrastructure for this landed. (These features are being collected in #131799.)

I've made this a warning for now to give people some time to speak up if this would break something.

MCP: rust-lang/compiler-team#780

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Some changes occurred in compiler/rustc_codegen_gcc

cc @antoyo, @GuillaumeGomez

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Some changes occurred in tests/ui/check-cfg

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@@ -328,6 +355,7 @@ const X86_ALLOWED_FEATURES: &[(&str, Stability, ImpliedFeatures)] = &[
("sha512", Unstable(sym::sha512_sm_x86), &["avx2"]),
("sm3", Unstable(sym::sha512_sm_x86), &["avx"]),
("sm4", Unstable(sym::sha512_sm_x86), &["avx2"]),
("soft-float", Forbidden, &[]), // changes float ABI
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ARM targets also have a soft-float target feature. Aarch64 does not, though -- so we can't just add this for all targets, unfortunately.

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Aarch64 has abi: "softfloat":

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That seems like it cannot be changed with -Ctarget-feature, which is good news.

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How does this affect kernel / bare metal builds on x86 where you don't enable any floating point support whatsoever? I know the Linux kernel uses that. I'm not sure what the status for Redox, etc is.

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RalfJung commented Sep 2, 2024

How does this affect kernel / bare metal builds on x86 where you don't enable any floating point support whatsoever? I know the Linux kernel uses that. I'm not sure what the status for Redox, etc is.

We have a x86_64-unknown-none soft-float target for them. I sure hope they don't use some other target and -Ctarget-features=+soft-float.

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bjorn3 commented Sep 2, 2024

We have a x86_64-unknown-none soft-float target for them. I sure hope they don't use some other target and -Ctarget-features=+soft-float.

The kernel currently has a script generating a target spec for x86: https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/blob/rust-next/scripts/generate_rust_target.rs Arm64, riscv and loongarch use builtin bare-metal targets though.

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RalfJung commented Sep 2, 2024

Yeah anyone using custom targets can still set these target features in the target spec. I assume it is generally understood that code using different custom target specs cannot be linked together, so the same concerns do not apply there.

@RalfJung RalfJung changed the title mark some target features as 'forbidden' so they cannot be (un)set mark some target features as 'forbidden' so they cannot be (un)set with -Ctarget-feature Sep 2, 2024
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bjorn3 commented Sep 2, 2024

I assume it is generally understood that code using different custom target specs cannot be linked together

In fact rustc already checks that the content of the target spec file matches for custom target specs ever since #98225.

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beetrees commented Sep 2, 2024

The one exception is that it may be the case that on a target with +soft-float, it is okay to enable x87 as floats will still be returned in regular registers... I haven't checked this, so I am not sure. I would say this seems sufficiently niche that it's okay to reject this for now, and if the need really comes up we'll have to add a special case.

AFAICT, on x86(-64), soft-float completely disables use of floating-point registers and always uses software floating point operations regardless of which other target features are enabled, meaning that it's safe to enable the x87 feature (and other floating-point features) but completely useless (e.g. if you enable the sse feature and try to use an xmm_reg input/output in inline ASM, LLVM will emit rustc-LLVM ERROR: Do not know how to soften this operator's operand!).

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RalfJung commented Sep 2, 2024

AFAICT, on x86(-64), soft-float completely disables use of floating-point registers and always uses software floating point operations regardless of which other target features are enabled, meaning that it's safe to enable the x87 feature (and other floating-point features) but completely useless (e.g. if you enable the sse feature and try to use an xmm_reg input/output in inline ASM, LLVM will emit rustc-LLVM ERROR: Do not know how to soften this operator's operand!).

The problematic case is -x87 on what is usually a hardfloat target -- that will change ABI. So we have to make x87 "forbidden".

We could make it "forbidden to disable but not forbidden to enable", but if you're saying that enabling it is useless anyway then I suggest we go with "forbidden" now. :)

For now, this is just a warning, but should become a hard error in the future
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RalfJung commented Nov 4, 2024

@bors r=workingjubilee

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bors commented Nov 4, 2024

📌 Commit ffad9aa has been approved by workingjubilee

It is now in the queue for this repository.

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. and removed S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. labels Nov 4, 2024
workingjubilee added a commit to workingjubilee/rustc that referenced this pull request Nov 4, 2024
…, r=workingjubilee

mark some target features as 'forbidden' so they cannot be (un)set with -Ctarget-feature

The context for this is rust-lang#116344: some target features change the way floats are passed between functions. Changing those target features is unsound as code compiled for the same target may now use different ABIs.

So this introduces a new concept of "forbidden" target features (on top of the existing "stable " and "unstable" categories), and makes it a hard error to (un)set such a target feature. For now, the x86 and ARM feature `soft-float` is on that list. We'll have to make some effort to collect more relevant features, and similar features from other targets, but that can happen after the basic infrastructure for this landed. (These features are being collected in rust-lang#131799.)

I've made this a warning for now to give people some time to speak up if this would break something.

MCP: rust-lang/compiler-team#780
bors added a commit to rust-lang-ci/rust that referenced this pull request Nov 4, 2024
…kingjubilee

Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - rust-lang#129884 (mark some target features as 'forbidden' so they cannot be (un)set with -Ctarget-feature)
 - rust-lang#132153 (Stabilise `const_char_encode_utf16`.)
 - rust-lang#132473 ([core/fmt] Replace checked slice indexing by unchecked to support panic-free code)
 - rust-lang#132571 (add const_eval_select macro to reduce redundancy)
 - rust-lang#132587 (Revert "Avoid nested replacement ranges" from rust-lang#129346.)
 - rust-lang#132596 ([rustdoc] Fix `--show-coverage` when JSON output format is used)
 - rust-lang#132598 (Clippy: Move some attribute lints to be early pass (post expansion))
 - rust-lang#132601 (Update books)
 - rust-lang#132606 (Improve example of `impl Pattern for &[char]`)
 - rust-lang#132609 (docs: fix grammar in doc comment at unix/process.rs)

r? `@ghost`
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bors added a commit to rust-lang-ci/rust that referenced this pull request Nov 5, 2024
…r=workingjubilee

mark some target features as 'forbidden' so they cannot be (un)set with -Ctarget-feature

The context for this is rust-lang#116344: some target features change the way floats are passed between functions. Changing those target features is unsound as code compiled for the same target may now use different ABIs.

So this introduces a new concept of "forbidden" target features (on top of the existing "stable " and "unstable" categories), and makes it a hard error to (un)set such a target feature. For now, the x86 and ARM feature `soft-float` is on that list. We'll have to make some effort to collect more relevant features, and similar features from other targets, but that can happen after the basic infrastructure for this landed. (These features are being collected in rust-lang#131799.)

I've made this a warning for now to give people some time to speak up if this would break something.

MCP: rust-lang/compiler-team#780
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bors commented Nov 5, 2024

⌛ Testing commit ffad9aa with merge 4990a69...

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A job failed! Check out the build log: (web) (plain)

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bors commented Nov 5, 2024

💔 Test failed - checks-actions

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. and removed S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. labels Nov 5, 2024
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RalfJung commented Nov 5, 2024

The musl job timed out?

@bors retry

@bors bors added S-waiting-on-bors Status: Waiting on bors to run and complete tests. Bors will change the label on completion. and removed S-waiting-on-review Status: Awaiting review from the assignee but also interested parties. labels Nov 5, 2024
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@bors rollup=iffy

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bors commented Nov 5, 2024

⌛ Testing commit ffad9aa with merge e8c698b...

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bors commented Nov 5, 2024

☀️ Test successful - checks-actions
Approved by: workingjubilee
Pushing e8c698b to master...

@bors bors added the merged-by-bors This PR was explicitly merged by bors. label Nov 5, 2024
@bors bors merged commit e8c698b into rust-lang:master Nov 5, 2024
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@rustbot rustbot added this to the 1.84.0 milestone Nov 5, 2024
@RalfJung RalfJung deleted the forbidden-target-features branch November 5, 2024 19:04
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Finished benchmarking commit (e8c698b): comparison URL.

Overall result: ❌ regressions - no action needed

@rustbot label: -perf-regression

Instruction count

This is the most reliable metric that we have; it was used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment. However, even this metric can sometimes exhibit noise.

mean range count
Regressions ❌
(primary)
- - 0
Regressions ❌
(secondary)
1.3% [1.3%, 1.3%] 1
Improvements ✅
(primary)
- - 0
Improvements ✅
(secondary)
- - 0
All ❌✅ (primary) - - 0

Max RSS (memory usage)

Results (primary -0.9%, secondary -1.5%)

This is a less reliable metric that may be of interest but was not used to determine the overall result at the top of this comment.

mean range count
Regressions ❌
(primary)
- - 0
Regressions ❌
(secondary)
- - 0
Improvements ✅
(primary)
-0.9% [-0.9%, -0.9%] 1
Improvements ✅
(secondary)
-1.5% [-2.0%, -1.1%] 6
All ❌✅ (primary) -0.9% [-0.9%, -0.9%] 1

Cycles

This benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric.

Binary size

This benchmark run did not return any relevant results for this metric.

Bootstrap: 780.065s -> 779.96s (-0.01%)
Artifact size: 335.31 MiB -> 335.30 MiB (-0.00%)

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