зеркало из https://github.com/mozilla/gecko-dev.git
439 строки
17 KiB
Python
439 строки
17 KiB
Python
# -*- Mode: python; indent-tabs-mode: nil; tab-width: 40 -*-
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# vim: set filetype=python:
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# This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
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# License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
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# file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
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# Rust is required by `rust_compiler` below. We allow_missing here
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# to propagate failures to the better error message there.
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js_option(env='RUSTC', nargs=1, help='Path to the rust compiler')
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js_option(env='CARGO', nargs=1, help='Path to the Cargo package manager')
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rustc = check_prog('_RUSTC', ['rustc'], what='rustc',
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paths=toolchain_search_path, input='RUSTC',
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allow_missing=True)
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cargo = check_prog('_CARGO', ['cargo'], what='cargo',
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paths=toolchain_search_path, input='CARGO',
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allow_missing=True)
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@template
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def unwrap_rustup(prog, name):
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# rustc and cargo can either be rustup wrappers, or they can be the actual,
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# plain executables. For cargo, on OSX, rustup sets DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH (at
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# least until https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup.rs/pull/1752 is merged
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# and shipped) and that can wreak havoc (see bug 1536486). Similarly, for
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# rustc, rustup silently honors toolchain overrides set by vendored crates
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# (see bug 1547196).
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#
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# In either case, we need to find the plain executables.
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#
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# To achieve that, try to run `PROG +stable`. When the rustup wrapper is in
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# use, it either prints PROG's help and exits with status 0, or prints
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# an error message (error: toolchain 'stable' is not installed) and exits
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# with status 1. In the cargo case, when plain cargo is in use, it exits
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# with a different error message (e.g. "error: no such subcommand:
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# `+stable`"), and exits with status 101.
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#
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# Unfortunately, in the rustc case, when plain rustc is in use,
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# `rustc +stable` will exit with status 1, complaining about a missing
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# "+stable" file. We'll examine the error output to try and distinguish
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# between failing rustup and failing rustc.
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@depends(prog, dependable(name))
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@imports(_from='__builtin__', _import='open')
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@imports('os')
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def unwrap(prog, name):
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def from_rustup_which():
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out = check_cmd_output('rustup', 'which', name,
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executable=prog).rstrip()
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# If for some reason the above failed to return something, keep the
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# PROG we found originally.
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if out:
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log.info('Actually using \'%s\'', out)
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return out
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log.info('No `rustup which` output, using \'%s\'', prog)
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return prog
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(retcode, stdout, stderr) = get_cmd_output(prog, '+stable')
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if name == 'cargo' and retcode != 101:
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prog = from_rustup_which()
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elif name == 'rustc':
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if retcode == 0:
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prog = from_rustup_which()
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elif "+stable" in stderr:
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# PROG looks like plain `rustc`.
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pass
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else:
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# Assume PROG looks like `rustup`. This case is a little weird,
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# insofar as the user doesn't have the "stable" toolchain
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# installed, but go ahead and unwrap anyway: the user might
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# have only certain versions, beta, or nightly installed, and
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# we'll catch invalid versions later.
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prog = from_rustup_which()
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return prog
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return unwrap
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rustc = unwrap_rustup(rustc, 'rustc')
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cargo = unwrap_rustup(cargo, 'cargo')
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set_config('CARGO', cargo)
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set_config('RUSTC', rustc)
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@depends_if(rustc)
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@checking('rustc version', lambda info: info.version)
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def rustc_info(rustc):
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out = check_cmd_output(rustc, '--version', '--verbose').splitlines()
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info = dict((s.strip() for s in line.split(':', 1)) for line in out[1:])
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return namespace(
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version=Version(info.get('release', '0')),
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commit=info.get('commit-hash', 'unknown'),
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host=info['host'],
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llvm_version=Version(info.get('LLVM version', '0')),
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)
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set_config('RUSTC_VERSION', depends(rustc_info)(lambda info: str(info.version)))
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@depends_if(cargo)
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@checking('cargo version', lambda info: info.version)
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@imports('re')
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def cargo_info(cargo):
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out = check_cmd_output(cargo, '--version', '--verbose').splitlines()
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info = dict((s.strip() for s in line.split(':', 1)) for line in out[1:])
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version = info.get('release')
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# Older versions of cargo didn't support --verbose, in which case, they
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# only output a not-really-pleasant-to-parse output. Fortunately, they
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# don't error out, so we can just try some regexp matching on the output
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# we already got.
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if version is None:
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VERSION_FORMAT = r'^cargo (\d\.\d+\.\d+).*'
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m = re.search(VERSION_FORMAT, out[0])
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# Fail fast if cargo changes its output on us.
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if not m:
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die('Could not determine cargo version from output: %s', out)
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version = m.group(1)
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return namespace(
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version=Version(version),
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)
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@depends(rustc_info, cargo_info, build_project)
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@imports(_from='textwrap', _import='dedent')
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def rust_compiler(rustc_info, cargo_info, build_project):
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if not rustc_info:
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die(dedent('''\
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Rust compiler not found.
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To compile rust language sources, you must have 'rustc' in your path.
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See https://www.rust-lang.org/ for more information.
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You can install rust by running './mach bootstrap'
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or by directly running the installer from https://rustup.rs/
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'''))
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if build_project == 'tools/crashreporter':
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rustc_min_version = Version('1.31.0')
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else:
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rustc_min_version = Version('1.37.0')
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cargo_min_version = rustc_min_version
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version = rustc_info.version
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if version < rustc_min_version:
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die(dedent('''\
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Rust compiler {} is too old.
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To compile Rust language sources please install at least
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version {} of the 'rustc' toolchain and make sure it is
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first in your path.
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You can verify this by typing 'rustc --version'.
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If you have the 'rustup' tool installed you can upgrade
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to the latest release by typing 'rustup update'. The
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installer is available from https://rustup.rs/
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'''.format(version, rustc_min_version)))
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if not cargo_info:
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die(dedent('''\
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Cargo package manager not found.
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To compile Rust language sources, you must have 'cargo' in your path.
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See https://www.rust-lang.org/ for more information.
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You can install cargo by running './mach bootstrap'
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or by directly running the installer from https://rustup.rs/
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'''))
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version = cargo_info.version
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if version < cargo_min_version:
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die(dedent('''\
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Cargo package manager {} is too old.
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To compile Rust language sources please install at least
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version {} of 'cargo' and make sure it is first in your path.
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You can verify this by typing 'cargo --version'.
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''').format(version, cargo_min_version))
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return True
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@depends(rustc, when=rust_compiler)
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@imports(_from='__builtin__', _import='ValueError')
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def rust_supported_targets(rustc):
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out = check_cmd_output(rustc, '--print', 'target-list').splitlines()
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data = {}
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for t in out:
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try:
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info = split_triplet(t)
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except ValueError:
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if t.startswith('thumb'):
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cpu, rest = t.split('-', 1)
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retry = '-'.join(('arm', rest))
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elif t.endswith('-windows-msvc'):
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retry = t[:-len('windows-msvc')] + 'mingw32'
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elif t.endswith('-windows-gnu'):
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retry = t[:-len('windows-gnu')] + 'mingw32'
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else:
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continue
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try:
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info = split_triplet(retry)
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except ValueError:
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continue
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key = (info.cpu, info.endianness, info.os)
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data.setdefault(key, []).append(namespace(rust_target=t, target=info))
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return data
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@template
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def rust_triple_alias(host_or_target, host_or_target_c_compiler):
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"""Template defining the alias used for rustc's --target flag.
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`host_or_target` is either `host` or `target` (the @depends functions
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from init.configure).
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"""
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assert host_or_target in {host, target}
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host_or_target_str = {host: 'host', target: 'target'}[host_or_target]
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@depends(rustc, host_or_target, host_or_target_c_compiler,
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rust_supported_targets, arm_target, when=rust_compiler)
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@checking('for rust %s triplet' % host_or_target_str)
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@imports('os')
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@imports(_from='mozbuild.configure.util', _import='LineIO')
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@imports(_from='mozbuild.shellutil', _import='quote')
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@imports(_from='tempfile', _import='mkstemp')
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@imports(_from='textwrap', _import='dedent')
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def rust_target(rustc, host_or_target, compiler_info,
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rust_supported_targets, arm_target):
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# Rust's --target options are similar to, but not exactly the same
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# as, the autoconf-derived targets we use. An example would be that
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# Rust uses distinct target triples for targetting the GNU C++ ABI
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# and the MSVC C++ ABI on Win32, whereas autoconf has a single
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# triple and relies on the user to ensure that everything is
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# compiled for the appropriate ABI. We need to perform appropriate
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# munging to get the correct option to rustc.
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# We correlate the autoconf-derived targets with the list of targets
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# rustc gives us with --print target-list.
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candidates = rust_supported_targets.get(
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(host_or_target.cpu, host_or_target.endianness, host_or_target.os), [])
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def find_candidate(candidates):
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if len(candidates) == 1:
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return candidates[0].rust_target
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elif not candidates:
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return None
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# We have multiple candidates. There are two cases where we can try to
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# narrow further down using extra information from the build system.
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# - For windows targets, correlate with the C compiler type
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if host_or_target.kernel == 'WINNT':
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if compiler_info.type in ('gcc', 'clang'):
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suffix = 'windows-gnu'
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else:
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suffix = 'windows-msvc'
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narrowed = [c for c in candidates if c.rust_target.endswith('-{}'.format(suffix))]
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if len(narrowed) == 1:
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return narrowed[0].rust_target
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elif narrowed:
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candidates = narrowed
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# - For arm targets, correlate with arm_target
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# we could be more thorough with the supported rust targets, but they
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# don't support OSes that are supported to build Gecko anyways.
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# Also, sadly, the only interface to check the rust target cpu features
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# is --print target-spec-json, and it's unstable, so we have to rely on
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# our own knowledge of what each arm target means.
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if host_or_target.cpu == 'arm' and host_or_target.endianness == 'little':
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prefixes = []
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if arm_target.arm_arch >= 7:
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if arm_target.thumb2 and arm_target.fpu == 'neon':
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prefixes.append('thumbv7neon')
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if arm_target.thumb2:
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prefixes.append('thumbv7a')
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prefixes.append('armv7')
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if arm_target.arm_arch >= 6:
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prefixes.append('armv6')
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if host_or_target.os != 'Android':
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# arm-* rust targets are armv6... except arm-linux-androideabi
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prefixes.append('arm')
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if arm_target.arm_arch >= 5:
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prefixes.append('armv5te')
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if host_or_target.os == 'Android':
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# arm-* rust targets are armv6... except arm-linux-androideabi
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prefixes.append('arm')
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if arm_target.arm_arch >= 4:
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prefixes.append('armv4t')
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# rust freebsd targets are the only ones that don't have a 'hf' suffix
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# for hard-float. Technically, that means if the float abi ever is not
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# hard-float, this will pick a wrong target, but since rust only
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# supports hard-float, let's assume that means freebsd only support
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# hard-float.
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if arm_target.float_abi == 'hard' and host_or_target.os != 'FreeBSD':
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suffix = 'hf'
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else:
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suffix = ''
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for p in prefixes:
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for c in candidates:
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if c.rust_target.startswith('{}-'.format(p)) and \
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c.rust_target.endswith(suffix):
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return c.rust_target
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# See if we can narrow down on the exact alias
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narrowed = [c for c in candidates if c.target.alias == host_or_target.alias]
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if len(narrowed) == 1:
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return narrowed[0].rust_target
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elif narrowed:
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candidates = narrowed
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# See if we can narrow down with the raw OS
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narrowed = [c for c in candidates if c.target.raw_os == host_or_target.raw_os]
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if len(narrowed) == 1:
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return narrowed[0].rust_target
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elif narrowed:
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candidates = narrowed
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# See if we can narrow down with the raw OS and raw CPU
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narrowed = [
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c for c in candidates
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if c.target.raw_os == host_or_target.raw_os and
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c.target.raw_cpu == host_or_target.raw_cpu
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]
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if len(narrowed) == 1:
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return narrowed[0].rust_target
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return None
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rustc_target = find_candidate(candidates)
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if rustc_target is None:
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die("Don't know how to translate {} for rustc".format(
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host_or_target.alias))
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# Check to see whether our rustc has a reasonably functional stdlib
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# for our chosen target.
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target_arg = '--target=' + rustc_target
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in_fd, in_path = mkstemp(prefix='conftest', suffix='.rs')
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out_fd, out_path = mkstemp(prefix='conftest', suffix='.rlib')
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os.close(out_fd)
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try:
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source = 'pub extern fn hello() { println!("Hello world"); }'
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log.debug('Creating `%s` with content:', in_path)
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with LineIO(lambda l: log.debug('| %s', l)) as out:
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out.write(source)
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os.write(in_fd, source)
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os.close(in_fd)
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cmd = [
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rustc,
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'--crate-type', 'staticlib',
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target_arg,
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'-o', out_path,
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in_path,
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]
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def failed():
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die(dedent('''\
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Cannot compile for {} with {}
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The target may be unsupported, or you may not have
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a rust std library for that target installed. Try:
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rustup target add {}
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'''.format(host_or_target.alias, rustc, rustc_target)))
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check_cmd_output(*cmd, onerror=failed)
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if not os.path.exists(out_path) or os.path.getsize(out_path) == 0:
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failed()
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finally:
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os.remove(in_path)
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os.remove(out_path)
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# This target is usable.
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return rustc_target
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return rust_target
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rust_target_triple = rust_triple_alias(target, c_compiler)
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rust_host_triple = rust_triple_alias(host, host_c_compiler)
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@depends(host, rust_host_triple, rustc_info.host)
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def validate_rust_host_triple(host, rust_host, rustc_host):
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if rust_host != rustc_host:
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if host.alias == rust_host:
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configure_host = host.alias
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else:
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configure_host = '{}/{}'.format(host.alias, rust_host)
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die("The rust compiler host ({}) is not suitable for the configure host ({})."
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.format(rustc_host, configure_host))
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set_config('RUST_TARGET', rust_target_triple)
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set_config('RUST_HOST_TARGET', rust_host_triple)
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# This is used for putting source info into symbol files.
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set_config('RUSTC_COMMIT', depends(rustc_info)(lambda i: i.commit))
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# Rustdoc is required by Rust tests below.
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js_option(env='RUSTDOC', nargs=1, help='Path to the rustdoc program')
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rustdoc = check_prog('RUSTDOC', ['rustdoc'], paths=toolchain_search_path,
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input='RUSTDOC', allow_missing=True)
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# This option is separate from --enable-tests because Rust tests are particularly
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# expensive in terms of compile time (especially for code in libxul).
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option('--enable-rust-tests',
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help='Enable building and running of Rust tests during `make check`')
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@depends('--enable-rust-tests', rustdoc)
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def rust_tests(enable_rust_tests, rustdoc):
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if enable_rust_tests and not rustdoc:
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die('--enable-rust-tests requires rustdoc')
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return bool(enable_rust_tests)
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set_config('MOZ_RUST_TESTS', rust_tests)
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@depends(target, c_compiler, rustc)
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@imports('os')
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def rustc_natvis_ldflags(target, compiler_info, rustc):
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if target.kernel == 'WINNT' and compiler_info.type == 'clang-cl':
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sysroot = check_cmd_output(rustc, '--print', 'sysroot').strip()
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etc = os.path.join(sysroot, 'lib/rustlib/etc')
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ldflags = []
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for f in os.listdir(etc):
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if f.endswith('.natvis'):
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ldflags.append('-NATVIS:' + normsep(os.path.join(etc, f)))
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return ldflags
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set_config('RUSTC_NATVIS_LDFLAGS', rustc_natvis_ldflags)
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