This reverts commit 0c99ba1eab, reversing
changes made to 5f92b070bf.
This caused a CI failure when it landed in master branch due to a
128-bit `@byteSwap` in std.mem.
After fixing some issues with inline assembly in the C backend, the std
cleanups have the side effect of making these functions compatible with
the backend, allowing it to be used on linux without linking libc.
Most of this migration was performed automatically with `zig fmt`. There
were a few exceptions which I had to manually fix:
* `@alignCast` and `@addrSpaceCast` cannot be automatically rewritten
* `@truncate`'s fixup is incorrect for vectors
* Test cases are not formatted, and their error locations change
Opaque and `noreturn` makes sense since they don't represent real
values, but `null` and `undefined` are perfectly normal
comptime-only values.
Closes#16088
Split big test into the two separate things it is testing.
Add missing checks to the test which revealed the test is not actually
passing yet for the C backend.
Commit 052079c994 surfaced two issues with
the generated C code:
- renderInt128() contained a seemingly unnecessary assertion to verify
that the high 64 bits of the number were nonzero, dating back to
9bf1681990. I removed it.
- renderValue() didn't have any special handling for undefined structs,
falling back to printing "{}" which generated invalid expressions
such as "return {}" for functions returning structs, whereas
"return (S){}" is the correct form. I changed it accordingly.
At the same time I'm reenabling the relevant tests.
Adds 2 new AIR instructions:
* dbg_var_ptr
* dbg_var_val
Sema no longer emits dbg_stmt AIR instructions when strip=true.
LLVM backend: fixed lowerPtrToVoid when calling ptrAlignment on
the element type is problematic.
LLVM backend: fixed alloca instructions improperly getting debug
location annotated, causing chaotic debug info behavior.
zig_llvm.cpp: fixed incorrect bindings for a function that should use
unsigned integers for line and column.
A bunch of C test cases regressed because the new dbg_var AIR
instructions caused their operands to be alive, exposing latent bugs.
Mostly it's just a problem that the C backend lowers mutable
and const slices to the same C type, so we need to represent that in the
C backend instead of printing two duplicate typedefs.