Due to differences in where the output gets emitted in stage1 and stage2,
we were putting the symlink next to the binary rather than in `zig-cache`
directory when building with stage2.
For some projects, they can't help themselves, -lgcc_s ends up on the
compiler command line even though it does not belong there. In Zig we
know what -lgcc_s does. It's an alternative to compiler-rt. With this
commit we emit a warning telling that it is unnecessary to put such
thing on the command line, and happily ignore it, since we will fulfill
the dependency with compiler-rt.
fixes https://github.com/ziglang/zig/issues/10719
compiler_rt already provides __muloti4 but libc++ is also providing it and when linking libc++ it causes a crash on my windows x86_64 machine.
First step towards #10634.
Treating stub files as C++ allows to use zig c++ as a host
compiler for nvcc.
Treating cu files as C++ allow using zig c++ as a host compiler in
CMake. CMake calls the host compiler with -E on a cu file to identify
the compiler.
Using zig c++ to directly compile CUDA code is untested.
This is only relevant for ELF files.
I also fixed a bug where passing a zig source file to `zig cc` would
incorrectly punt to clang because it thought there were no positional
arguments.
Prior to this change, `__DATA,__bss` and `__DATA,__thread_bss` would
get actually, physically written out to the output file, unnecessarily
filling the output file with 0s.
* Fix incorrect result when the first digit after the decimal point is not 0-9 - eg 0x0.ap0
* Fix compiler panic when the number starts with `0X` with a capital `X` - eg 0X0p0
* Fix compiler panic when the number has a decimal point immediately after `0x` - eg 0x.0p0
Prior to this change, even if the use specified the sysroot on the
compiler line like so
```
zig cc --sysroot=/path/to/sdk
```
it would only be used as a prefix to include paths and not as a prefix
for `zig ld` linker.
This saves on comptime format string parsing, as the compiler caches
comptime calls. The catch here, is that parsePlaceHolder cannot take the
placeholder string as a slice. It must take it as an array by value for
the caching to occure.
There is also some logic in here that ensures that the specifier_arg is
always them same slice when the items they contain are the same. This
makes the compiler stamp out less copies of formatType.
Make `@returnAddress()` return for the BPF target, as the BPF target for
the time being does not support probing for the return address. Stack
traces for the general purpose allocator for the BPF target is also set
to not be captured.
The status quo for the `build.zig` build system is preserved in
the sense that, if the user does not explicitly override
`dylib.setInstallName(...);` in their build script, the default
of `@rpath/libname.dylib` applies. However, should they want to
override the default behaviour, they can either:
1) unset it with
```dylib.setIntallName(null);```
2) set it to an explicit string with
```dylib.setInstallName("somename.dylib");```
When it comes to the command line however, the default is not to
use `@rpath` for the install name when creating a dylib. The user
will now be required to explicitly specify the `@rpath` as part
of the desired install name should they choose so like so:
1) with `build-lib`
```
zig build-lib -dynamic foo.zig -install_name @rpath/libfoo.dylib
```
2) with `cc`
```
zig cc -shared foo.c -o libfoo.dylib -Wl,"-install_name=@rpath/libfoo.dylib"
```