|
1 | | -An informal guide to reading and working on the rustc compiler. |
2 | | -================================================================== |
| 1 | +For more information about how rustc works, see the [rustc guide]. |
3 | 2 |
|
4 | | -If you wish to expand on this document, or have a more experienced |
5 | | -Rust contributor add anything else to it, please get in touch: |
6 | | - |
7 | | -* https://internals.rust-lang.org/ |
8 | | -* https://chat.mibbit.com/?server=irc.mozilla.org&channel=%23rust |
9 | | - |
10 | | -or file a bug: |
11 | | - |
12 | | -https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues |
13 | | - |
14 | | -Your concerns are probably the same as someone else's. |
15 | | - |
16 | | -You may also be interested in the |
17 | | -[Rust Forge](https://forge.rust-lang.org/), which includes a number of |
18 | | -interesting bits of information. |
19 | | - |
20 | | -Finally, at the end of this file is a GLOSSARY defining a number of |
21 | | -common (and not necessarily obvious!) names that are used in the Rust |
22 | | -compiler code. If you see some funky name and you'd like to know what |
23 | | -it stands for, check there! |
24 | | - |
25 | | -The crates of rustc |
26 | | -=================== |
27 | | - |
28 | | -Rustc consists of a number of crates, including `syntax`, |
29 | | -`rustc`, `rustc_back`, `rustc_trans`, `rustc_driver`, and |
30 | | -many more. The source for each crate can be found in a directory |
31 | | -like `src/libXXX`, where `XXX` is the crate name. |
32 | | - |
33 | | -(NB. The names and divisions of these crates are not set in |
34 | | -stone and may change over time -- for the time being, we tend towards |
35 | | -a finer-grained division to help with compilation time, though as |
36 | | -incremental improves that may change.) |
37 | | - |
38 | | -The dependency structure of these crates is roughly a diamond: |
39 | | - |
40 | | -``` |
41 | | - rustc_driver |
42 | | - / | \ |
43 | | - / | \ |
44 | | - / | \ |
45 | | - / v \ |
46 | | -rustc_trans rustc_borrowck ... rustc_metadata |
47 | | - \ | / |
48 | | - \ | / |
49 | | - \ | / |
50 | | - \ v / |
51 | | - rustc |
52 | | - | |
53 | | - v |
54 | | - syntax |
55 | | - / \ |
56 | | - / \ |
57 | | - syntax_pos syntax_ext |
58 | | -``` |
59 | | - |
60 | | -The `rustc_driver` crate, at the top of this lattice, is effectively |
61 | | -the "main" function for the rust compiler. It doesn't have much "real |
62 | | -code", but instead ties together all of the code defined in the other |
63 | | -crates and defines the overall flow of execution. (As we transition |
64 | | -more and more to the [query model](ty/maps/README.md), however, the |
65 | | -"flow" of compilation is becoming less centrally defined.) |
66 | | - |
67 | | -At the other extreme, the `rustc` crate defines the common and |
68 | | -pervasive data structures that all the rest of the compiler uses |
69 | | -(e.g., how to represent types, traits, and the program itself). It |
70 | | -also contains some amount of the compiler itself, although that is |
71 | | -relatively limited. |
72 | | - |
73 | | -Finally, all the crates in the bulge in the middle define the bulk of |
74 | | -the compiler -- they all depend on `rustc`, so that they can make use |
75 | | -of the various types defined there, and they export public routines |
76 | | -that `rustc_driver` will invoke as needed (more and more, what these |
77 | | -crates export are "query definitions", but those are covered later |
78 | | -on). |
79 | | - |
80 | | -Below `rustc` lie various crates that make up the parser and error |
81 | | -reporting mechanism. For historical reasons, these crates do not have |
82 | | -the `rustc_` prefix, but they are really just as much an internal part |
83 | | -of the compiler and not intended to be stable (though they do wind up |
84 | | -getting used by some crates in the wild; a practice we hope to |
85 | | -gradually phase out). |
86 | | - |
87 | | -Each crate has a `README.md` file that describes, at a high-level, |
88 | | -what it contains, and tries to give some kind of explanation (some |
89 | | -better than others). |
90 | | - |
91 | | -The compiler process |
92 | | -==================== |
93 | | - |
94 | | -The Rust compiler is in a bit of transition right now. It used to be a |
95 | | -purely "pass-based" compiler, where we ran a number of passes over the |
96 | | -entire program, and each did a particular check of transformation. |
97 | | - |
98 | | -We are gradually replacing this pass-based code with an alternative |
99 | | -setup based on on-demand **queries**. In the query-model, we work |
100 | | -backwards, executing a *query* that expresses our ultimate goal (e.g., |
101 | | -"compile this crate"). This query in turn may make other queries |
102 | | -(e.g., "get me a list of all modules in the crate"). Those queries |
103 | | -make other queries that ultimately bottom out in the base operations, |
104 | | -like parsing the input, running the type-checker, and so forth. This |
105 | | -on-demand model permits us to do exciting things like only do the |
106 | | -minimal amount of work needed to type-check a single function. It also |
107 | | -helps with incremental compilation. (For details on defining queries, |
108 | | -check out `src/librustc/ty/maps/README.md`.) |
109 | | - |
110 | | -Regardless of the general setup, the basic operations that the |
111 | | -compiler must perform are the same. The only thing that changes is |
112 | | -whether these operations are invoked front-to-back, or on demand. In |
113 | | -order to compile a Rust crate, these are the general steps that we |
114 | | -take: |
115 | | - |
116 | | -1. **Parsing input** |
117 | | - - this processes the `.rs` files and produces the AST ("abstract syntax tree") |
118 | | - - the AST is defined in `syntax/ast.rs`. It is intended to match the lexical |
119 | | - syntax of the Rust language quite closely. |
120 | | -2. **Name resolution, macro expansion, and configuration** |
121 | | - - once parsing is complete, we process the AST recursively, resolving paths |
122 | | - and expanding macros. This same process also processes `#[cfg]` nodes, and hence |
123 | | - may strip things out of the AST as well. |
124 | | -3. **Lowering to HIR** |
125 | | - - Once name resolution completes, we convert the AST into the HIR, |
126 | | - or "high-level IR". The HIR is defined in `src/librustc/hir/`; that module also includes |
127 | | - the lowering code. |
128 | | - - The HIR is a lightly desugared variant of the AST. It is more processed than the |
129 | | - AST and more suitable for the analyses that follow. It is **not** required to match |
130 | | - the syntax of the Rust language. |
131 | | - - As a simple example, in the **AST**, we preserve the parentheses |
132 | | - that the user wrote, so `((1 + 2) + 3)` and `1 + 2 + 3` parse |
133 | | - into distinct trees, even though they are equivalent. In the |
134 | | - HIR, however, parentheses nodes are removed, and those two |
135 | | - expressions are represented in the same way. |
136 | | -3. **Type-checking and subsequent analyses** |
137 | | - - An important step in processing the HIR is to perform type |
138 | | - checking. This process assigns types to every HIR expression, |
139 | | - for example, and also is responsible for resolving some |
140 | | - "type-dependent" paths, such as field accesses (`x.f` -- we |
141 | | - can't know what field `f` is being accessed until we know the |
142 | | - type of `x`) and associated type references (`T::Item` -- we |
143 | | - can't know what type `Item` is until we know what `T` is). |
144 | | - - Type checking creates "side-tables" (`TypeckTables`) that include |
145 | | - the types of expressions, the way to resolve methods, and so forth. |
146 | | - - After type-checking, we can do other analyses, such as privacy checking. |
147 | | -4. **Lowering to MIR and post-processing** |
148 | | - - Once type-checking is done, we can lower the HIR into MIR ("middle IR"), which |
149 | | - is a **very** desugared version of Rust, well suited to the borrowck but also |
150 | | - certain high-level optimizations. |
151 | | -5. **Translation to LLVM and LLVM optimizations** |
152 | | - - From MIR, we can produce LLVM IR. |
153 | | - - LLVM then runs its various optimizations, which produces a number of `.o` files |
154 | | - (one for each "codegen unit"). |
155 | | -6. **Linking** |
156 | | - - Finally, those `.o` files are linked together. |
157 | | - |
158 | | -Glossary |
159 | | -======== |
160 | | - |
161 | | -The compiler uses a number of...idiosyncratic abbreviations and |
162 | | -things. This glossary attempts to list them and give you a few |
163 | | -pointers for understanding them better. |
164 | | - |
165 | | -- AST -- the **abstract syntax tree** produced by the `syntax` crate; reflects user syntax |
166 | | - very closely. |
167 | | -- codegen unit -- when we produce LLVM IR, we group the Rust code into a number of codegen |
168 | | - units. Each of these units is processed by LLVM independently from one another, |
169 | | - enabling parallelism. They are also the unit of incremental re-use. |
170 | | -- cx -- we tend to use "cx" as an abbrevation for context. See also tcx, infcx, etc. |
171 | | -- `DefId` -- an index identifying a **definition** (see `librustc/hir/def_id.rs`). Uniquely |
172 | | - identifies a `DefPath`. |
173 | | -- HIR -- the **High-level IR**, created by lowering and desugaring the AST. See `librustc/hir`. |
174 | | -- `HirId` -- identifies a particular node in the HIR by combining a |
175 | | - def-id with an "intra-definition offset". |
176 | | -- `'gcx` -- the lifetime of the global arena (see `librustc/ty`). |
177 | | -- generics -- the set of generic type parameters defined on a type or item |
178 | | -- ICE -- internal compiler error. When the compiler crashes. |
179 | | -- ICH -- incremental compilation hash. |
180 | | -- infcx -- the inference context (see `librustc/infer`) |
181 | | -- MIR -- the **Mid-level IR** that is created after type-checking for use by borrowck and trans. |
182 | | - Defined in the `src/librustc/mir/` module, but much of the code that manipulates it is |
183 | | - found in `src/librustc_mir`. |
184 | | -- obligation -- something that must be proven by the trait system; see `librustc/traits`. |
185 | | -- local crate -- the crate currently being compiled. |
186 | | -- node-id or `NodeId` -- an index identifying a particular node in the |
187 | | - AST or HIR; gradually being phased out and replaced with `HirId`. |
188 | | -- query -- perhaps some sub-computation during compilation; see `librustc/maps`. |
189 | | -- provider -- the function that executes a query; see `librustc/maps`. |
190 | | -- sess -- the **compiler session**, which stores global data used throughout compilation |
191 | | -- side tables -- because the AST and HIR are immutable once created, we often carry extra |
192 | | - information about them in the form of hashtables, indexed by the id of a particular node. |
193 | | -- span -- a location in the user's source code, used for error |
194 | | - reporting primarily. These are like a file-name/line-number/column |
195 | | - tuple on steroids: they carry a start/end point, and also track |
196 | | - macro expansions and compiler desugaring. All while being packed |
197 | | - into a few bytes (really, it's an index into a table). See the |
198 | | - `Span` datatype for more. |
199 | | -- substs -- the **substitutions** for a given generic type or item |
200 | | - (e.g., the `i32, u32` in `HashMap<i32, u32>`) |
201 | | -- tcx -- the "typing context", main data structure of the compiler (see `librustc/ty`). |
202 | | -- trans -- the code to **translate** MIR into LLVM IR. |
203 | | -- trait reference -- a trait and values for its type parameters (see `librustc/ty`). |
204 | | -- ty -- the internal representation of a **type** (see `librustc/ty`). |
| 3 | +[rustc guide]: https://rust-lang-nursery.github.io/rustc-guide/ |
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