rustc_codegen_gcc: Progress Report #31

What is rustc_codegen_gcc?

rustc_codegen_gcc is a GCC ahead-of-time codegen for rustc, meaning that it can be loaded by the existing rustc frontend, but benefits from GCC by having more architectures supported and having access to GCC’s optimizations. It is not to be confused with gccrs, which is a GCC frontend for Rust.

GCC patches status

This month, we addressed the reviews of all the patches that were sent. We’re waiting for other rounds of review and approvals before we merge the patches. Hopefully, we’ll have most of the patches merged for the release of GCC 14.

State of rustc_codegen_gcc

Here’s what has been done during the past month:

This month, we continued our work towards having rustup distribution: we now use the default rust mangling scheme and we now build libgccjit in the Rust CI so that we run the tests will all the latest features of rustc_codegen_gcc in the Rust CI. We also transferred the ownership of my GCC fork and the gccjit.rs crate to rust-lang in order to have all the dependencies of the GCC codegen owned by this organization. We also saw the start of the implementation of debug info, thanks to tempdragon.

Next month, we’ll address the review of the GCC patches that were already sent and hopefully merge most of them in time for the release of gcc 14. We’ll also continue towards our goal of distributing this project through rustup, which should hopefully happens in a couple of months.

Here’s a rough summary of what has been implemented:

Feature Last month completion Completion Delta

Unwinding.

80%

80%

LTO.

80%

80%

More function and variable attributes.

20%

20%

Target features (to detect what is supported in an architecture, like SIMD).

80%

80%

Debug info.

0%

20%

+20%

Thin LTO.

0%

Rustup distribution.

0%

SIMD for other architectures than x86-64.

0%

Support for new architectures in libraries (libc, object, …) and rustc.

0%

Endianness support for non-native 128-bit integers.

Done

SIMD (x86-64).

Done

Basic and aggregate types.

Done

Operations, local and global variables, constants, functions, basic blocks.

Done

Atomics.

Done

Thread-local storage.

Done

Inline assembly.

Done

Many intrinsics.

Done

Metadata.

Done

Setting optimization level.

Done

Packed structures.

Done

Alignment, symbol visibility, attributes.

Done

128-bit integers.

Done

UI tests progress

Here are the results of running the UI tests in the CI:

Category Last Month This Month Delta

Passed

5577

5647

+70

Failed

68

70

+2

(I removed the LTO tests from the failed row because those tests pass in the CI job where LTO is enabled.)

How to contribute

rustc_codegen_gcc

If you want to help on the project itself, please do the following:

  1. Run the tests locally.

  2. Choose a test that fails.

  3. Investigate why it fails.

  4. Fix the problem.

Even if you can’t fix the problem, your investigation could help, so if you enjoy staring at assembly code, have fun!

Crates and rustc

If you would like to contribute on adding support for Rust on currently unsupported platforms, you can help by adding the support for those platforms in some crates like libc and object and also in the rust compiler itself.

Test this project

Otherwise, you can test this project on new platforms and also compare the assembly with LLVM to see if some optimization is missing.

Good first issue

Finally, another good way to help is to look at good first issues. Those are issues that should be easier to start with.

Thanks for your support!

I wanted to personally thank all the people that sponsor this project: your support is very much appreciated.

A special thanks to the following sponsors:

  • Futurewei

  • saethlin

  • embark-studios

  • Shnatsel

  • Rust Foundation

  • opensrcsec

A big thank you to bjorn3 for his help, contributions and reviews. And a big thank you to lqd and GuillaumeGomez for answering my questions about rustc’s internals. Another big thank you to Commeownist for his contributions.

Also, a big thank you to the rest of my sponsors:

  • kpp

  • 0x7CFE

  • repi

  • oleid

  • acshi

  • joshtriplett

  • djc

  • sdroege

  • pcn

  • alanfalloon

  • davidlattimore

  • colelawrence

  • zmanian

  • alexkirsz

  • berkus

  • belzael

  • yvt

  • Shoeboxam

  • yerke

  • bes

  • srijs

  • kkysen

  • riking

  • Lemmih

  • memoryruins

  • senden9

  • robjtede

  • Jonas Platte

  • Sam Harrington

  • Jonas

  • Eugene Bulkin

  • Joseph Garvin

  • MarcoFalke

  • athre0z

  • Sebastian Zivota

  • Oskar Nehlin

  • Nicolas Barbier

  • Daniel

  • Justin Ossevoort

  • kiyoshigawa

  • Daniel Sheehan

  • Marvin Löbel

  • nacaclanga

  • 0x0177b11f

  • L.apz

  • JockeTF

  • davidcornu

  • stuhood

  • Mauve

  • icewind1991

  • nicholasbishop

  • David Vasak

  • Eric Driggers

  • Olaf Leidinger

  • UtherII

  • simonlindholm

  • lemmih

  • Eddddddd

  • rrbutani

  • Mateusz K

  • thk1

  • 0xdeafbeef

  • teh

  • KirilMihaylov

  • Vladislav Sukhmel

  • CohenArthur

  • ximou

  • Kate Kiesel

and a few others who preferred to stay anonymous.

Former sponsors/patreons:

  • igrr

  • Traverse-Research

  • finfet

  • Alovchin91

  • wezm

  • mexus

  • raymanfx

  • ghost

  • gilescope

  • olanod

  • Denis Zaletaev

  • Chai T. Rex

  • Paul Ellenbogen

  • Dakota Brink

  • Botlabs

  • Cass

  • Oliver Marshall

  • pthariensflame

  • tedbyron

  • sstadick

  • Absolucy

  • rafaelcaricio

  • dandxy89

  • luizirber

  • regiontog

  • vincentdephily

  • zebp

  • Hofer-Julian

  • messense

  • fanquake

  • jam1garner

  • sbstp

  • evanrichter

  • Nehliin

  • nevi-me

  • TimNN

  • steven-joruk

  • seanpianka

  • spike grobstein

  • Jeff Muizelaar

  • robinmoussu

  • Chris Butler

  • sierrafiveseven

  • icewind

  • Thomas Colliers

  • Tommy Thorn

  • Bálint Horváth

  • Matthew Conolly

  • Lapz

  • Myrik Lord

  • T

  • Emily A. Bellows

  • Chris