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rust189: add a package for rust 1.89.0.
Pkgsrc changes: * Adjust patches to adapt to upstream changes and new versions. * assosicated checksums Upstream changes relative to 1.88.0: Version 1.89.0 (2025-08-07) ========================== Language -------- - [Stabilize explicitly inferred const arguments (`feature(generic_arg_infer)`)] (rust-lang/rust#141610) - [Add a warn-by-default `mismatched_lifetime_syntaxes` lint.] (rust-lang/rust#138677) This lint detects when the same lifetime is referred to by different syntax categories between function arguments and return values, which can be confusing to read, especially in unsafe code. This lint supersedes the warn-by-default `elided_named_lifetimes` lint. - [Expand `unpredictable_function_pointer_comparisons` to also lint on function pointer comparisons in external macros] (rust-lang/rust#134536) - [Make the `dangerous_implicit_autorefs` lint deny-by-default] (rust-lang/rust#141661) - [Stabilize the avx512 target features] (rust-lang/rust#138940) - [Stabilize `kl` and `widekl` target features for x86] (rust-lang/rust#140766) - [Stabilize `sha512`, `sm3` and `sm4` target features for x86] (rust-lang/rust#140767) - [Stabilize LoongArch target features `f`, `d`, `frecipe`, `lasx`, `lbt`, `lsx`, and `lvz`] (rust-lang/rust#135015) - [Remove `i128` and `u128` from `improper_ctypes_definitions`] (rust-lang/rust#137306) - [Stabilize `repr128` (`#[repr(u128)]`, `#[repr(i128)]`)] (rust-lang/rust#138285) - [Allow `#![doc(test(attr(..)))]` everywhere] (rust-lang/rust#140560) - [Extend temporary lifetime extension to also go through tuple struct and tuple variant constructors] (rust-lang/rust#140593) Compiler -------- - [Default to non-leaf frame pointers on aarch64-linux] (rust-lang/rust#140832) - [Enable non-leaf frame pointers for Arm64EC Windows] (rust-lang/rust#140862) - [Set Apple frame pointers by architecture] (rust-lang/rust#141797) Platform Support ---------------- - [Add new Tier-3 targets `loongarch32-unknown-none` and `loongarch32-unknown-none-softfloat`] (rust-lang/rust#142053) Refer to Rust's [platform support page][platform-support-doc] for more information on Rust's tiered platform support. [platform-support-doc]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/platform-support.html Libraries --------- - [Specify the base path for `file!`] (rust-lang/rust#134442) - [Allow storing `format_args!()` in a variable] (rust-lang/rust#140748) - [Add `#[must_use]` to `[T; N]::map`] (rust-lang/rust#140957) - [Implement `DerefMut` for `Lazy{Cell,Lock}`] (rust-lang/rust#129334) - [Implement `Default` for `array::IntoIter`] (rust-lang/rust#141574) - [Implement `Clone` for `slice::ChunkBy`] (rust-lang/rust#138016) - [Implement `io::Seek` for `io::Take`] (rust-lang/rust#138023) Stabilized APIs --------------- - [`NonZero<char>`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/num/struct.NonZero.html) - Many intrinsics for x86, not enumerated here - [AVX512 intrinsics](rust-lang/rust#111137) - [`SHA512`, `SM3` and `SM4` intrinsics] (rust-lang/rust#126624) - [`File::lock`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/fs/struct.File.html#method.lock) - [`File::lock_shared`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/fs/struct.File.html#method.lock_shared) - [`File::try_lock`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/fs/struct.File.html#method.try_lock) - [`File::try_lock_shared`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/fs/struct.File.html#method.try_lock_shared) - [`File::unlock`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/fs/struct.File.html#method.unlock) - [`NonNull::from_ref`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.from_ref) - [`NonNull::from_mut`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.from_mut) - [`NonNull::without_provenance`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.without_provenance) - [`NonNull::with_exposed_provenance`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.with_exposed_provenance) - [`NonNull::expose_provenance`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ptr/struct.NonNull.html#method.expose_provenance) - [`OsString::leak`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ffi/struct.OsString.html#method.leak) - [`PathBuf::leak`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/path/struct.PathBuf.html#method.leak) - [`Result::flatten`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/result/enum.Result.html#method.flatten) - [`std::os::linux::net::TcpStreamExt::quickack`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/os/linux/net/trait.TcpStreamExt.html#tymethod.quickack) - [`std::os::linux::net::TcpStreamExt::set_quickack`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/os/linux/net/trait.TcpStreamExt.html#tymethod.set_quickack) These previously stable APIs are now stable in const contexts: - [`<[T; N]>::as_mut_slice`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.array.html#method.as_mut_slice) - [`<[u8]>::eq_ignore_ascii_case`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.slice.html#impl-%5Bu8%5D/method.eq_ignore_ascii_case) - [`str::eq_ignore_ascii_case`] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/primitive.str.html#impl-str/method.eq_ignore_ascii_case) Cargo ----- - [`cargo fix` and `cargo clippy --fix` now default to the same Cargo target selection as other build commands.] (rust-lang/cargo#15192) Previously it would apply to all targets (like binaries, examples, tests, etc.). The `--edition` flag still applies to all targets. - [Stabilize doctest-xcompile.] (rust-lang/cargo#15462) Doctests are now tested when cross-compiling. Just like other tests, it will use the [`runner` setting] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/config.html#targettriplerunner) to run the tests. If you need to disable tests for a target, you can use the [ignore doctest attribute] (https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustdoc/write-documentation/documentation-tests.html#ignoring-targets) to specify the targets to ignore. Rustdoc ----- - [On mobile, make the sidebar full width and linewrap] (rust-lang/rust#139831). This makes long section and item names much easier to deal with on mobile. Compatibility Notes ------------------- - [Make `missing_fragment_specifier` an unconditional error] (rust-lang/rust#128425) - [Enabling the `neon` target feature on `aarch64-unknown-none-softfloat` causes a warning] (rust-lang/rust#135160) because mixing code with and without that target feature is not properly supported by LLVM - [Sized Hierarchy: Part I](rust-lang/rust#137944) - Introduces a small breaking change affecting `?Sized` bounds on impls on recursive types which contain associated type projections. It is not expected to affect any existing published crates. Can be fixed by refactoring the involved types or opting into the `sized_hierarchy` unstable feature. See the [FCP report] (rust-lang/rust#137944 (comment)) for a code example. - The warn-by-default `elided_named_lifetimes` lint is [superseded by the warn-by-default `mismatched_lifetime_syntaxes` lint.] (rust-lang/rust#138677) - [Error on recursive opaque types earlier in the type checker] (rust-lang/rust#139419) - [Type inference side effects from requiring element types of array repeat expressions are `Copy` are now only available at the end of type checking] (rust-lang/rust#139635) - [The deprecated accidentally-stable `std::intrinsics::{copy,copy_nonoverlapping,write_bytes}` are now proper intrinsics] (rust-lang/rust#139916). There are no debug assertions guarding against UB, and they cannot be coerced to function pointers. - [Remove long-deprecated `std::intrinsics::drop_in_place`] (rust-lang/rust#140151) - [Make well-formedness predicates no longer coinductive] (rust-lang/rust#140208) - [Remove hack when checking impl method compatibility] (rust-lang/rust#140557) - [Remove unnecessary type inference due to built-in trait object impls] (rust-lang/rust#141352) - [Lint against "stdcall", "fastcall", and "cdecl" on non-x86-32 targets] (rust-lang/rust#141435) - [Future incompatibility warnings relating to the never type (`!`) are now reported in dependencies] (rust-lang/rust#141937) - [Ensure `std::ptr::copy_*` intrinsics also perform the static self-init checks] (rust-lang/rust#142575) Internal Changes ---------------- These changes do not affect any public interfaces of Rust, but they represent significant improvements to the performance or internals of rustc and related tools. - [Correctly un-remap compiler sources paths with the `rustc-dev` component] (rust-lang/rust#142377)
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rust189/DESCR

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Rust is a systems programming language focused on three goals: safety,
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speed, and concurrency. It maintains these goals without having a
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garbage collector, making it a useful language for a number of use cases
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other languages aren't good at: embedding in other languages, programs
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with specific space and time requirements, and writing low-level code,
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like device drivers and operating systems.
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It improves on current languages targeting this space by having a number
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of compile-time safety checks that produce no runtime overhead, while
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eliminating all data races. Rust also aims to achieve "zero-cost
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abstractions" even though some of these abstractions feel like those of
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a high-level language. Even then, Rust still allows precise control
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like a low-level language would.

rust189/HOWTO-BOOTSTRAP

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How to build a rust bootstrap kit using pkgsrc
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----------------------------------------------
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A rust bootstrap kit is simply a pre-compiled binary of rust and
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the rust standard library, and contains the "rust" and "rust-std"
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build results, found in
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work/rustc-<version>/build/dist/
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as
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rust-<version>-<target>.tar.xz
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and
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rust-std-<version>-<target>.tar.xz
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These result files are produced when the "dist" build target is
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used, ref. BUILD_TARGET. For a normal native build of the rust
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pkgsrc package, the default BUILD_TARGET is "build", not "dist".
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There are two possible ways to produce a bootstrap kit:
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1) a native build. This requires minimum preparation, except
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possibly for setting rust.BUILD_TARGET to "dist" via e.g.
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/etc/mk.conf. Note that on NetBSD, using the "BUILD_TARGET" ==
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"dist" results in the "rust-cargo-static" option being set, ref.
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options.mk. This is so that the resulting bootstrap kits are
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built with mostly-static linking, reducing the run-time dependencies
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of the bootstrap kits.
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2) a cross-build. This requires a bit of preparation:
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For each target you want to cross-build rust for, you need
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- the cross toolchain resulting from "build.sh tools" for
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the intended target
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- an OS distribution extracted, including the comp.tgz
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set so that the target's include files can be used
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- for 32-bit ports, the "libatomic" package needs to be
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available. I'm sure there's a clever and long-winded
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use of pkg_install which can be used to effect this;
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I on my hand have always just extracted the tgz file
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and done the minimal cleanup of the "cruft" files
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which are part of the package meta-data.
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- Pick a root directory for the target, e.g. /u/i386.
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Below this directory place the "tools" containing
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the cross-compiler in a "tools" sub-directory.
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Similarly, the extracted OS distribution in the "dest"
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sub-directory.
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There are two methods available for doing the cross-compile:
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a) Using the "cross.mk" file. For an i386 build against i586, the
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following settings should be active:
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CROSS_ROOT= /u/i386
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MAKE_ENV+= CROSS_ROOT=${CROSS_ROOT}
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GNU_CROSS_TARGET= i486--netbsdelf
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MAKE_ENV+= GNU_CROSS_TARGET=${GNU_CROSS_TARGET}
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TARGET= i586-unknown-netbsd
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SCRIPTS= ${WRKDIR}/scripts
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CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --host=${TARGET}
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CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --target=${TARGET}
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CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --set=target.${TARGET}.cc=${SCRIPTS}/gcc-wrap
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CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --set=target.${TARGET}.cxx=${SCRIPTS}/c++-wrap
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CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --set=target.${TARGET}.linker=${SCRIPTS}/gcc-wrap
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CONFIGURE_ARGS+= --set=target.${TARGET}.ar=${CROSS_ROOT}/tools/bin/${GNU_CROSS_TARGET}-ar
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Then doing a "make" will cross-build rust, including the LLVM
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embedded in the rust distribution, ref. the defaulting of that
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option when TARGET is defined ref. options.mk.
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Note that when TARGET is set, the default build target for
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the rust makefile becomes "dist", so there's no need to set
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rust.BUILD_TARGET for cross-builds.
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b) Using the "do-cross.mk" Makefile. This will attempt to
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cross-build rust for all the targets listed in the SHORT_TARGETS
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variable in that file. Overriding the root directories for
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the various targets can be done by making your own "local-roots.mk"
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file, ref. "do-cross.mk".
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This will create a "dist" subdirectory in the rust pkgsrc
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directory, and the bootstrap kits for each architecture, plus
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the library source kit will be placed in this directory.
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The bootstrap kits can then be placed in /usr/pkgsrc/distfiles, and
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be used by the "next" rust version, where you can use "make makesum"
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to compute the updated checksums for the bootstrap kits.

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