bevy/.cargo/config_fast_builds.toml
Christian Robles 35fb54fa49
Use lld for rustdoc on Linux in config_fast_builds.toml (#14839)
# Objective

Running `cargo ci` on Fedora 40 causes a system crash due to many `ld`
processes consuming all available memory when performing doc tests.

## Solution

This PR extends #13553.

- Add reference to #12207 in the CI sections of `CONTRIBUTING.md` and
`config_fast_builds.toml`.
- Add sample `rustdocflags` configurations for `lld` and `mold` to
`config_fast_builds.toml` for Linux.

## Testing

Crashing configuration

- config.toml
  ```
  [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]
  linker = "clang"
  rustflags = ["-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=lld"]
  
  [alias]
  ci = "run --package ci --"
  ```
- Test command
  `cargo ci`

Working configuration

- config.toml
  ```
  [target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]
  linker = "clang"
  rustflags = ["-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=lld"]
  rustdocflags = ["-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=lld"]
  
  [alias]
  ci = "run --package ci --"
  ```
- Test command
  `cargo ci`
2024-08-22 23:08:04 +00:00

161 lines
5.5 KiB
TOML

# Copy this file to `config.toml` to speed up your builds.
#
# # Faster linker
#
# One of the slowest aspects of compiling large Rust programs is the linking time. This file configures an
# alternate linker that may improve build times. When choosing a new linker, you have two options:
#
# ## LLD
#
# LLD is a linker from the LLVM project that supports Linux, Windows, macOS, and Wasm. It has the greatest
# platform support and the easiest installation process. It is enabled by default in this file for Linux
# and Windows. On macOS, the default linker yields higher performance than LLD and is used instead.
#
# To install, please scroll to the corresponding table for your target (eg. `[target.x86_64-pc-windows-msvc]`
# for Windows) and follow the steps under `LLD linker`.
#
# For more information, please see LLD's website at <https://lld.llvm.org>.
#
# ## Mold
#
# Mold is a newer linker written by one of the authors of LLD. It boasts even greater performance, specifically
# through its high parallelism, though it only supports Linux.
#
# Mold is disabled by default in this file. If you wish to enable it, follow the installation instructions for
# your corresponding target, disable LLD by commenting out its `-Clink-arg=...` line, and enable Mold by
# *uncommenting* its `-Clink-arg=...` line.
#
# There is a fork of Mold named Sold that supports macOS, but it is unmaintained and is about the same speed as
# the default ld64 linker. For this reason, it is not included in this file.
#
# For more information, please see Mold's repository at <https://github.com/rui314/mold>.
#
# # Nightly configuration
#
# Be warned that the following features require nightly Rust, which is expiremental and may contain bugs. If you
# are having issues, skip this section and use stable Rust instead.
#
# There are a few unstable features that can improve performance. To use them, first install nightly Rust
# through Rustup:
#
# ```
# rustup toolchain install nightly
# ```
#
# Finally, uncomment the lines under the `Nightly` heading for your corresponding target table (eg.
# `[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]` for Linux) to enable the following features:
#
# ## `share-generics`
#
# Usually rustc builds each crate separately, then combines them all together at the end. `share-generics` forces
# crates to share monomorphized generic code, so they do not duplicate work.
#
# In other words, instead of crate 1 generating `Foo<String>` and crate 2 generating `Foo<String>` separately,
# only one crate generates `Foo<String>` and the other adds on to the pre-exiting work.
#
# Note that you may have some issues with this flag on Windows. If compiling fails due to the 65k symbol limit,
# you may have to disable this setting. For more information and possible solutions to this error, see
# <https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/1110>.
#
# ## `threads`
#
# This option enables rustc's parallel frontend, which improves performance when parsing, type checking, borrow
# checking, and more. We currently set `threads=0`, which defaults to the amount of cores in your CPU.
#
# For more information, see the blog post at <https://blog.rust-lang.org/2023/11/09/parallel-rustc.html>.
[target.x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu]
linker = "clang"
rustflags = [
# LLD linker
#
# You may need to install it:
#
# - Ubuntu: `sudo apt-get install lld clang`
# - Fedora: `sudo dnf install lld clang`
# - Arch: `sudo pacman -S lld clang`
"-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=lld",
# Mold linker
#
# You may need to install it:
#
# - Ubuntu: `sudo apt-get install mold clang`
# - Fedora: `sudo dnf install mold clang`
# - Arch: `sudo pacman -S mold clang`
# "-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=mold",
# Nightly
# "-Zshare-generics=y",
# "-Zthreads=0",
]
# Some systems may experience linker performance issues when running doc tests.
# See https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/12207 for details.
rustdocflags = [
# LLD linker
"-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=lld",
# Mold linker
# "-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=mold",
]
[target.x86_64-apple-darwin]
rustflags = [
# LLD linker
#
# The default ld64 linker is faster, you should continue using it instead.
#
# You may need to install it:
#
# Brew: `brew install llvm`
# Manually: <https://lld.llvm.org/MachO/index.html>
# "-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=/usr/local/opt/llvm/bin/ld64.lld",
# Nightly
# "-Zshare-generics=y",
# "-Zthreads=0",
]
[target.aarch64-apple-darwin]
rustflags = [
# LLD linker
#
# The default ld64 linker is faster, you should continue using it instead.
#
# You may need to install it:
#
# Brew: `brew install llvm`
# Manually: <https://lld.llvm.org/MachO/index.html>
# "-Clink-arg=-fuse-ld=/opt/homebrew/opt/llvm/bin/ld64.lld",
# Nightly
# "-Zshare-generics=y",
# "-Zthreads=0",
]
[target.x86_64-pc-windows-msvc]
# LLD linker
#
# You may need to install it:
#
# ```
# cargo install -f cargo-binutils
# rustup component add llvm-tools
# ```
linker = "rust-lld.exe"
rustdocflags = ["-Clinker=rust-lld.exe"]
rustflags = [
# Nightly
# "-Zshare-generics=n", # This needs to be off if you use dynamic linking on Windows.
# "-Zthreads=0",
]
# Optional: Uncommenting the following improves compile times, but reduces the amount of debug info to 'line number tables only'
# In most cases the gains are negligible, but if you are on macOS and have slow compile times you should see significant gains.
# [profile.dev]
# debug = 1
# This enables you to run the CI tool using `cargo ci`.
# This is not enabled by default, you need to copy this file to `config.toml`.
[alias]
ci = "run --package ci --"