rustc 1.53.0+dfsg1+llvm-4ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
rustc (1.53.0+dfsg1+llvm-4ubuntu1) jammy; urgency=medium * Merge 1.53.0+dfsg1-4 from Debian unstable. (LP: #1943842) Remaining changes: - Use the bundled llvm to avoid having to do llvm updates in order to deliver rust updates - update debian/config.toml.in - update debian/control - update debian/copyright - update debian/rules - Build-Depend on libc6-dbg on armhf, to workaround a crash in ld.so during some debuginfo tests - update debian/control - Add a hack to ensure the stage0 compiler is extracted to the correct location - update debian/make_orig-stage0_tarball.sh - Scrub -g from CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS in order to let rustbuild control whether LLVM is compiled with debug symbols - update debian/rules - On i386, only build debuginfo for libstd - update debian/rules - Ignore all test failures on every architecture - update debian/rules - Version the Build-Conflict on gdb-minimal as gdb now Provides it - update debian/control - Adjust the rustc Breaks/Replaces libstd-rust-dev version to fix an upgrade issue - update debian/control - Adjust debian/watch to include +llvm in upstream version. - update debian/watch - Add Build-Depends-Indep: libssl-dev - Revert workaround for upstream bug #74786 - Disable wasm build as build dependencies not currently available in Ubuntu. - Do not build windows cross compiler. - Reduce parallelism on all arches to avoid OOMs during build. - Adjust -march setting on armhf -- Michael Hudson-Doyle <email address hidden> Wed, 27 Oct 2021 20:12:14 +1300
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Michael Hudson-Doyle
- Uploaded to:
- Jammy
- Original maintainer:
- Ubuntu Developers
- Architectures:
- any all
- Section:
- misc
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section |
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Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
rustc_1.53.0+dfsg1+llvm.orig.tar.xz | 80.6 MiB | 1126c387579544bf8b3c239a51ed24f00404ed34373d58658a4fa1b0ae4b90db |
rustc_1.53.0+dfsg1+llvm-4ubuntu1.debian.tar.xz | 93.2 KiB | 4e4330d7f659a097793d4d59f0b6ed0f89d2618603a202ab1d2c3efdb820ea63 |
rustc_1.53.0+dfsg1+llvm-4ubuntu1.dsc | 3.1 KiB | 29bbf9c8e27db77c7371f6ae413f2e515825caa4a88e52679148389eb0c8a0d2 |
Available diffs
Binary packages built by this source
- libstd-rust-1.53: No summary available for libstd-rust-1.53 in ubuntu jammy.
No description available for libstd-rust-1.53 in ubuntu jammy.
- libstd-rust-1.53-dbgsym: No summary available for libstd-rust-1.53-dbgsym in ubuntu jammy.
No description available for libstd-
rust-1. 53-dbgsym in ubuntu jammy.
- libstd-rust-dev: Rust standard libraries - development files
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains development files for the standard Rust libraries,
needed to compile Rust programs. It may also be installed on a system
of another host architecture, for cross-compiling to this architecture.
- rust-all: Rust systems programming language - all developer tools
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package is an empty metapackage that depends on all developer tools
in the standard rustc distribution that have been packaged for Debian.
- rust-clippy: Rust linter
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains 'clippy', a linter to catch common mistakes and improve
your Rust code as well a collection of over 400 compatible lints.
.
Lints are divided into categories, each with a default lint level. You can
choose how much Clippy is supposed to annoy help you by changing the lint
level by category.
.
Clippy is integrated into the 'cargo' build tool, available via 'cargo clippy'.
- rust-clippy-dbgsym: debug symbols for rust-clippy
- rust-doc: Rust systems programming language - Documentation
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains the Rust tutorial, language reference and
standard library documentation.
- rust-gdb: Rust debugger (gdb)
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains pretty printers and a wrapper script for
invoking gdb on rust binaries.
- rust-lldb: Rust debugger (lldb)
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains pretty printers and a wrapper script for
invoking lldb on rust binaries.
- rust-src: Rust systems programming language - source code
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains sources of the Rust compiler and standard
libraries, useful for IDEs and code analysis tools such as Racer.
- rustc: Rust systems programming language
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
- rustc-dbgsym: debug symbols for rustc
- rustfmt: Rust formatting helper
Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language. It
visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly
in syntactic and semantic details. Its design is oriented toward
concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating and
maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that
preserve large-system integrity, availability and concurrency.
.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor,
object-oriented and pure functional styles. Rust also supports
generic programming and meta-programming, in both static and dynamic
styles.
.
This package contains 'rustfmt', a tool for formatting Rust code according to
style guidelines, as well as 'cargo-fmt', a helper enabling running rustfmt
directly with 'cargo fmt'.
- rustfmt-dbgsym: debug symbols for rustfmt