Matthias Krüger 81cc29a425 Rollup merge of #145354 - cache-proc-derive-macros, r=petrochenkov
Cache derive proc macro expansion with incremental query

This is a revival of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129102, originally implemented by @futile. Since it looks like they are not active currently, I'd like to push this work forward.

The first commit is squashed and rebased work from the original PR, with author attribution to futile. The rest of the commits are some additional comments that I created mostly for myself to understand what happens here. I also did some cleanups based on Vadim's review comments on the original PR, plus I refactored the TLS access a bit using `scoped_tls`.

The biggest issue, as usually, are tests... I tried using `#[rustc_clean(..., loaded_from_disk = "derive_macro_expansion")]`, but the problem is that since this query cannot recover the original key from its hash, and thus its fingerprintstyle is `FingerprintStyle::Opaque`, [this](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/2fef0a30ae6b2687dfb286cb544d2a542f7e2335/compiler/rustc_incremental/src/persist/dirty_clean.rs#L388) crashes when I try to use `loaded_from_disk`. Any suggestions from someone who actually understands the query system would be welcome 😅

TODO: document the new unstable flag

On a no-op change re-check of `octocrab 0.49` (which has a ton of `serde` derive proc macro invocations), this saves ~0.6s out of ~6s (so a ~10% win) on my PC.

r? @petrochenkov
2026-01-16 13:57:45 +01:00
2024-06-26 05:56:00 +08:00
2025-03-29 12:39:06 +01:00
2025-08-01 10:17:04 +02:00
2025-09-22 10:15:50 +01:00
2025-02-15 16:48:37 +01:00
2025-12-08 13:48:47 -08:00
2025-11-17 10:58:13 +02:00
2025-12-16 00:31:32 +09:00
2025-09-19 16:48:05 +02:00
2023-12-09 09:46:16 -05:00
2024-12-04 23:03:44 +01:00

This is the main source code repository for Rust. It contains the compiler, standard library, and documentation.

Why Rust?

  • Performance: Fast and memory-efficient, suitable for critical services, embedded devices, and easily integrated with other languages.

  • Reliability: Our rich type system and ownership model ensure memory and thread safety, reducing bugs at compile-time.

  • Productivity: Comprehensive documentation, a compiler committed to providing great diagnostics, and advanced tooling including package manager and build tool (Cargo), auto-formatter (rustfmt), linter (Clippy) and editor support (rust-analyzer).

Quick Start

Read "Installation" from The Book.

Installing from Source

If you really want to install from source (though this is not recommended), see INSTALL.md.

Getting Help

See https://www.rust-lang.org/community for a list of chat platforms and forums.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.

License

Rust is primarily distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0), with portions covered by various BSD-like licenses.

See LICENSE-APACHE, LICENSE-MIT, and COPYRIGHT for details.

Trademark

The Rust Foundation owns and protects the Rust and Cargo trademarks and logos (the "Rust Trademarks").

If you want to use these names or brands, please read the Rust language trademark policy.

Third-party logos may be subject to third-party copyrights and trademarks. See Licenses for details.

S
Description
No description provided
Readme 1.5 GiB
Languages
Rust 96%
Shell 1%
C 0.7%
JavaScript 0.6%
Python 0.4%
Other 1%