Prefer where clauses to impls in trait resolution (not vice versa).

Fixes #18453.
This commit is contained in:
Niko Matsakis 2014-10-31 15:00:03 -04:00
parent 7e662316d1
commit 6bf0dc849f
2 changed files with 68 additions and 7 deletions

View File

@ -1104,18 +1104,29 @@ impl<'cx, 'tcx> SelectionContext<'cx, 'tcx> {
* Returns true if `candidate_i` should be dropped in favor of `candidate_j`.
* This is generally true if either:
* - candidate i and candidate j are equivalent; or,
* - candidate i is a where clause bound and candidate j is a concrete impl,
* - candidate i is a conrete impl and candidate j is a where clause bound,
* and the concrete impl is applicable to the types in the where clause bound.
*
* The last case basically occurs with blanket impls like
* `impl<T> Foo for T`. In that case, a bound like `T:Foo` is
* kind of an "false" ambiguity -- both are applicable to any
* type, but in fact coherence requires that the bound will
* always be resolved to the impl anyway.
* The last case refers to cases where there are blanket impls (often conditional
* blanket impls) as well as a where clause. This can come down to one of two cases:
*
* - The impl is truly unconditional (it has no where clauses
* of its own), in which case the where clause is
* unnecessary, because coherence requires that we would
* pick that particular impl anyhow (at least so long as we
* don't have specialization).
*
* - The impl is conditional, in which case we may not have winnowed it out
* because we don't know if the conditions apply, but the where clause is basically
* telling us taht there is some impl, though not necessarily the one we see.
*
* In both cases we prefer to take the where clause, which is
* essentially harmless. See issue #18453 for more details of
* a case where doing the opposite caused us harm.
*/
match (candidate_i, candidate_j) {
(&ParamCandidate(ref vt), &ImplCandidate(impl_def_id)) => {
(&ImplCandidate(impl_def_id), &ParamCandidate(ref vt)) => {
debug!("Considering whether to drop param {} in favor of impl {}",
candidate_i.repr(self.tcx()),
candidate_j.repr(self.tcx()));

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@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
// Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT
// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at
// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license
// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your
// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
// except according to those terms.
// Test that when there is a conditional (but blanket) impl and a
// where clause, we don't get confused in trait resolution.
//
// Issue #18453.
use std::rc::Rc;
pub trait Foo<M> {
fn foo(&mut self, msg: M);
}
pub trait Bar<M> {
fn dummy(&self) -> M;
}
impl<M, F: Bar<M>> Foo<M> for F {
fn foo(&mut self, msg: M) {
}
}
pub struct Both<M, F> {
inner: Rc<(M, F)>,
}
impl<M, F: Foo<M>> Clone for Both<M, F> {
fn clone(&self) -> Both<M, F> {
Both { inner: self.inner.clone() }
}
}
fn repro1<M, F: Foo<M>>(_both: Both<M, F>) {
}
fn repro2<M, F: Foo<M>>(msg: M, foo: F) {
let both = Both { inner: Rc::new((msg, foo)) };
repro1(both.clone()); // <--- This clone causes problem
}
pub fn main() {
}