Auto merge of #111753 - cjgillot:simp-place-conflict, r=compiler-errors

Only consider places with the same local in each_borrow_involving_path.

This avoids having a busy loop that repeatedly checks for equality of locals.
This commit is contained in:
bors 2023-08-01 03:53:19 +00:00
commit 866710c552
4 changed files with 87 additions and 90 deletions

View File

@ -353,7 +353,6 @@ impl<'cx, 'tcx> InvalidationGenerator<'cx, 'tcx> {
let tcx = self.tcx;
let body = self.body;
let borrow_set = self.borrow_set;
let indices = self.borrow_set.indices();
each_borrow_involving_path(
self,
tcx,
@ -361,7 +360,7 @@ impl<'cx, 'tcx> InvalidationGenerator<'cx, 'tcx> {
location,
(sd, place),
borrow_set,
indices,
|_| true,
|this, borrow_index, borrow| {
match (rw, borrow.kind) {
// Obviously an activation is compatible with its own

View File

@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ use rustc_errors::{Diagnostic, DiagnosticBuilder, DiagnosticMessage, Subdiagnost
use rustc_fluent_macro::fluent_messages;
use rustc_hir as hir;
use rustc_hir::def_id::LocalDefId;
use rustc_index::bit_set::ChunkedBitSet;
use rustc_index::bit_set::{BitSet, ChunkedBitSet};
use rustc_index::{IndexSlice, IndexVec};
use rustc_infer::infer::{
InferCtxt, NllRegionVariableOrigin, RegionVariableOrigin, TyCtxtInferExt,
@ -42,7 +42,6 @@ use rustc_session::lint::builtin::UNUSED_MUT;
use rustc_span::{Span, Symbol};
use rustc_target::abi::FieldIdx;
use either::Either;
use smallvec::SmallVec;
use std::cell::RefCell;
use std::collections::BTreeMap;
@ -1035,12 +1034,16 @@ impl<'cx, 'tcx> MirBorrowckCtxt<'cx, 'tcx> {
let borrow_set = self.borrow_set.clone();
// Use polonius output if it has been enabled.
let polonius_output = self.polonius_output.clone();
let borrows_in_scope = if let Some(polonius) = &polonius_output {
let mut polonius_output;
let borrows_in_scope = if let Some(polonius) = &self.polonius_output {
let location = self.location_table.start_index(location);
Either::Left(polonius.errors_at(location).iter().copied())
polonius_output = BitSet::new_empty(borrow_set.len());
for &idx in polonius.errors_at(location) {
polonius_output.insert(idx);
}
&polonius_output
} else {
Either::Right(flow_state.borrows.iter())
&flow_state.borrows
};
each_borrow_involving_path(
@ -1050,7 +1053,7 @@ impl<'cx, 'tcx> MirBorrowckCtxt<'cx, 'tcx> {
location,
(sd, place_span.0),
&borrow_set,
borrows_in_scope,
|borrow_index| borrows_in_scope.contains(borrow_index),
|this, borrow_index, borrow| match (rw, borrow.kind) {
// Obviously an activation is compatible with its own
// reservation (or even prior activating uses of same

View File

@ -33,20 +33,24 @@ pub(super) fn each_borrow_involving_path<'tcx, F, I, S>(
_location: Location,
access_place: (AccessDepth, Place<'tcx>),
borrow_set: &BorrowSet<'tcx>,
candidates: I,
is_candidate: I,
mut op: F,
) where
F: FnMut(&mut S, BorrowIndex, &BorrowData<'tcx>) -> Control,
I: Iterator<Item = BorrowIndex>,
I: Fn(BorrowIndex) -> bool,
{
let (access, place) = access_place;
// FIXME: analogous code in check_loans first maps `place` to
// its base_path.
// The number of candidates can be large, but borrows for different locals cannot conflict with
// each other, so we restrict the working set a priori.
let Some(borrows_for_place_base) = borrow_set.local_map.get(&place.local) else { return };
// check for loan restricting path P being used. Accounts for
// borrows of P, P.a.b, etc.
for i in candidates {
for &i in borrows_for_place_base {
if !is_candidate(i) {
continue;
}
let borrowed = &borrow_set[i];
if places_conflict::borrow_conflicts_with_place(

View File

@ -1,3 +1,55 @@
//! The borrowck rules for proving disjointness are applied from the "root" of the
//! borrow forwards, iterating over "similar" projections in lockstep until
//! we can prove overlap one way or another. Essentially, we treat `Overlap` as
//! a monoid and report a conflict if the product ends up not being `Disjoint`.
//!
//! At each step, if we didn't run out of borrow or place, we know that our elements
//! have the same type, and that they only overlap if they are the identical.
//!
//! For example, if we are comparing these:
//! ```text
//! BORROW: (*x1[2].y).z.a
//! ACCESS: (*x1[i].y).w.b
//! ```
//!
//! Then our steps are:
//! ```text
//! x1 | x1 -- places are the same
//! x1[2] | x1[i] -- equal or disjoint (disjoint if indexes differ)
//! x1[2].y | x1[i].y -- equal or disjoint
//! *x1[2].y | *x1[i].y -- equal or disjoint
//! (*x1[2].y).z | (*x1[i].y).w -- we are disjoint and don't need to check more!
//! ```
//!
//! Because `zip` does potentially bad things to the iterator inside, this loop
//! also handles the case where the access might be a *prefix* of the borrow, e.g.
//!
//! ```text
//! BORROW: (*x1[2].y).z.a
//! ACCESS: x1[i].y
//! ```
//!
//! Then our steps are:
//! ```text
//! x1 | x1 -- places are the same
//! x1[2] | x1[i] -- equal or disjoint (disjoint if indexes differ)
//! x1[2].y | x1[i].y -- equal or disjoint
//! ```
//!
//! -- here we run out of access - the borrow can access a part of it. If this
//! is a full deep access, then we *know* the borrow conflicts with it. However,
//! if the access is shallow, then we can proceed:
//!
//! ```text
//! x1[2].y | (*x1[i].y) -- a deref! the access can't get past this, so we
//! are disjoint
//! ```
//!
//! Our invariant is, that at each step of the iteration:
//! - If we didn't run out of access to match, our borrow and access are comparable
//! and either equal or disjoint.
//! - If we did run out of access, the borrow can access a part of it.
#![deny(rustc::untranslatable_diagnostic)]
#![deny(rustc::diagnostic_outside_of_impl)]
use crate::ArtificialField;
@ -5,7 +57,7 @@ use crate::Overlap;
use crate::{AccessDepth, Deep, Shallow};
use rustc_hir as hir;
use rustc_middle::mir::{
Body, BorrowKind, Local, MutBorrowKind, Place, PlaceElem, PlaceRef, ProjectionElem,
Body, BorrowKind, MutBorrowKind, Place, PlaceElem, PlaceRef, ProjectionElem,
};
use rustc_middle::ty::{self, TyCtxt};
use std::cmp::max;
@ -48,7 +100,7 @@ pub fn places_conflict<'tcx>(
/// access depth. The `bias` parameter is used to determine how the unknowable (comparing runtime
/// array indices, for example) should be interpreted - this depends on what the caller wants in
/// order to make the conservative choice and preserve soundness.
#[instrument(level = "debug", skip(tcx, body))]
#[inline]
pub(super) fn borrow_conflicts_with_place<'tcx>(
tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>,
body: &Body<'tcx>,
@ -58,15 +110,24 @@ pub(super) fn borrow_conflicts_with_place<'tcx>(
access: AccessDepth,
bias: PlaceConflictBias,
) -> bool {
let borrow_local = borrow_place.local;
let access_local = access_place.local;
if borrow_local != access_local {
// We have proven the borrow disjoint - further projections will remain disjoint.
return false;
}
// This Local/Local case is handled by the more general code below, but
// it's so common that it's a speed win to check for it first.
if let Some(l1) = borrow_place.as_local() && let Some(l2) = access_place.as_local() {
return l1 == l2;
if borrow_place.projection.is_empty() && access_place.projection.is_empty() {
return true;
}
place_components_conflict(tcx, body, borrow_place, borrow_kind, access_place, access, bias)
}
#[instrument(level = "debug", skip(tcx, body))]
fn place_components_conflict<'tcx>(
tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>,
body: &Body<'tcx>,
@ -76,65 +137,10 @@ fn place_components_conflict<'tcx>(
access: AccessDepth,
bias: PlaceConflictBias,
) -> bool {
// The borrowck rules for proving disjointness are applied from the "root" of the
// borrow forwards, iterating over "similar" projections in lockstep until
// we can prove overlap one way or another. Essentially, we treat `Overlap` as
// a monoid and report a conflict if the product ends up not being `Disjoint`.
//
// At each step, if we didn't run out of borrow or place, we know that our elements
// have the same type, and that they only overlap if they are the identical.
//
// For example, if we are comparing these:
// BORROW: (*x1[2].y).z.a
// ACCESS: (*x1[i].y).w.b
//
// Then our steps are:
// x1 | x1 -- places are the same
// x1[2] | x1[i] -- equal or disjoint (disjoint if indexes differ)
// x1[2].y | x1[i].y -- equal or disjoint
// *x1[2].y | *x1[i].y -- equal or disjoint
// (*x1[2].y).z | (*x1[i].y).w -- we are disjoint and don't need to check more!
//
// Because `zip` does potentially bad things to the iterator inside, this loop
// also handles the case where the access might be a *prefix* of the borrow, e.g.
//
// BORROW: (*x1[2].y).z.a
// ACCESS: x1[i].y
//
// Then our steps are:
// x1 | x1 -- places are the same
// x1[2] | x1[i] -- equal or disjoint (disjoint if indexes differ)
// x1[2].y | x1[i].y -- equal or disjoint
//
// -- here we run out of access - the borrow can access a part of it. If this
// is a full deep access, then we *know* the borrow conflicts with it. However,
// if the access is shallow, then we can proceed:
//
// x1[2].y | (*x1[i].y) -- a deref! the access can't get past this, so we
// are disjoint
//
// Our invariant is, that at each step of the iteration:
// - If we didn't run out of access to match, our borrow and access are comparable
// and either equal or disjoint.
// - If we did run out of access, the borrow can access a part of it.
let borrow_local = borrow_place.local;
let access_local = access_place.local;
match place_base_conflict(borrow_local, access_local) {
Overlap::Arbitrary => {
bug!("Two base can't return Arbitrary");
}
Overlap::EqualOrDisjoint => {
// This is the recursive case - proceed to the next element.
}
Overlap::Disjoint => {
// We have proven the borrow disjoint - further
// projections will remain disjoint.
debug!("borrow_conflicts_with_place: disjoint");
return false;
}
}
// borrow_conflicts_with_place should have checked that.
assert_eq!(borrow_local, access_local);
// loop invariant: borrow_c is always either equal to access_c or disjoint from it.
for ((borrow_place, borrow_c), &access_c) in
@ -277,21 +283,6 @@ fn place_components_conflict<'tcx>(
}
}
// Given that the bases of `elem1` and `elem2` are always either equal
// or disjoint (and have the same type!), return the overlap situation
// between `elem1` and `elem2`.
fn place_base_conflict(l1: Local, l2: Local) -> Overlap {
if l1 == l2 {
// the same local - base case, equal
debug!("place_element_conflict: DISJOINT-OR-EQ-LOCAL");
Overlap::EqualOrDisjoint
} else {
// different locals - base case, disjoint
debug!("place_element_conflict: DISJOINT-LOCAL");
Overlap::Disjoint
}
}
// Given that the bases of `elem1` and `elem2` are always either equal
// or disjoint (and have the same type!), return the overlap situation
// between `elem1` and `elem2`.