Uplift `ClauseKind` and `PredicateKind` into `rustc_type_ir`
Uplift `ClauseKind` and `PredicateKind` into `rustc_type_ir`.
Blocked on #116951
r? `@ghost`
Get rid of `'tcx` lifetime on `ConstVid`, `EffectVid`
These are simply newtyped numbers, so don't really have a reason (per se) to have a lifetime -- `TyVid` and `RegionVid` do not, for example.
The only consequence of this is that we need to use a new key type for `UnifyKey` that mentions `'tcx`. This is already done for `RegionVid`, with `RegionVidKey<'tcx>`, but this `UnifyKey` trait implementation may have been the original reason to give `ConstVid` a lifetime. See the changes to `compiler/rustc_middle/src/infer/unify_key.rs` specifically.
I consider the code cleaner this way, though -- we removed quite a few unnecessary `'tcx` in the process. This also makes it easier to uplift these two ids to `rustc_type_ir`, which I plan on doing in a follow-up PR.
r? `@BoxyUwU`
`OptWithInfcx` naming nits, trait bound simplifications
* Use an associated type `Interner` on `InferCtxtLike` to remove a redundant interner parameter (`I: Interner, Infcx: InferCtxtLike<I>` -> `Infcx: InferCtxtLike`).
* Remove double-`Option` between `infcx: Option<Infcx>` and `fn universe_of_ty(&self, ty: ty::InferTy) -> Option<ty::UniverseIndex>`. We don't need the infcx to be optional if we can provide a "noop" (`NoInfcx`) implementation that just always returns `None` for universe index.
* Also removes the `core::convert::Infallible` implementation which I found a bit weird...
* Some naming nits with params.
* I found `InferCtxt` + `InfCtx` and `Infcx` to be a lot of different ways to spell "inference context", so I got rid of the `InfCtx` type parameter name in favor of `Infcx` which is a more standard name.
* I found `OptWithInfcx` to be a bit redundant -> `WithInfcx`.
I'm making these changes because I intend to reuse the `InferCtxtLike` trait for uplifting the canonicalizer into a new trait -- conveniently, the information I need for uplifting the canonicalizer also is just the universe information of a type var, so it's super convenient 😸
r? `@BoxyUwU` or `@lcnr`
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #107159 (rand use getrandom for freebsd (available since 12.x))
- #116859 (Make `ty::print::Printer` take `&mut self` instead of `self`)
- #117046 (return unfixed len if pat has reported error)
- #117070 (rustdoc: wrap Type with Box instead of Generics)
- #117074 (Remove smir from triage and add me to stablemir)
- #117086 (Update .mailmap to promote my livename)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make `ty::print::Printer` take `&mut self` instead of `self`
based on #116815
This simplifies the code by removing all the `self` assignments and
makes the flow of data clearer - always into the printer.
Especially in v0 mangling, which already used `&mut self` in some
places, it gets a lot more uniform.
report `unused_import` for empty reexports even it is pub
Fixes#116032
An easy fix. r? `@petrochenkov`
(Discovered this issue while reviewing #115993.)
Implement jump threading MIR opt
This pass is an attempt to generalize `ConstGoto` and `SeparateConstSwitch` passes into a more complete jump threading pass.
This pass is rather heavy, as it performs a truncated backwards DFS on MIR starting from each `SwitchInt` terminator. This backwards DFS remains very limited, as it only walks through `Goto` terminators.
It is build to support constants and discriminants, and a propagating through a very limited set of operations.
The pass successfully manages to disentangle the `Some(x?)` use case and the DFA use case. It still needs a few tests before being ready.
Avoid a `track_errors` by bubbling up most errors from `check_well_formed`
I believe `track_errors` is mostly papering over issues that a sufficiently convoluted query graph can hit. I made this change, while the actual change I want to do is to stop bailing out early on errors, and instead use this new `ErrorGuaranteed` to invoke `check_well_formed` for individual items before doing all the `typeck` logic on them.
This works towards resolving https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97477 and various other ICEs, as well as allowing us to use parallel rustc more (which is currently rather limited/bottlenecked due to the very sequential nature in which we do `rustc_hir_analysis::check_crate`)
cc `@SparrowLii` `@Zoxc` for the new `try_par_for_each_in` function
coverage: Emit mappings for unused functions without generating stubs
For a while I've been annoyed by the fact that generating coverage maps for unused functions involves generating a stub function at the LLVM level.
As I suspected, generating that stub function isn't actually necessary, as long as we specifically tell LLVM about the symbol names of all the functions that have coverage mappings but weren't codegenned (due to being unused).
---
There is some helper code that gets moved around in the follow-up patches, so look at the first patch to see the most important functional changes.
---
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
This simplifies the code by removing all the `self` assignments and
makes the flow of data clearer - always into the printer.
Especially in v0 mangling, which already used `&mut self` in some
places, it gets a lot more uniform.
This query has a name that sounds general-purpose, but in fact it has
coverage-specific semantics, and (fortunately) is only used by coverage code.
Because it is only ever called once (from one designated CGU), it doesn't need
to be a query, and we can change it to a regular function instead.
Uplift movability and mutability, the simple way
Just make type_ir a dependency of ast. This can be relaxed later if we want to make the dependency less heavy. Part of rust-lang/types-team#124.
r? `@lcnr` or `@jackh726`
coverage: Move most per-function coverage info into `mir::Body`
Currently, all of the coverage information collected by the `InstrumentCoverage` pass is smuggled through MIR in the form of individual `StatementKind::Coverage` statements, which must then be reassembled by coverage codegen.
That's awkward for a number of reasons:
- While some of the coverage statements do care about their specific position in the MIR control-flow graph, many of them don't, and are just tacked onto the function's first BB as metadata carriers.
- MIR inlining can result in coverage statements being duplicated, so coverage codegen has to jump through hoops to avoid emitting duplicate mappings.
- MIR optimizations that would delete coverage statements need to carefully copy them into the function's first BB so as not to omit them from coverage reports.
- The order in which coverage codegen sees coverage statements is dependent on MIR optimizations/inlining, which can cause unnecessary churn in the emitted coverage mappings.
- We don't have a good way to annotate MIR-level functions with extra coverage info that doesn't belong in a statement.
---
This PR therefore takes most of the per-function coverage info and stores it in a field in `mir::Body` as `Option<Box<FunctionCoverageInfo>>`.
(This adds one pointer to the size of `mir::Body`, even when coverage is not enabled.)
Coverage statements still need to be injected into MIR in some cases, but only when they actually affect codegen (counters) or are needed to detect code that has been optimized away as unreachable (counters/expressions).
---
By the end of this PR, the information stored in `FunctionCoverageInfo` is:
- A hash of the function's source code (needed by LLVM's coverage map format)
- The number of coverage counters added by coverage instrumentation
- A table of coverage expressions, associating each expression ID with its operator (add or subtract) and its two operands
- The list of mappings, associating each covered code region with a counter/expression/zero value
---
~~This is built on top of #115301, so I'll rebase and roll a reviewer once that lands.~~
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
This new description reflects the changes made in this PR, and should hopefully
be more useful to non-coverage developers who need to care about coverage
statements.
Even though expression details are now stored in the info structure, we still
need to inject `ExpressionUsed` statements into MIR, because if one is missing
during codegen then we know that it was optimized out and we can remap all of
its associated code regions to zero.
Previously, mappings were attached to individual coverage statements in MIR.
That necessitated special handling in MIR optimizations to avoid deleting those
statements, since otherwise codegen would be unable to reassemble the original
list of mappings.
With this change, a function's list of mappings is now attached to its MIR
body, and survives intact even if individual statements are deleted by
optimizations.
Don't compare host param by name
Seems sketchy to be searching for `sym::host` by name, especially when we can get the actual index with not very much work.
r? fee1-dead
Coverage codegen can now allocate arrays based on the number of
counters/expressions originally used by the instrumentor.
The existing query that inspects coverage statements is still used for
determining the number of counters passed to `llvm.instrprof.increment`. If
some high-numbered counters were removed by MIR optimizations, the instrumented
binary can potentially use less memory and disk space at runtime.
This allows coverage information to be attached to the function as a whole when
appropriate, instead of being smuggled through coverage statements in the
function's basic blocks.
As an example, this patch moves the `function_source_hash` value out of
individual `CoverageKind::Counter` statements and into the per-function info.
When synthesizing unused functions for coverage purposes, the absence of this
info is taken to indicate that a function was not eligible for coverage and
should not be synthesized.
Remove lots of generics from `ty::print`
All of these generics mostly resolve to the same thing, which means we can remove them, greatly simplifying the types involved in pretty printing and unlocking another simplification (that is not performed in this PR): Using `&mut self` instead of passing `self` through the return type.
cc `@eddyb` you probably know why it's like this, just checking in and making sure I didn't do anything bad
r? oli-obk