For better throughput during parallel processing by LLVM, we used to sort
CGUs largest to smallest. This would lead to better thread utilization
by, for example, preventing a large CGU from being processed last and
having only one LLVM thread working while the rest remained idle.
However, this strategy would lead to high memory usage, as it meant the
LLVM-IR for all of the largest CGUs would be resident in memory at once.
Instead, we can compromise by ordering CGUs such that the largest and
smallest are first, second largest and smallest are next, etc. If there
are large size variations, this can reduce memory usage significantly.
This extends the `panic_fmt` lint to warn for all cases where the first
argument cannot be interpreted as a format string, as will happen in
Rust 2021.
It suggests to add `"{}", ` to format the message as a string. In the
case of `std::panic!()`, it also suggests the recently stabilized
`std::panic::panic_any()` function as an alternative.
It renames the lint to `non_fmt_panic` to match the lint naming
guidelines.
Fix panic when emitting diagnostic for closure mutable binding error
Fixes#81700
The upvar borrow kind may be `ty::BorrowKind::UniqueImmBorrow`, which is
still a mutable borrow for the purposes of this diagnostic code.
Fix non-existent-field ICE for generic fields.
I mentioned this ICE in a chat and it took about 3 milliseconds before `@eddyb` found the problem and said this change would fix it. :)
This also changes one the field types in the related test to one that triggered the ICE.
Fixes#81627.
Fixes#81672.
Fixes#81709.
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81480 `@b-naber` `@estebank.`
Reduce tab formatting assertions to debug only
The tab replacement for diagnostics added in #79757 included a few assertions to ensure all tab characters are handled appropriately. We've started getting reports of these assertions firing (#81614). Since it's only a cosmetic issue, this downgrades the assertions to debug only, so we at least continue compiling even if the diagnostics might be a tad wonky.
Minimizes the impact of #81614
Remove incorrect `delay_span_bug`
The following code is supposed to compile
```rust
use std::ops::BitOr;
pub trait IntWrapper {
type InternalStorage;
}
impl<T> BitOr for dyn IntWrapper<InternalStorage = T>
where
Self: Sized,
T: BitOr + BitOr<Output = T>,
{
type Output = Self;
fn bitor(self, _other: Self) -> Self {
todo!()
}
}
```
Before this change it would ICE. In #70998 the removed logic was added
to provide better suggestions, and the `delay_span_bug` guard was added
to protect against a potential logic error when returning traits. As it
happens, there are cases, like the one above, where traits can indeed be
returned, so valid code was being rejected.
Fix (but not close) #80207.
make const_err a future incompat lint
This is the first step for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71800: make const_err a future-incompat lint. I also rewrote the const_err lint description as the old one seemed wrong.
This has the unfortunate side-effect of making const-eval error even more verbose by making the const_err message longer without fixing the redundancy caused by additionally emitting an error on each use site of the constant. We cannot fix that redundancy until const_err is a *hard* error (at that point the error-on-use-site can be turned into a `delay_span_bug!` for uses of monomorphic consts, and into a nicely rendered error for [lazily / post-monomorhization evaluated] associated consts).
~~The one annoying effect of this PR is that `let _x = &(1/(1-1));` now also shows the future-incompat warning, even though of course we will *not* make this a hard error. We'll instead (hopefully) stop promoting it -- see https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3027. The only way I see to avoid the future-incompat warning is to use a different lint for "failure to evaluate promoted".~~
Cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`
The tab replacement for diagnostics added in #79757 included a few assertions to
ensure all tab characters are handled appropriately. We've started getting
reports of these assertions firing (#81614). Since it's only a cosmetic issue,
this downgrades the assertions to debug only, so we at least continue compiling
even if the diagnostics might be a tad wonky.
Fixes#81614
The following code is supposed to compile
```rust
use std::ops::BitOr;
pub trait IntWrapper {
type InternalStorage;
}
impl<T> BitOr for dyn IntWrapper<InternalStorage = T>
where
Self: Sized,
T: BitOr + BitOr<Output = T>,
{
type Output = Self;
fn bitor(self, _other: Self) -> Self {
todo!()
}
}
```
Before this change it would ICE. In #70998 the removed logic was added
to provide better suggestions, and the `delay_span_bug` guard was added
to protect against a potential logic error when returning traits. As it
happens, there are cases, like the one above, where traits can indeed be
returned, so valid code was being rejected.
Fix#80207.
Add a new ABI to support cmse_nonsecure_call
This adds support for the `cmse_nonsecure_call` feature to be able to perform non-secure function call.
See the discussion on Zulip [here](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Support.20for.20callsite.20attributes/near/223054928).
This is a followup to #75810 which added `cmse_nonsecure_entry`. As for that PR, I assume that the changes are small enough to not have to go through a RFC but I don't mind doing one if needed 😃
I did not yet create a tracking issue, but if most of it is fine, I can create one and update the various files accordingly (they refer to the other tracking issue now).
On the Zulip chat, I believe `@jonas-schievink` volunteered to be a reviewer 💯
We used to ignore `forbid(group)` scenarios completely. This changed
in #78864, but that led to a number of regressions (#80988, #81218).
This PR introduces a future compatibility warning for the case where
a group is forbidden but then an individual lint within that group
is allowed. We now issue a FCW when we see the "allow", but permit
it to take effect.
Improve wording of suggestion about accessing field
Follow-up to #81504
The compiler at this moment suggests "you might have meant to use field `b` of type `B`", sounding like it's type `B` which has the field `b`.
r? ```@estebank```
Fix bug with assert!() calling the wrong edition of panic!().
The span of `panic!` produced by the `assert` macro did not carry the right edition. This changes `assert` to call the right version.
Also adds tests for the 2021 edition of panic and assert, that would've caught this.
Add better diagnostic for unbounded Abst. Const
~~In the case where a generic abst. const requires a trivial where bound: `where TypeWithConst<const_fn(N)>: ,`,
instead of requiring a where bound, just check that only consts are being substituted in to skip over where check.~~
~~This is pretty sketchy, but I think it works. Presumably, if there is checking for type bounds added later, it can first check nested requirements, and see if they're satisfied by the current `ParamEnv`.~~
Changed the diagnostic to add a better example, which is more practical than what was previously proposed.
r? ```@lcnr```
Add AArch64 big-endian and ILP32 targets
This PR adds 3 new AArch64 targets:
- `aarch64_be-unknown-linux-gnu`
- `aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32`
- `aarch64_be-unknown-linux-gnu_ilp32`
It also fixes some ABI issues on big-endian ARM and AArch64.
Upgrade Chalk
~~Blocked on rust-lang/chalk#670~~
~~Now blocked on rust-lang/chalk#680 and release~~
In addition to the straight upgrade, I also tried to fix some tests by properly returning variables and max universes in the solution. Unfortunately, this actually triggers the same perf problem that rustc traits code runs into in `canonicalizer`. Not sure what the root cause of this problem is, or why it's supposed to be solved in chalk.
r? ```@nikomatsakis```
Fix early lints inside an async desugaring
Fixes#81531
When we buffer an early lint for a macro invocation,
we need to determine which NodeId to take the lint level from.
Currently, we use the NodeId of the closest def parent. However, if
the macro invocation is inside the desugared closure from an `async fn`
or async closure, that NodeId does not actually exist in the AST.
This commit uses the parent of a desugared closure when computing
`lint_node_id`, which is something that actually exists in the AST (an
`async fn` or async closure).
Fixes#81531
When we buffer an early lint for a macro invocation,
we need to determine which NodeId to take the lint level from.
Currently, we use the `NodeId` of the closest def parent. However, if
the macro invocation is inside the desugared closure from an `async fn`
or async closure, that `NodeId` does not actually exist in the AST.
This commit explicitly calls `check_lint` for the `NodeId`s of closures
desugared from async expressions, ensuring that we do not miss any
buffered lints.
Box the biggest ast::ItemKind variants
This PR is a different approach on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81400, aiming to save memory in humongous ASTs.
The three affected item kind enums are:
- `ast::ItemKind` (208 -> 112 bytes)
- `ast::AssocItemKind` (176 -> 72 bytes)
- `ast::ForeignItemKind` (176 -> 72 bytes)
This commit adds a new ABI to be selected via `extern
"C-cmse-nonsecure-call"` on function pointers in order for the compiler to
apply the corresponding cmse_nonsecure_call callsite attribute.
For Armv8-M targets supporting TrustZone-M, this will perform a
non-secure function call by saving, clearing and calling a non-secure
function pointer using the BLXNS instruction.
See the page on the unstable book for details.
Signed-off-by: Hugues de Valon <hugues.devalon@arm.com>
Remove unneeded `mut` variable
`arg_elide` gets initialized, immediately cloned, and only written to after that.
The last reading access was removed back in
7704762604
Remove the remains of query categories
Back in October 2020 in #77830 ``@cjgillot`` removed the query categories information from the profiler, but the actual definitions which query was in which category remained, although unused.
Here I clean that up, to simplify the query definitions even further.
It's unfortunate that this loses all the context for `git blame`, ~~but I'm working on moving those query definitions into `rustc_query_system`, which will lose that context anyway.~~ EDIT: Might not work out.
The functional changes are in the first commit. The second one only changes the indentation.
Improve handling of spans around macro result parse errors
Fixes#81543
After we expand a macro, we try to parse the resulting tokens as a AST
node. This commit makes several improvements to how we handle spans when
an error occurs:
* Only ovewrite the original `Span` if it's a dummy span. This preserves
a more-specific span if one is available.
* Use `self.prev_token` instead of `self.token` when emitting an error
message after encountering EOF, since an EOF token always has a dummy
span
* Make `SourceMap::next_point` leave dummy spans unused. A dummy span
does not have a logical 'next point', since it's a zero-length span.
Re-using the span span preserves its 'dummy-ness' for other checks
Add lint for 2229 migrations
Implements the first for RFC 2229 where we make the decision to migrate a root variable based on if the type of the variable needs Drop and if the root variable would be moved into the closure when the feature isn't enabled.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
- This allows us add fake information after handling migrations if
needed.
- Capture analysis also priortizes what we see earlier, which means
fake information should go in last.
Add visitors for checking #[inline]
Add visitors for checking #[inline] with struct field
Fix test for #[inline]
Add visitors for checking #[inline] with #[macro_export] macro
Add visitors for checking #[inline] without #[macro_export] macro
Add use alias with Visitor
Fix lint error
Reduce unnecessary variable
Co-authored-by: LingMan <LingMan@users.noreply.github.com>
Change error to warning
Add warning for checking field, arm with #[allow_internal_unstable]
Add name resolver
Formatting
Formatting
Fix error fixture
Add checking field, arm, macro def
Sync rustc_codegen_cranelift
The highlight of this sync are abi compatibility with cg_llvm allowing mixing of cg_clif and cg_llvm compiled crates and switching to the x64 cranelift backend based on the new backend framework.
r? ``@ghost``
``@rustbot`` label +A-codegen +A-cranelift +T-compiler
Indicate both start and end of pass RSS in time-passes output
Previously, only the end of pass RSS was indicated. This could easily
lead one to believe that the change in RSS from one pass to the next was
attributable to the second pass, when in fact it occurred between the
end of the first pass and the start of the second.
Also, improve alignment of columns.
Sample of output:
```
time: 0.739; rss: 607MB -> 637MB item_types_checking
time: 8.429; rss: 637MB -> 775MB item_bodies_checking
time: 11.063; rss: 470MB -> 775MB type_check_crate
time: 0.232; rss: 775MB -> 777MB match_checking
time: 0.139; rss: 777MB -> 779MB liveness_and_intrinsic_checking
time: 0.372; rss: 775MB -> 779MB misc_checking_2
time: 8.188; rss: 779MB -> 1019MB MIR_borrow_checking
time: 0.062; rss: 1019MB -> 1021MB MIR_effect_checking
```
Add error message for private fn
Attempts to add a more detailed error when a `const_evaluatable` fn from another scope is used inside of a scope which cannot access it.
r? ````@lcnr````
Implement Rust 2021 panic
This implements the Rust 2021 versions of `panic!()`. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80162 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3007.
It does so by replacing `{std, core}::panic!()` by a bulitin macro that expands to either `$crate::panic::panic_2015!(..)` or `$crate::panic::panic_2021!(..)` depending on the edition of the caller.
This does not yet make std's panic an alias for core's panic on Rust 2021 as the RFC proposes. That will be a separate change: c5273bdfb2 That change is blocked on figuring out what to do with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80846 first.
Fixes#81543
After we expand a macro, we try to parse the resulting tokens as a AST
node. This commit makes several improvements to how we handle spans when
an error occurs:
* Only ovewrite the original `Span` if it's a dummy span. This preserves
a more-specific span if one is available.
* Use `self.prev_token` instead of `self.token` when emitting an error
message after encountering EOF, since an EOF token always has a dummy
span
* Make `SourceMap::next_point` leave dummy spans unused. A dummy span
does not have a logical 'next point', since it's a zero-length span.
Re-using the span span preserves its 'dummy-ness' for other checks
Edit multiple error code Markdown files
Makes small edits to several error code files. Fixes some missing punctuation. Changes some wording, grammar, and formatting for clarity and readability.
Adds a link to the rustup book in E0658.
Don't link with --export-dynamic on wasm32-wasi
Remove --export-dynamic from the link arguments on the wasm32-wasi
target, as it emits spurious exports and increases code size.
Leave it in place for wasm32-unknown-unknown and
wasm32-unknown-emscripten. Even though it isn't a great solution
there, users are likely depending on its behavior there.
Remove const_in_array_repeat
Fixes#80371. Fixes#81315. Fixes#80767. Fixes#75682.
I thought there might be some issue with `Repeats(_, 0)`, but if you increase the items in the array it still ICEs. I'm not sure if this is the best fix but it does fix the given issue.
2229: Fix issues with move closures and mutability
This PR fixes two issues when feature `capture_disjoint_fields` is used.
1. Can't mutate using a mutable reference
2. Move closures try to move value out through a reference.
To do so, we
1. Compute the mutability of the capture and store it as part of the `CapturedPlace` that is written in TypeckResults
2. Restrict capture precision. Note this is temporary for now, to allow the feature to be used with move closures and ByValue captures and might change depending on discussions with the lang team.
- No Derefs are captured for ByValue captures, since that will result in value behind a reference getting moved.
- No projections are applied to raw pointers since these require unsafe blocks. We capture
them completely.
r? `````@nikomatsakis`````
codegen: assume constants cannot fail to evaluate
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80579 landed, so we can finally remove this old hack from codegen and instead assume that consts never fail to evaluate. :)
r? `@oli-obk`
Edit rustc_typeck top-level docs
Edit punctuation and wording in note on type variables vs. type parameters.
Also add missing punctuation and two inter-doc links.
Clone entire `TokenCursor` when collecting tokens
Reverts PR #80830Fixestaiki-e/pin-project#312
We can have an arbitrary number of `None`-delimited group frames pushed
on the stack due to proc-macro invocations, which can legally be exited.
Attempting to account for this would add a lot of complexity for a tiny
performance gain, so let's just use the original strategy.
Stabilize by-value `[T; N]` iterator `core::array::IntoIter`
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/65798
This is unblocked now that `min_const_generics` has been stabilized in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79135.
This PR does *not* include the corresponding `IntoIterator` impl, which is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/65819. Instead, an iterator can be constructed through the `new` method.
`new` would become unnecessary when `IntoIterator` is implemented and might be deprecated then, although it will stay stable.
Makes small edits to several error code files. Fixes some
missing punctuation. Changes some wording, grammar, and formatting
for clarity and readability.
Adds a link to the rustup book in E0658.
clashing_extern_declarations: Use symbol interning to avoid string alloc.
Use symbol interning as a hack to avoid allocating a string for every symbol name we store in the seen set. This hopefully addresses the minor perf regression described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80009#issuecomment-763526902.
r? `@nagisa`
cfg(version): treat nightlies as complete
This PR makes cfg(version) treat the nightlies
for version 1.n.0 as 1.n.0, even though that nightly
version might not have all stabilizations and features
of the released 1.n.0. This is done for greater
convenience for people who want to test a newly
stabilized feature on nightly, or in other words,
give newly stabilized features as many eyeballs
as possible.
For users who wish to pin nightlies, this commit adds
a -Z assume-incomplete-release option that they can
enable if they run into any issues due to this change.
Implements the suggestion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/64796#issuecomment-640851454
Support FRU pattern with `[feature(capture_disjoint_fields)]`
In case of a functional record update syntax for creating a structure, `ExprUseVisitor` to only detect the precise use of some of the field in the `..x` part of the syntax. However, when we start building MIR, we
1. First, build the place for `x`
2. and then, add precise field projections so that only some parts of `x` end up getting read.
When `capture_disjoint_fields` is enabled, and FRU is used within a closure `x` won't be completely captured, and therefore the first step will fail. This PR updates `mir_build` to create a place builder in the first step and then create place from the builder only after applying the field projection.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/32
r? ``````@nikomatsakis``````
Stabilize `unsigned_abs`
Resolves#74913.
This PR stabilizes the `i*::unsigned_abs()` method, which returns the absolute value of an integer _as its unsigned equivalent_. This has the advantage that it does not overflow on `i*::MIN`.
I have gone ahead and used this in a couple locations throughout the repository.
Precompute ancestors of the old error node set so that check for private
types and traits in public interfaces can in constant time determine if
the current item has any descendants in the old error set.
No functional changes intended.
This seems right, given that conceptually bools are unsigned, but the
implications of this change may have more action at distance that I'm
not sure how to exhaustively consider.
For instance there are a number of cases where code attaches range
metadata if `scalar.is_bool()` holds. Supposedly it would no longer be
attached to the `repr(i8)` enums? Though I'm not sure why booleans are
being special-cased here in the first place...
Fixes#80556
Previously, only the end of pass RSS was indicated. This could easily
lead one to believe that the change in RSS from one pass to the next was
attributable to the second pass, when in fact it occurred between the
end of the first pass and the start of the second.
Also, improve alignment of columns.
When `capture_disjoint_fields` is not enabled, checking if the root variable
binding is mutable would suffice.
However with the feature enabled, the captured place might be mutable
because it dereferences a mutable reference.
This PR computes the mutability of each capture after capture analysis
in rustc_typeck. We store this in `ty::CapturedPlace` and then use
`ty::CapturedPlace::mutability` in mir_build and borrow_check.
- No Derefs in move closure, this will result in value behind a reference getting moved.
- No projections are applied to raw pointers, since these require unsafe blocks. We capture
them completely.
Motivations for these are recorded here: https://hackmd.io/71qq-IOpTNqzMkPpAI1dVg?view
Avoid memory allocation when removing dead blocks
Use `reachable_as_bitset` to reuse a bitset from the traversal rather
than allocating it seprately. Additionally check if there are any
unreachable blocks before proceeding.
Pre-canoncalize ExternLocation::ExactPaths
This stores pre-canacolized paths inside `ExternLocation::ExactPaths` so that we don't need to canoncalize them every time we want to compare them to source lib paths.
This is related to #81414.
This commit makes cfg(version) treat the nightlies
for version 1.n.0 as 1.n.0, even though that nightly
version might not have all stabilizations and features
of the released 1.n.0. This is done for greater
convenience for people who want to test a newly
stabilized feature on nightly.
For users who wish to pin nightlies, this commit adds
a -Z assume-incomplete-release option that they can
enable if there are any issues due to this change.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #79570 (rustc: Stabilize `-Zrun-dsymutil` as `-Csplit-debuginfo`)
- #79819 (Add `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` lint)
- #79991 (rustdoc: Render HRTB correctly for bare functions)
- #80215 (Use -target when linking binaries for Mac Catalyst)
- #81158 (Point to span of upvar making closure FnMut)
- #81176 (Improve safety of `LateContext::qpath_res`)
- #81287 (Split rustdoc JSON types into separately versioned crate)
- #81306 (Fuse inner iterator in FlattenCompat and improve related tests)
- #81333 (clean up some const error reporting around promoteds)
- #81459 (Fix rustdoc text selection for page titles)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
clean up some const error reporting around promoteds
These are some error reporting simplifications enabled by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80579.
Further simplifications are possible but could be blocked on making `const_err` a hard error.
r? ``````@oli-obk``````
Improve safety of `LateContext::qpath_res`
This is my first rustc code change, inspired by hacking on clippy!
The first change is to clear cached `TypeckResults` from `LateContext` when visiting a nested item. I took a hint from [here](5e91c4ecc0/compiler/rustc_privacy/src/lib.rs (L1300)).
Clippy has a `qpath_res` util function to avoid a possible ICE in `LateContext::qpath_res`. But the docs of `LateContext::qpath_res` promise no ICE. So this updates the `LateContext` method to keep its promises, and removes the util function.
Related: rust-lang/rust-clippy#4545
CC ````````````@eddyb```````````` since you've done related work
CC ````````````@flip1995```````````` FYI
Use -target when linking binaries for Mac Catalyst
When running `rustc` with `-target x86_64-apple-ios-macabi`, the linker
eventually gets run with `-arch x86_64`, because the linker back end splits the
LLVM target triple and uses the first token as the target architecture. However,
this does not work for the Mac Catalyst ABI, which is a separate target from
Darwin.
Specifying the full target triple with `-target` allows Mac Catalyst binaries to
link and run.
closes#80202
Add `SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS` lint
cc #79813
This PR adds an allow-by-default future-compatibility lint
`SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS`. It fires when a trailing semicolon in a
macro body is ignored due to the macro being used in expression
position:
```rust
macro_rules! foo {
() => {
true; // WARN
}
}
fn main() {
let val = match true {
true => false,
_ => foo!()
};
}
```
The lint takes its level from the macro call site, and
can be allowed for a particular macro by adding
`#[allow(macro_trailing_semicolon)]`.
The lint is set to warn for all internal rustc crates (when being built
by a stage1 compiler). After the next beta bump, we can enable
the lint for the bootstrap compiler as well.
rustc: Stabilize `-Zrun-dsymutil` as `-Csplit-debuginfo`
This commit adds a new stable codegen option to rustc,
`-Csplit-debuginfo`. The old `-Zrun-dsymutil` flag is deleted and now
subsumed by this stable flag. Additionally `-Zsplit-dwarf` is also
subsumed by this flag but still requires `-Zunstable-options` to
actually activate. The `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag takes one of
three values:
* `off` - This indicates that split-debuginfo from the final artifact is
not desired. This is not supported on Windows and is the default on
Unix platforms except macOS. On macOS this means that `dsymutil` is
not executed.
* `packed` - This means that debuginfo is desired in one location
separate from the main executable. This is the default on Windows
(`*.pdb`) and macOS (`*.dSYM`). On other Unix platforms this subsumes
`-Zsplit-dwarf=single` and produces a `*.dwp` file.
* `unpacked` - This means that debuginfo will be roughly equivalent to
object files, meaning that it's throughout the build directory
rather than in one location (often the fastest for local development).
This is not the default on any platform and is not supported on Windows.
Each target can indicate its own default preference for how debuginfo is
handled. Almost all platforms default to `off` except for Windows and
macOS which default to `packed` for historical reasons.
Some equivalencies for previous unstable flags with the new flags are:
* `-Zrun-dsymutil=yes` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zrun-dsymutil=no` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=split` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`
Note that `-Csplit-debuginfo` still requires `-Zunstable-options` for
non-macOS platforms since split-dwarf support was *just* implemented in
rustc.
There's some more rationale listed on #79361, but the main gist of the
motivation for this commit is that `dsymutil` can take quite a long time
to execute in debug builds and provides little benefit. This means that
incremental compile times appear that much worse on macOS because the
compiler is constantly running `dsymutil` over every single binary it
produces during `cargo build` (even build scripts!). Ideally rustc would
switch to not running `dsymutil` by default, but that's a problem left
to get tackled another day.
Closes#79361
Make hitting the recursion limit in projection non-fatal
This change was originally made in #80246 to avoid future (effectively) infinite loop bugs in projections,
but wundergraph relies on rustc recovering here.
cc #80953
r? `@nikomatsakis`
This commit adds a new stable codegen option to rustc,
`-Csplit-debuginfo`. The old `-Zrun-dsymutil` flag is deleted and now
subsumed by this stable flag. Additionally `-Zsplit-dwarf` is also
subsumed by this flag but still requires `-Zunstable-options` to
actually activate. The `-Csplit-debuginfo` flag takes one of
three values:
* `off` - This indicates that split-debuginfo from the final artifact is
not desired. This is not supported on Windows and is the default on
Unix platforms except macOS. On macOS this means that `dsymutil` is
not executed.
* `packed` - This means that debuginfo is desired in one location
separate from the main executable. This is the default on Windows
(`*.pdb`) and macOS (`*.dSYM`). On other Unix platforms this subsumes
`-Zsplit-dwarf=single` and produces a `*.dwp` file.
* `unpacked` - This means that debuginfo will be roughly equivalent to
object files, meaning that it's throughout the build directory
rather than in one location (often the fastest for local development).
This is not the default on any platform and is not supported on Windows.
Each target can indicate its own default preference for how debuginfo is
handled. Almost all platforms default to `off` except for Windows and
macOS which default to `packed` for historical reasons.
Some equivalencies for previous unstable flags with the new flags are:
* `-Zrun-dsymutil=yes` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zrun-dsymutil=no` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=single` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`
* `-Zsplit-dwarf=split` -> `-Csplit-debuginfo=unpacked`
Note that `-Csplit-debuginfo` still requires `-Zunstable-options` for
non-macOS platforms since split-dwarf support was *just* implemented in
rustc.
There's some more rationale listed on #79361, but the main gist of the
motivation for this commit is that `dsymutil` can take quite a long time
to execute in debug builds and provides little benefit. This means that
incremental compile times appear that much worse on macOS because the
compiler is constantly running `dsymutil` over every single binary it
produces during `cargo build` (even build scripts!). Ideally rustc would
switch to not running `dsymutil` by default, but that's a problem left
to get tackled another day.
Closes#79361
Reverts PR #80830Fixestaiki-e/pin-project#312
We can have an arbitrary number of `None`-delimited group frames pushed
on the stack due to proc-macro invocations, which can legally be exited.
Attempting to account for this would add a lot of complexity for a tiny
performance gain, so let's just use the original strategy.
cc #79813
This PR adds an allow-by-default future-compatibility lint
`SEMICOLON_IN_EXPRESSIONS_FROM_MACROS`. It fires when a trailing semicolon in a
macro body is ignored due to the macro being used in expression
position:
```rust
macro_rules! foo {
() => {
true; // WARN
}
}
fn main() {
let val = match true {
true => false,
_ => foo!()
};
}
```
The lint takes its level from the macro call site, and
can be allowed for a particular macro by adding
`#[allow(semicolon_in_expressions_from_macros)]`.
The lint is set to warn for all internal rustc crates (when being built
by a stage1 compiler). After the next beta bump, we can enable
the lint for the bootstrap compiler as well.
Avoid describing a method as 'not found' when bounds are unsatisfied
Fixes#76267
When there is a single applicable method candidate, but its trait bounds
are not satisfied, we avoid saying that the method is "not found".
Insted, we update the error message to directly mention which bounds are
not satisfied, rather than mentioning them in a note.
Tweak suggestion for missing field in patterns
Account for parser recovered struct and tuple patterns to avoid invalid
suggestion.
Follow up to #81103.
Make `-Z time-passes` less noisy
- Add the module name to `pre_AST_expansion_passes` and don't make it a
verbose event (since it normally doesn't take very long, and it's
emitted many times)
- Don't make the following rustdoc events verbose; they're emitted many times.
+ build_extern_trait_impl
+ build_local_trait_impl
+ build_primitive_trait_impl
+ get_auto_trait_impls
+ get_blanket_trait_impls
- Remove the `get_auto_trait_and_blanket_synthetic_impls` rustdoc event; it's wholly
covered by get_{auto,blanket}_trait_impls and not very useful.
I found this while working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/81275 but it's independent of those changes.
Make more traits of the From/Into family diagnostic items
Following traits are now diagnostic items:
- `From` (unchanged)
- `Into`
- `TryFrom`
- `TryInto`
This also adds symbols for those items:
- `into_trait`
- `try_from_trait`
- `try_into_trait`
Related: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/6620#discussion_r562482587
Refractor a few more types to `rustc_type_ir`
In the continuation of #79169, ~~blocked on that PR~~.
This PR:
- moves `IntVarValue`, `FloatVarValue`, `InferTy` (and friends) and `Variance`
- creates the `IntTy`, `UintTy` and `FloatTy` enums in `rustc_type_ir`, based on their `ast` and `chalk_ir` equilavents, and uses them for types in the rest of the compiler.
~~I will split up that commit to make this easier to review and to have a better commit history.~~
EDIT: done, I split the PR in commits of 200-ish lines each
r? `````@nikomatsakis````` cc `````@jackh726`````
Change filesearch::get_or_default_sysroot() to check if sysroot is found
using env::args().next() if rustc in argv[0] is a symlink; otherwise, or
if it is not found, use env::current_exe() to imply sysroot. This makes
the rustc binary able to locate Rust libraries in systems using
content-addressable storage (CAS).
Check for rmeta crates when getting existing crates from cache
This change makes sure to check for rmeta files when resolving crates instead of always going to disk in that case.
Use `reachable_as_bitset` to reuse a bitset from the traversal rather
than allocating it seprately. Additionally check if there are any
unreachable blocks before proceeding.
Fixes#76267
When there is a single applicable method candidate, but its trait bounds
are not satisfied, we avoid saying that the method is "not found".
Insted, we update the error message to directly mention which bounds are
not satisfied, rather than mentioning them in a note.
Make weak item traversal deterministic
Fix#81296.
(No test added. The relevant test *is* ui/panic-handler/weak-lang-item.rs, and this change should make it less flaky.)
Refine "remove semicolon" suggestion in trait selection
Don't suggest it if the last statement doesn't have a semicolon
Fixes#81098
See also #54771 for why this suggestion was added
rustc_codegen_ssa: use wall time for codegen_to_LLVM_IR time-passes entry
Use elapsed wall time spent on codegen_to_LLVM_IR for all CGUs as a
whole, rather than the sum for each CGU (the distinction matters for
parallel builds, where some CGUs are processed in parallel).
Enforce that query results implement Debug
Currently, we require that query keys implement `Debug`, but we do not do the same for query values. This can make incremental compilation bugs difficult to debug - there isn't a good place to print out the result loaded from disk.
This PR adds `Debug` bounds to several query-related functions, allowing us to debug-print the query value when an 'unstable fingerprint' error occurs. This required adding `#[derive(Debug)]` to a fairly large number of types - hopefully, this doesn't have much of an impact on compiler bootstrapping times.
Prevent query cycles in the MIR inliner
r? `@eddyb` `@wesleywiser`
cc `@rust-lang/wg-mir-opt`
The general design is that we have a new query that is run on the `validated_mir` instead of on the `optimized_mir`. That query is forced before going into the optimization pipeline, so as to not try to read from a stolen MIR.
The query should not be cached cross crate, as you should never call it for items from other crates. By its very design calls into other crates can never cause query cycles.
This is a pessimistic approach to inlining, since we strictly have more calls in the `validated_mir` than we have in `optimized_mir`, but that's not a problem imo.
Add expected error
Add comment
Tweak comment wording
Fix after rebase to updated master
Fix after rebase to updated master
Distinguish mutation in normal and move closures
Tweak error message
Fix error message for nested closures
Refactor code showing mutated upvar in closure
Remove debug assert
B
Use elapsed wall time spent on codegen_to_LLVM_IR for all CGUs as a
whole, rather than the sum for each CGU (the distinction matters for
parallel builds, where some CGUs are processed in parallel).
Rollup of 14 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #75180 (Implement Error for &(impl Error))
- #78578 (Permit mutable references in all const contexts)
- #79174 (Make std::future a re-export of core::future)
- #79884 (Replace magic numbers with existing constants)
- #80855 (Expand assert!(expr, args..) to include $crate for hygiene on 2021.)
- #80933 (Fix sysroot option not being honored across rustc)
- #81259 (Replace version_check dependency with own version parsing code)
- #81264 (Add unstable option to control doctest run directory)
- #81279 (Small refactor in typeck)
- #81297 (Don't provide backend_optimization_level query for extern crates)
- #81302 (Fix rendering of stabilization version for trait implementors)
- #81310 (Do not mark unit variants as used when in path pattern)
- #81320 (Make bad shlex parsing a pretty error)
- #81338 (Clean up `dominators_given_rpo`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do not mark unit variants as used when in path pattern
Record that we are processing a pattern so that code responsible for
handling path resolution can correctly decide whether to mark it as
used or not.
Closes#76788.
Small refactor in typeck
- `check_impl_items_against_trait` only queries and walks through associated items once
- extracted function that reports errors
- don't check specialization validity when trait item does not match
- small additional cleanups
Replace version_check dependency with own version parsing code
This gives compiler maintainers a better degree of control
over how the version gets parsed and is a good way to ensure
that there are no changes of behaviour in the future.
Also, issue a warning if the version is invalid instead of erroring
so that we stay forwards compatible with possible future changes
of the versioning scheme.
Last, this improves the present test a little.
Fixes#79436
r? `@petrochenkov`
Fix sysroot option not being honored across rustc
Change link_sanitizer_runtime() to check if the sanitizer library exists in the specified/session sysroot, and if it doesn't exist, use the default sysroot. (See #79253.)
Expand assert!(expr, args..) to include $crate for hygiene on 2021.
This makes `assert!(expr, args..)` properly hygienic in Rust 2021.
This is part of rust-lang/rfcs#3007, see #80162.
Before edition 2021, this was a breaking change, as `std::panic` and `core::panic` are different. In edition 2021 they will be identical, making it possible to apply proper hygiene here.
Target stack-probe support configurable finely
This adds capability to configure the target's stack probe support in a
more precise manner than just on/off. In particular now we allow
choosing between always inline-asm, always call or either one of those
depending on the LLVM version.
Note that this removes the ability to turn off the generation of the
stack-probe attribute. This is valid to replace it with inline-asm for all targets because
`probe-stack="inline-asm"` will not generate any machine code on targets
that do not currently support stack probes. This makes support for stack
probes on targets that don't have any right now automatic with LLVM
upgrades in the future.
(This is valid to do based on the fact that clang unconditionally sets
this attribute when `-fstack-clash-protection` is used, AFAICT)
cc #77885
r? `@cuviper`
Various ABI refactorings
This includes changes to the rust abi and various refactorings that will hopefully make it easier to use the abi handling infrastructure of rustc in cg_clif. There are several refactorings that I haven't done. I am opening this draft PR to check that I haven't broken any non x86_64 architectures.
r? `@ghost`
This gives compiler maintainers a better degree of control
over how the version gets parsed and is a good way to ensure
that there are no changes of behaviour in the future.
Also, issue a warning if the version is invalid instead of erroring
so that we stay forwards compatible with possible future changes
of the versioning scheme.
Last, this improves the present test a little.
Due to macro expansion, its possible to end up with two distinct
`ExpnId`s that have the same `ExpnData` contents. This violates the
contract of `HashStable`, since two unequal `ExpnId`s will end up with
equal `Fingerprint`s.
This commit adds a `disambiguator` field to `ExpnData`, which is used to
force two otherwise-equivalent `ExpnData`s to be distinct.
Fix <unknown> queries and add more timing info to render_html
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/81251.
## Fix `<unknown>` queries
This happened because `alloc_query_strings` was never called.
## Add more timing info to render_html
This still has some issues I'm not sure how to work out:
- `create_renderer` and `renderer_after_krate` aren't shown by default.
I want something like `verbose_generic_activity_with_arg`, but it doesn't exist.
I'm also not sure how to show activities that aren't on by default - I
tried `-Z self-profile -Z self-profile-args=all`, but it didn't show up.
r? `@wesleywiser`
- Add the module name to `pre_AST_expansion_passes` and don't make it a
verbose event (since it normally doesn't take very long, and it's
emitted many times)
- Don't make the following rustdoc events verbose; they're emitted many times.
+ build_extern_trait_impl
+ build_local_trait_impl
+ build_primitive_trait_impl
+ get_auto_trait_impls
+ get_blanket_trait_impls
- Remove `get_auto_trait_and_blanket_synthetic_impls`; it's wholly
covered by get_{auto,blanket}_trait_impls and not very useful.
This avoids each tool having to separately find and call
`self_profile_alloc_strings`.
- Don't compute the global context if it hasn't yet been computed
This avoids giving extraneous errors about unresolved names if an error
occurs during parsing.
avoid promoting division, modulo and indexing operations that could fail
For division, `x / y` will still be promoted if `y` is a non-zero integer literal; however, `1/(1+1)` will not be promoted any more.
While at it, also see if we can reject promoting floating-point arithmetic (which are [complicated](https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/237) so maybe we should not promote them).
This will need a crater run to see if there's code out there that relies on these things being promoted.
If we can land this, promoteds in `fn`/`const fn` cannot fail to evaluate any more, which should let us do some simplifications in codegen/Miri!
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3027
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/61821
r? `@oli-obk`
Abi::ScalarPair is only ever used for types that don't have a stable
layout anyway so this doesn't break any FFI. It does however reduce the
amount of special casing on the abi outside of the code responsible for
abi specific adjustments to the pass mode.
Improve diagnostics when parsing angle args
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79266 introduced parsing of generic arguments in associated type constraints, this however resulted in possibly very confusing error messages in cases in which closing angle brackets were missing such as in `Vec<(u32, _, _) = vec![]`, which outputs an incorrectly parsed equality constraint error, as noted by `@cynecx.`
This PR tries to provide better error messages in such cases.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Refactor token collection to capture trailing token immediately
Split out from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80689 - when we start capturing more information about attribute targets, we'll need to know in advance if we're capturing a trailing token or not.
r? `@ghost`
Following traits are now diagnostic items:
- `From` (unchanged)
- `Into`
- `TryFrom`
- `TryInto`
This also adds symbols for those items:
- `into_trait`
- `try_from_trait`
- `try_into_trait`
Gracefully handle loop labels missing leading `'` in different positions
Fix#81192.
* Account for labels when suggesting `loop` instead of `while true`
* Suggest `'a` when given `a` only when appropriate
* Add loop head span to hir
* Tweak error for invalid `break expr`
* Add more misspelled label tests
* Avoid emitting redundant "unused label" lint
* Parse loop labels missing a leading `'`
Each commit can be reviewed in isolation.
Fix formatting for removed lints
- Don't add backticks for the reason a lint was removed. This is almost
never a code block, and when it is the backticks should be in the reason
itself.
- Don't assume clippy is the only tool that needs to be checked for
backwards compatibility
I split this out of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80527/ because it kept causing tests to fail, and it's a good change to have anyway.
r? `@flip1995`
When encountering a name `a` that isn't resolved, but a label `'a` is
found in the current ribs, only suggest `'a` if this name is the value
expression of a `break` statement.
Solve FIXME.
Force token collection to run when parsing nonterminals
Fixes#81007
Previously, we would fail to collect tokens in the proper place when
only builtin attributes were present. As a result, we would end up with
attribute tokens in the collected `TokenStream`, leading to duplication
when we attempted to prepend the attributes from the AST node.
We now explicitly track when token collection must be performed due to
nomterminal parsing.
Remove --export-dynamic from the link arguments on the wasm32-wasi
target, as it emits spurious exports and increases code size.
Leave it in place for wasm32-unknown-unknown and
wasm32-unknown-emscripten. Even though it isn't a great solution
there, users are likely depending on its behavior there.
Fix ICE in mir when evaluating SizeOf on unsized type
Not quite ready yet. This tries to fix#80742 as discussed on [Zulip topic][1],
by using `delay_span_bug`.
I don't understand what `delay_span_bug` does. It seems like my error message
is never used. With this patch, in this program:
```rust
#![allow(incomplete_features)]
#![feature(const_evaluatable_checked)]
#![feature(const_generics)]
use std::fmt::Debug;
use std::marker::PhantomData;
use std::mem::size_of;
struct Inline<T>
where
[u8; size_of::<T>() + 1]: ,
{
_phantom: PhantomData<T>,
buf: [u8; size_of::<T>() + 1],
}
impl<T> Inline<T>
where
[u8; size_of::<T>() + 1]: ,
{
pub fn new(val: T) -> Inline<T> {
todo!()
}
}
fn main() {
let dst = Inline::<dyn Debug>::new(0); // line 27
}
```
these errors are printed, both for line 27 (annotated line above):
- "no function or associated item named `new` found for struct `Inline<dyn
Debug>` in the current scope"
- "the size for values of type `dyn Debug` cannot be known at compilation time"
Second error makes sense, but I'm not sure about the first one and why it's
even printed.
Finally, I'm not sure about the span passing in `const_eval`.
[1]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/269128-miri/topic/Help.20fixing.20.2380742
Fixes#81007
Previously, we would fail to collect tokens in the proper place when
only builtin attributes were present. As a result, we would end up with
attribute tokens in the collected `TokenStream`, leading to duplication
when we attempted to prepend the attributes from the AST node.
We now explicitly track when token collection must be performed due to
nomterminal parsing.
Change link_sanitizer_runtime() to check if the sanitizer library exists
in the specified/session sysroot, and if it doesn't exist, use the
default sysroot.
Serialize dependency graph directly from DepGraph
Reduce memory usage by serializing dep graph directly from `DepGraph`,
rather than copying it into `SerializedDepGraph` and serializing that.
Fix `unused_unsafe` label with `unsafe_block_in_unsafe_fn
Previously, the following code:
```rust
#![feature(unsafe_block_in_unsafe_fn)]
unsafe fn foo() {
unsafe { unsf() }
}
unsafe fn unsf() {}
```
Would give the following warning:
```
warning: unnecessary `unsafe` block
--> src/lib.rs:4:5
|
4 | unsafe { unsf() }
| ^^^^^^ unnecessary `unsafe` block
|
= note: `#[warn(unused_unsafe)]` on by default
```
which doesn't point out that the block is in an `unsafe fn`.
Tracking issue: #71668
cc #79208
don't suggest erroneous trailing comma after `..`
In #76612, suggestions were added for missing fields in patterns. However, the suggestions are being inserted just at the end
of the last field in the pattern—before any trailing comma after the last field. This resulted in the "if you don't care about missing fields" suggestion to recommend code with a trailing comma after the field ellipsis (`..,`), which is actually not legal ("`..` must be at the end and cannot have a trailing comma")!
Incidentally, the doc-comment on `error_unmentioned_fields` was using `you_cant_use_this_field` as an example field name (presumably copy-paste inherited from the description of Issue #76077), but the present author found this confusing, because unmentioned fields aren't necessarily unusable.
The suggested code in the diff this commit introduces to `destructuring-assignment/struct_destructure_fail.stderr` doesn't work, but it didn't work beforehand, either (because of the "found reserved identifier `_`" thing), so you can't really call it a regression; it could be fixed in a separate PR.
Resolves#78511.
r? `@davidtwco` or `@estebank`
Stability oddity with const intrinsics
cc `@RalfJung`
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80699#discussion_r551495670 `@usbalbin` realized we accepted some intrinsics as `const` without a `#[rustc_const_(un)stable]` attribute. I did some digging, and that example works because intrinsics inherit their stability from their parents... including `#[rustc_const_(un)stable]` attributes. While we may want to fix that (not sure, wasn't there just a MCPed PR that caused this on purpose?), we definitely want tests for it, thus this PR adding tests and some fun tracing statements.
Prevents LateContext::maybe_typeck_results() from returning data in a
nested item without a body. Consequently, LateContext::qpath_res is less
likely to ICE when called in a nested item. Would have prevented
rust-lang/rust-clippy#4545, presumably.