While profiling Zed's dev build I've noticed that while most of the time `upstream_monomorphizations` takes a lot of time in monomorpization_collector, in some cases (e.g. build of `editor` itself)
the rest of monomorphization_collector_graph_walk dominates it. Most of the time is spent in collect_items_rec.
This PR aims to reduce the number of locks taking place; instead of locking output MonoItems once per children of current node, we do so once per *parent*. We also get to reuse locks for mentioned and used items.
While this commit does not reduce Wall time of Zed's build, it does shave off `cargo build -j1` from 43s to 41.5s.
Make #![feature(let_chains)] bootstrap conditional in compiler/
Let chains have been stabilized recently in #132833, so we can remove the gating from our uses in the compiler (as the compiler uses edition 2024).
make abi_unsupported_vector_types a hard error
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116558 by completing the transition; see that issue for context. The lint was introduced with Rust 1.84 and this has been shown in cargo's future breakage reports since Rust 1.85, released 6 weeks ago, and so far we got 0 complaints by users. There's not even a backlink on the tracking issue. We did a [crater run](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127731#issuecomment-2286736295) when the lint was originally added and found no breakage. So I don't think we need another crater run now, but I can do one if the team prefers that.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131800 is done, so for most current targets (in particular, all tier 1 and tier 2 targets) we have the information to implement this check (modulo the targets where we don't properly support SIMD vectors yet, see the sub-issues of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116558). If a new target gets added in the future, it will default to reject all SIMD vector types until proper information is added, which is the default we want.
This will need approval by for `@rust-lang/lang.` Cc `@workingjubilee` `@veluca93`
try-job: test-various
try-job: armhf-gnu
try-job: dist-i586-gnu-i586-i686-musl
Ignore zero-sized types in wasm future-compat warning
This commit fixes a false positive of the warning triggered for #138762 and the fix is to codify that zero-sized types are "safe" in both the old and new ABIs.
Autodiff batching2
~I will rebase it once my first PR landed.~ done.
This autodiff batch mode is more similar to scalar autodiff, since it still only takes one shadow argument.
However, that argument is supposed to be `width` times larger.
r? `@oli-obk`
Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124509
This commit fixes a false positive of the warning triggered for #138762
and the fix is to codify that zero-sized types are "safe" in both the
old and new ABIs.
Normalize ADT field in `find_tails_for_unsizing`
See the comment inline and in the test.
TL;DR is that we're getting getting a type from a `type_of` query and then matching on it structurally in codegen, so we're obligated to normalize it. The fact that this wasn't triggered earlier is that all of the types that have `CoerceUnsized` implementations never encounter aliases when peeling the ADT down to their base reference/ptr type.
**NOTE**: I also renamed some things and reorganized the function a bit.
Fixes#139812Fixes#74451, which I didn't think was interesting enough to add another test.
r? oli-obk
Overhaul `AssocItem`
`AssocItem` has multiple fields that only make sense some of the time. E.g. the `name` can be empty if it's an RPITIT associated type. It's clearer and less error prone if these fields are moved to the relevant `kind` variants.
r? ``@fee1-dead``
`hir::AssocItem` currently has a boolean `fn_has_self_parameter` field,
which is misplaced, because it's only relevant for associated fns, not
for associated consts or types. This commit moves it (and renames it) to
the `AssocKind::Fn` variant, where it belongs.
This requires introducing a new C-style enum, `AssocTag`, which is like
`AssocKind` but without the fields. This is because `AssocKind` values
are passed to various functions like `find_by_ident_and_kind` to
indicate what kind of associated item should be searched for, and having
to specify `has_self` isn't relevant there.
New methods:
- Predicates `AssocItem::is_fn` and `AssocItem::is_method`.
- `AssocItem::as_tag` which converts `AssocItem::kind` to `AssocTag`.
Removed `find_by_name_and_kinds`, which is unused.
`AssocItem::descr` can now distinguish between methods and associated
functions, which slightly improves some error messages.
Rename some `name` variables as `ident`.
It bugs me when variables of type `Ident` are called `name`. It leads to silly things like `name.name`. `Ident` variables should be called `ident`, and `name` should be used for variables of type `Symbol`.
This commit improves things by by doing `s/name/ident/` on a bunch of `Ident` variables. Not all of them, but a decent chunk.
r? `@fee1-dead`
It bugs me when variables of type `Ident` are called `name`. It leads to
silly things like `name.name`. `Ident` variables should be called
`ident`, and `name` should be used for variables of type `Symbol`.
This commit improves things by by doing `s/name/ident/` on a bunch of
`Ident` variables. Not all of them, but a decent chunk.
Collect items referenced from var_debug_info
The collection is limited to full debuginfo builds to match behavior of FunctionCx::compute_per_local_var_debug_info.
Fixes#138942.
Revert <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138084> to buy time to
consider options that avoids breaking downstream usages of cargo on
distributed `rustc-src` artifacts, where such cargo invocations fail due
to inability to inherit `lints` from workspace root manifest's
`workspace.lints` (this is only valid for the source rust-lang/rust
workspace, but not really the distributed `rustc-src` artifacts).
This breakage was reported in
<https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138304>.
This reverts commit 48caf81484, reversing
changes made to c6662879b2.
By naming them in `[workspace.lints.rust]` in the top-level
`Cargo.toml`, and then making all `compiler/` crates inherit them with
`[lints] workspace = true`. (I omitted `rustc_codegen_{cranelift,gcc}`,
because they're a bit different.)
The advantages of this over the current approach:
- It uses a standard Cargo feature, rather than special handling in
bootstrap. So, easier to understand, and less likely to get
accidentally broken in the future.
- It works for proc macro crates.
It's a shame it doesn't work for rustc-specific lints, as the comments
explain.
ssa/mono: deduplicate `type_has_metadata`
The implementation of the `type_has_metadata` function is duplicated in `rustc_codegen_ssa` and `rustc_monomorphize`, so move this to `rustc_middle`.
vectorcall ABI: require SSE2
According to the official docs at https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/cpp/vectorcall, SSE2 is required for this ABI. Add a check that enforces this.
I put this together with the other checks ensuring the target features required for a function are present... however, since the ABI is known pre-monomorphization, it would be possible to do this check earlier, which would have the advantage of checking even in `cargo check`. It would have the disadvantage of spreading this code in yet more places.
The first commit just does a little refactoring of the mono-time ABI check to make it easier to add the new check.
Cc `@workingjubilee`
try-job: dist-i586-gnu-i586-i686-musl