Enable ConstGoto and SeparateConstSwitch passes by default
These 2 passes implement a limited form of jump-threading.
Filing this PR to see if enabling them would be lighter than https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107009.
Enable ScalarReplacementOfAggregates in optimized builds
Like MatchBranchSimplification, this pass is known to produce significant runtime improvements in Cranelift artifacts, and I believe based on the perf runs here that the primary effect of this pass is to empower MatchBranchSimplification. ScalarReplacementOfAggregates on its own has little effect on anything, but when this was rebased up to include https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112001 we started seeing significant and majority-positive results.
Based on the fact that we see most of the regressions in debug builds (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112002#issuecomment-1566270144) and some rather significant ones in cycles and wall time, I'm only enabling this in optimized builds at the moment.
Don't compute inlining status of mono items in advance.
We record inlining status for mono items in `MonoItems`, and then transfer it to `InliningMap`, for later use in
`InliningMap::with_inlining_candidates`.
But we can just compute inlining status directly in `InliningMap::with_inlining_candidates`, because the mono item is right there. There's no need to compute it in advance.
This commit changes the code to do that, removing the need for `MonoItems` and `InliningMap::inlines`. This does result in more calls to `instantiation_mode` (one per static occurrence) but the performance effect is negligible.
r? ``@wesleywiser``
Preserve substs in opaques recorded in typeck results
This means that we now prepopulate MIR with opaques with the right substs.
The first commit is a hack that I think we discussed, having to do with `DefiningAnchor::Bubble` basically being equivalent to `DefiningAnchor::Error` in the new solver, so having to use `DefiningAnchor::Bind` instead, lol.
r? `@lcnr`
Add a distinct `OperandValue::ZeroSized` variant for ZSTs
These tend to have special handling in a bunch of places anyway, so the variant helps remember that. And I think it's easier to grok than `Aggregate`s sometimes being `Immediates` (after all, I previously got that wrong and caused #109992). As a minor bonus, it means we don't need to generate poison LLVM values for ZSTs to pass around in `OperandValue::Immediate`s.
Inspired by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110021#discussion_r1160486991, so
r? `@compiler-errors`
Replace const eval limit by a lint and add an exponential backoff warning
The lint triggers at the first power of 2 that comes after 1 million function calls or traversed back-edges (takes less than a second on usual programs). After the first emission, an unsilenceable warning is repeated at every following power of 2 terminators, causing it to get reported less and less the longer the evaluation runs.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`
fixes#93481closes#67217
These tend to have special handling in a bunch of places anyway, so the variant helps remember that. And I think it's easier to grok than non-Scalar Aggregates sometimes being `Immediates` (like I got wrong and caused 109992). As a minor bonus, it means we don't need to generate poison LLVM values for them to pass around in `OperandValue::Immediate`s.
Uplift `clippy::cast_ref_to_mut` lint
This PR aims at uplifting the `clippy::cast_ref_to_mut` lint into rustc.
## `cast_ref_to_mut`
(deny-by-default)
The `cast_ref_to_mut` lint checks for casts of `&T` to `&mut T` without using interior mutability.
### Example
```rust,compile_fail
fn x(r: &i32) {
unsafe {
*(r as *const i32 as *mut i32) += 1;
}
}
```
### Explanation
Casting `&T` to `&mut T` without interior mutability is undefined behavior, as it's a violation of Rust reference aliasing requirements.
-----
Mostly followed the instructions for uplifting a clippy lint described here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/99696#pullrequestreview-1134072751
`@rustbot` label: +I-lang-nominated
r? compiler
-----
For Clippy:
changelog: Moves: Uplifted `clippy::cast_ref_to_mut` into rustc
linker: Report linker flavors incompatible with the current target
The linker flavor is checked for target compatibility even if linker is never used (e.g. we are producing a rlib).
If it causes trouble, we can move the check to `link.rs` so it will run if the linker (flavor) is actually used.
And also feature gate explicitly specifying linker flavors for tier 3 targets.
The next step is supporting all the internal linker flavors in user-visible interfaces (command line and json).
Only rewrite valtree-constants to patterns and keep other constants opaque
Now that we can reliably fall back to comparing constants with `PartialEq::eq` to the match scrutinee, we can
1. eagerly try to convert constants to valtrees
2. then deeply convert the valtree to a pattern
3. if the to-valtree conversion failed, create an "opaque constant" pattern.
This PR specifically avoids any behavioral changes or major cleanups. What we can now do as follow ups is
* move the two remaining call sites to `destructure_mir_constant` off that query
* make valtree to pattern conversion infallible
* this needs to be done after careful analysis of the effects. There may be user visible changes from that.
based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111768
We record inlining status for mono items in `MonoItems`, and then
transfer it to `InliningMap`, for later use in
`InliningMap::with_inlining_candidates`.
But we can just compute inlining status directly in
`InliningMap::with_inlining_candidates`, because the mono item is right
there. There's no need to compute it in advance.
This commit changes the code to do that, removing the need for
`MonoItems` and `InliningMap::inlines`. This does result in more calls
to `instantiation_mode` (one per static occurrence) but the performance
effect is negligible.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #111772 (Fix linkage for large binaries on mips64 platforms)
- #111975 (Stop normalizing so many different prefixes)
- #111979 (Respect CARGOFLAGS in bootstrap.py)
- #112089 (Add `--warnings warn` flag to `x.py`)
- #112103 (Bootstrap update to 1.71 beta)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Stop normalizing so many different prefixes
Previously, we would normalize *all* of
- the absolute path to the repository checkout
- the /rustc/$sha for stage1 (if `remap-debuginfo` was enabled)
- the /rustc/$sha for download-rustc
- the sysroot for download-rustc
Now, we consistently only normalize /rustc/FAKE_PREFIX. Not only is this much simpler, but it also avoids ongoing maintenance for download-rustc and makes it much less likely that tests break by accident.
- Change `tests/ui/track-diagnostics/track6.rs` to use a relative path instead of an absolute one. I am not actually sure why `track_caller` works here, but it does seem to work 🤷
- Pass `-Zsimulate-remapped-rust-src-base=/rustc/FAKE_PREFIX` to all suites, not just UI. In particular, mir-opt tests emit /rustc/ paths in their output.
r? ```@cjgillot``` since you reviewed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110699 - this is the test that it doesn't regress :)
Fix linkage for large binaries on mips64 platforms
This pull request fixes the linkage for large binaries on mips64 platforms by enabling the `xgot` feature in LLVM.
It is well understood that the generated binary will gain a hefty performance penalty where the external symbol jumps now cost at least three instructions each.
Also, this pull request does not address the same issue on the mips32 counterparts (due to being unable to test the changes thoroughly).
Should fix#52108
move `super_relate_consts` hack to `normalize_param_env_or_error`
`super_relate_consts` has as hack in it to work around the fact that `normalize_param_env_or_error` is broken. When relating two constants we attempt to evaluate them (aka normalize them). This is not an issue in any way specific to const generics, type aliases also have the same issue as demonstrated in [this code](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=84b6d3956a2c852a04b60782476b56c9).
Since the hack in `super_relate_consts` only exists to make `normalize_param_env_or_error` emit less errors move it to `normalize_param_env_or_error`. This makes `super_relate_consts` act more like the normal plain structural equality its supposed to and should help ensure that the hack doesnt accidentally affect other situations.
r? `@compiler-errors`
offset_of: don't require type to be `Sized`
Fixes#112051
~~The RFC [explicitly forbids](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3308-offset_of.html#limitations) non-`Sized` types, but it looks like only the fields being recursed into were checked. The sized check also seemed to have been completely missing for tuples~~
Remove `-Zcgu-partitioning-strategy`.
This option was introduced three years ago, but it's never been meaningfully used, and `default` is the only acceptable value.
Also, I think the `Partition` trait presents an interface that is too closely tied to the existing strategy and would probably be wrong for other strategies. (My rule of thumb is to not make something generic until there are at least two instances of it, to avoid this kind of problem.)
Also, I don't think providing multiple partitioning strategies to the user is a good idea, because the compiler already has enough obscure knobs.
This commit removes the option, along with the `Partition` trait, and the `Partitioner` and `DefaultPartitioning` types. I left the existing code in `compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/partitioning/default.rs`, though I could be persuaded that moving it into
`compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/partitioning/mod.rs` is better.
r? ``@wesleywiser``
change `BorrowKind::Unique` to be a mutating `PlaceContext`
fixes#112056
I believe that `BorrowKind::Unique` is a footgun in general, so I added a FIXME and opened https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/112072. This is a bit too involved for this PR though.
refactor and cleanup the leak check, add it to new solver
ended up being a bit more involved than I wanted but is hopefully still easy enough to review as a single PR, can split it into separate ones otherwise.
this can be reviewed commit by commit:
a473d55cdb9284aa2b01282d1b529a2a4d26547b 31a686646534ca006d906ec757ece4e771d6f973 949039c107852a5e36361c08b62821a0613656f5 242917bf5170d9a723c6c8e23e9d9d0c2fa8dc9d ed2b25a7aa28be3184be9e3022c2796a30eaad87 are all pretty straightforward.
03dd83b4c3f4ff27558f5c8ab859bd9f83db1d04 makes it easier to refactor coherence in a later commit, see the commit description, cc `@oli-obk`
4fe311d807a77b6270f384e41689bf5d58f46aec I don't quite remember what we wanted to test here, this definitely doesn't test that the occurs check doesn't cause incorrect errors in coherence, also cc `@oli-obk` here. I may end up writing a new test for this myself later.
5c200d88a91b75bd0875b973150655bd581ef97a is the main refactor of the leak check, changing it to take the `outer_universe` instead of getting it from a snapshot. Using a snapshot requires us to be in a probe which we aren't in the new solver, it also just feels dirty as snapshots don't really have anything to do with universes.
with all of this cfc230d54188d9c7ed867a9a0d1f51be77b485f9 is now kind of trivial.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Don't typecheck recovered method call from suggestion
Only make the use-dot-operator-to-call-method suggestion, but do not double down and use the recovered type to perform method call typechecking as it will produce confusing diagnostics relevant for the *fixed* code.
### Code Sample
```rust
struct Client;
impl Client {
fn post<T: std::ops::Add>(&self, _: T, _: T) {}
}
fn f() {
let c = Client;
post(c, ());
}
```
### Before This PR
```
error[[E0277]](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/error_codes/E0277.html): cannot add `()` to `()`
--> src/lib.rs:9:5
|
9 | post(c, ());
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ no implementation for `() + ()`
|
= help: the trait `Add` is not implemented for `()`
note: required by a bound in `Client::post`
--> src/lib.rs:4:16
|
4 | fn post<T: std::ops::Add>(&self, _: T, _: T) {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `Client::post`
error[[E0061]](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/error_codes/E0061.html): this function takes 2 arguments but 1 argument was supplied
--> src/lib.rs:9:5
|
9 | post(c, ());
| ^^^^ an argument of type `()` is missing
|
note: method defined here
--> src/lib.rs:4:8
|
4 | fn post<T: std::ops::Add>(&self, _: T, _: T) {}
| ^^^^ ----- ---- ----
help: provide the argument
|
9 | post((), ())(c, ());
| ++++++++
error[[E0425]](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/error_codes/E0425.html): cannot find function `post` in this scope
--> src/lib.rs:9:5
|
9 | post(c, ());
| ^^^^ not found in this scope
|
help: use the `.` operator to call the method `post` on `&Client`
|
9 - post(c, ());
9 + c.post(());
|
Some errors have detailed explanations: E0061, E0277, E0425.
For more information about an error, try `rustc --explain E0061`.
```
### After This PR
```
error[E0425]: cannot find function `post` in this scope
--> tests/ui/typeck/issue-106929.rs:9:5
|
9 | post(c, ());
| ^^^^ not found in this scope
|
help: use the `.` operator to call the method `post` on `&Client`
|
9 - post(c, ());
9 + c.post(());
|
error: aborting due to previous error
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0425`.
```
Fixes#106929.
`EarlyBinder::new` -> `EarlyBinder::bind`
for consistency with `Binder::bind`. it may make sense to also add `EarlyBinder::dummy` in places where we know that no parameters exist, but I left that out of this PR.
r? `@jackh726` `@kylematsuda`
fix: dedup `static_candidates` before report
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/103646
`record_static_candidate` had been executed twice, resulting in the presence of two identical `CandidateSource::Trait(Cat)` in static_candidates. This PR aims to deduplication the `static_candidates` list, allowing it to execute `suggest_associated_call_syntax` properly.
Uplift `clippy::invalid_utf8_in_unchecked` lint
This PR aims at uplifting the `clippy::invalid_utf8_in_unchecked` lint into two lints.
## `invalid_from_utf8_unchecked`
(deny-by-default)
The `invalid_from_utf8_unchecked` lint checks for calls to `std::str::from_utf8_unchecked` and `std::str::from_utf8_unchecked_mut` with an invalid UTF-8 literal.
### Example
```rust
unsafe {
std::str::from_utf8_unchecked(b"cl\x82ippy");
}
```
### Explanation
Creating such a `str` would result in undefined behavior as per documentation for `std::str::from_utf8_unchecked` and `std::str::from_utf8_unchecked_mut`.
## `invalid_from_utf8`
(warn-by-default)
The `invalid_from_utf8` lint checks for calls to `std::str::from_utf8` and `std::str::from_utf8_mut` with an invalid UTF-8 literal.
### Example
```rust
std::str::from_utf8(b"ru\x82st");
```
### Explanation
Trying to create such a `str` would always return an error as per documentation for `std::str::from_utf8` and `std::str::from_utf8_mut`.
-----
Mostly followed the instructions for uplifting a clippy lint described here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/99696#pullrequestreview-1134072751
````@rustbot```` label: +I-lang-nominated
r? compiler
-----
For Clippy:
changelog: Moves: Uplifted `clippy::invalid_utf8_in_unchecked` into rustc
we can otherwise assign a hidden type to the opaque which
causes ICE if we don't use `take_opaque_types` during
coherence. This is annoying so I didn't bother. Added a test
showing the behavior this prevents.
Optimize scalar and scalar pair representations loaded from ByRef in llvm
in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105653 I noticed that we were generating suboptimal LLVM IR if we had a `ConstValue::ByRef` that could be represented by a `ScalarPair`. Before https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105653 this is probably rare, but after it, every slice will go down this suboptimal code path that requires LLVM to untangle a bunch of indirections and translate static allocations that are only used once to read a scalar pair from.
Only make the use-dot-operator-to-call-method suggestion, but do not
double down and use the recovered type to perform method call
typechecking as it will produce confusing diagnostics on the "fixed"
code.
This option was introduced three years ago, but it's never been
meaningfully used, and `default` is the only acceptable value.
Also, I think the `Partition` trait presents an interface that is too
closely tied to the existing strategy and would probably be wrong for
other strategies. (My rule of thumb is to not make something generic
until there are at least two instances of it, to avoid this kind of
problem.)
Also, I don't think providing multiple partitioning strategies to the
user is a good idea, because the compiler already has enough obscure
knobs.
This commit removes the option, along with the `Partition` trait, and
the `Partitioner` and `DefaultPartitioning` types. I left the existing
code in `compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/partitioning/default.rs`,
though I could be persuaded that moving it into
`compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/partitioning/mod.rs` is better.
Make `TyKind: Debug` have less verbose output
Current `TyKind: Debug` impl is basically unusable for debugging, its too verbose even for verbose debugging 🤣 This PR replaces the debug logic for `TyKind` with a more manual debug impl instead of a hand expanded derived impl. This should help make #107084 more reasonable to land since the output of `Ty: Debug` will be better.
This isn't a fully completed change to the `Debug` impl of `TyKind` as there's still logic from the derive macro for some variants. Some of the variants are also not consisten with the `-Zverbose` printing of `Ty`, ideally `-Zverbose` printing of `Ty` would also just defer to the debug impl instead of having lots of checks in pretty printing. I plan on fixing this in follow up PRs since it seems tricky to do in this one and its already a large PR 😅
Add build instructions for cranelift backend as part of Rust repo
All other instructions assume that user works with separate repository than Rust compiler repository. When one follows default instructions, cranelift codegen tries to use different sys-root and compiler internal crates which leads to compiler errors when building it.
I needed to do all this steps while adding new intrinsic to rustc.
r? bjorn3
Go through an intermediate pair of `cc`and `lld` hints instead of mapping CLI options to `LinkerFlavor` directly, and use the target's default linker flavor as a reference.
Load only the crate header for `locator::crate_matches`
Previously, we used the following info to determine whether to load the crate:
1. The METADATA_HEADER, which includes a METADATA_VERSION constant
2. The embedded rustc version
3. Various metadata in the `CrateRoot`, including the SVH
This worked ok most of the time. Unfortunately, when building locally the rustc version is always
the same because `omit-git-hash` is on by default. That meant that we depended only on 1 and 3, and
we are not very good about bumping METADATA_VERSION (it's currently at 7) so in practice we were
only depending on 3. `CrateRoot` is a very large struct and changes somewhat regularly, so this led
to a steady stream of crashes from trying to load it.
Change the logic to add an intermediate step between 2 and 3: introduce a new `CrateHeader` struct
that contains only the minimum info needed to decide whether the crate should be loaded or not. That
avoids having to load all of `CrateRoot`, which in practice means we should crash much less often.
Note that this works because the SVH should be different between any two dependencies, even if the
compiler has changed, because we use `-Zbinary-dep-depinfo` in bootstrap. See
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111329#issuecomment-1538303474 for more details about how the
original crash happened.
Use `Cow` in `{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage`.
Each of `{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage::{Str,Eager}` has a comment:
```
// FIXME(davidtwco): can a `Cow<'static, str>` be used here?
```
This commit answers that question in the affirmative. It's not the most compelling change ever, but it might be worth merging.
This requires changing the `impl<'a> From<&'a str>` impls to `impl From<&'static str>`, which involves a bunch of knock-on changes that require/result in call sites being a little more precise about exactly what kind of string they use to create errors, and not just `&str`. This will result in fewer unnecessary allocations, though this will not have any notable perf effects given that these are error paths.
Note that I was lazy within Clippy, using `to_string` in a few places to preserve the existing string imprecision. I could have used `impl Into<{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage>` in various places as is done in the compiler, but that would have required changes to *many* call sites (mostly changing `&format("...")` to `format!("...")`) which didn't seem worthwhile.
r? `@WaffleLapkin`
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #112029 (Recover upon mistyped error on typo'd `const` in const param def)
- #112037 (Add details about `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` to E0133)
- #112039 (compiler: update solaris/illumos to enable tsan support.)
- #112042 (Migrate GUI colors test to original CSS color format)
- #112045 (Followup to #111973)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Recover upon mistyped error on typo'd `const` in const param def
And add machine-applicable fix for the typo'd `const` keyword.
### Before
```
error: expected one of `,`, `:`, `=`, or `>`, found `N`
--> src/lib.rs:1:18
|
1 | pub fn bar<Const N: u8>() {}
| ^ expected one of `,`, `:`, `=`, or `>`
```
### After This PR
```
error: `const` keyword was mistyped as `Const`
--> test.rs:1:8
|
1 | fn bar<Const N: u8>() {}
| ^^^^^
|
help: use the `const` keyword
|
1 | fn bar<const N: u8>() {}
| ~~~~~
```
Fixes#111941.
Inline derived `hash`
Because most of the other derived functions are inlined: `clone`, `default`, `eq`, `partial_cmp`, `cmp`. The exception is `fmt`, but it tends to not be on hot paths as much.
r? `@ghost`
Each of `{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage::{Str,Eager}` has a comment:
```
// FIXME(davidtwco): can a `Cow<'static, str>` be used here?
```
This commit answers that question in the affirmative. It's not the most
compelling change ever, but it might be worth merging.
This requires changing the `impl<'a> From<&'a str>` impls to `impl
From<&'static str>`, which involves a bunch of knock-on changes that
require/result in call sites being a little more precise about exactly
what kind of string they use to create errors, and not just `&str`. This
will result in fewer unnecessary allocations, though this will not have
any notable perf effects given that these are error paths.
Note that I was lazy within Clippy, using `to_string` in a few places to
preserve the existing string imprecision. I could have used `impl
Into<{D,Subd}iagnosticMessage>` in various places as is done in the
compiler, but that would have required changes to *many* call sites
(mostly changing `&format("...")` to `format!("...")`) which didn't seem
worthwhile.
MIR: opt-in normalization of `BasicBlock` and `Local` numbering
This doesn't matter at all for actual codegen, but after spending some time reading pre-codegen MIR, I was wishing I didn't have to jump around so much in reading post-inlining code.
So this add two passes that are off by default for every mir level, but can be enabled (`-Zmir-enable-passes=+ReorderBasicBlocks,+ReorderLocals`) for humans.
Make `EarlyBinder`'s inner value private
Currently, `EarlyBinder(T)`'s inner value is public, which allows implicitly skipping the binder by indexing into the tuple struct (i.e., `x.0`). `@lcnr` suggested making `EarlyBinder`'s inner value private so users are required to explicitly call `skip_binder` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105779#issuecomment-1549933424) .
This PR makes the inner value private, adds `EarlyBinder::new` for constructing a new instance, and replaces uses of `x.0` with `x.skip_binder()` (or similar). It also adds some documentation to `EarlyBinder::skip_binder` explaining how to skip the binder of `&EarlyBinder<T>` to get `&T` now that the inner value is private (since previously we could just do `&x.0`).
r? `@lcnr`
Use only one shard with a single thread
This changes `Sharded` to only access a single shard using a mask set to `0` when a single thread is used, which leads to cache utilization improvements.
Performance improvement with 1 thread and `cfg(parallel_compiler)`:
<table><tr><td rowspan="2">Benchmark</td><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th></tr><tr><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">%</th></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>clap</b>:check</td><td align="right">1.7402s</td><td align="right">1.7004s</td><td align="right">💚 -2.29%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.2633s</td><td align="right">0.2550s</td><td align="right">💚 -3.12%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.9716s</td><td align="right">0.9482s</td><td align="right">💚 -2.41%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check</td><td align="right">1.5679s</td><td align="right">1.5358s</td><td align="right">💚 -2.05%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check</td><td align="right">6.0569s</td><td align="right">5.9272s</td><td align="right">💚 -2.14%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">10.5999s</td><td align="right">10.3666s</td><td align="right">💚 -2.20%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">0.9760s</td><td align="right">💚 -2.40%</td></tr></table>
cc `@SparrowLii`
Don't check for misaligned raw pointer derefs inside Rvalue::AddressOf
From https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112026#issuecomment-1565686697:
rustc 1.70 (stable next week) added a Mir pass to add pointer alignment checks in debug mode. Adding these checks caused some crates to break, but that was expected, since they contain broken code (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111487) for tracking that.
However, the checks added are slightly more aggressive than they should have been. Specifically, they also check the place in an `addr_of!` expression. Whether lack of alignment there is or isn't UB is unclear. This PR modifies the pass to not affect those cases.
I spot checked the crater regressions and the ones I saw were not the case that this PR is modifying. It still seems good to not land anything overaggressive though
Enable MatchBranchSimplification
This pass is one of the small number of benefits from `-Zmir-opt-level=3` that has motivated rustc_codegen_cranelift to use it:
19ed0aade6/compiler/rustc_codegen_cranelift/build_system/build_sysroot.rs (L244-L246)
Cranelift's motivation for this is _runtime_ performance improvements in debug builds. Lifting this pass all the way to `-Zmir-opt-level=1` seems to come without significant perf overhead, so that's what I'm suggesting here.
Add support for LLVM SafeStack
Adds support for LLVM [SafeStack] which provides backward edge control
flow protection by separating the stack into two parts: data which is
only accessed in provable safe ways is allocated on the normal stack
(the "safe stack") and all other data is placed in a separate allocation
(the "unsafe stack").
SafeStack support is enabled by passing `-Zsanitizer=safestack`.
[SafeStack]: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SafeStack.html
cc `@rcvalle` #39699
Add warn-by-default lint when local binding shadows exported glob re-export item
This PR introduces a warn-by-default rustc lint for when a local binding (a use statement, or a type declaration) produces a name which shadows an exported glob re-export item, causing the name from the exported glob re-export to be hidden (see #111336).
### Unresolved Questions
- [x] ~~Is this approach correct? While it passes the UI tests, I'm not entirely convinced it is correct.~~ Seems to be ok now.
- [x] ~~What should the lint be called / how should it be worded? I don't like calling `use x::*;` or `struct Foo;` a "local binding" but they are `NameBinding`s internally if I'm not mistaken.~~ ~~The lint is called `local_binding_shadows_glob_reexport` for now, unless a better name is suggested.~~ `hidden_glob_reexports`.
Fixes#111336.
rustc driver: Remove argument 0 before at-expansion to prevent ICE
Under Unix-based operating systems, when I execute rustc by setting argv0 to ``@/dev/null`,` it will expand command-line arguments from this file, leading to an empty arglist, which then triggers an ICE by trying to remove first argument.
The panic message is this:
```
thread 'main' panicked at 'range start index 1 out of range for slice of length 0', compiler/rustc_driver/src/lib.rs:972:17
```
My fix is to remove the first argument before expanding arguments.
<details>
<summary>Full backtrace</summary>
```sh
% (exec -a `@/dev/null` `rustup which rustc`)
thread 'main' panicked at 'range start index 1 out of range for slice of length 0', compiler/rustc_driver/src/lib.rs:972:17
stack backtrace:
0: 0x7fcec776659a - std::backtrace_rs::backtrace::libunwind::trace::h595f06c70adcc478
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/../../backtrace/src/backtrace/libunwind.rs:93:5
1: 0x7fcec776659a - std::backtrace_rs::backtrace::trace_unsynchronized::h177a0149c76cdde9
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/../../backtrace/src/backtrace/mod.rs:66:5
2: 0x7fcec776659a - std::sys_common::backtrace::_print_fmt::hc0701fd2c3530c58
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/sys_common/backtrace.rs:65:5
3: 0x7fcec776659a - <std::sys_common::backtrace::_print::DisplayBacktrace as core::fmt::Display>::fmt::hd4cd115d8750fd6c
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/sys_common/backtrace.rs:44:22
4: 0x7fcec77c839e - core::fmt::write::h93e2f5923c7eca08
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/core/src/fmt/mod.rs:1213:17
5: 0x7fcec7756be5 - std::io::Write::write_fmt::h8162dbb45f0b9e62
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/io/mod.rs:1682:15
6: 0x7fcec7766365 - std::sys_common::backtrace::_print::h1835ef8a8f9066da
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/sys_common/backtrace.rs:47:5
7: 0x7fcec7766365 - std::sys_common::backtrace::print::hcb5e6388b9235f41
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/sys_common/backtrace.rs:34:9
8: 0x7fcec776912f - std::panicking::default_hook::{{closure}}::h9c084969ccf9a722
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:267:22
9: 0x7fcec7768e6b - std::panicking::default_hook::h68fa2ba3c3c6c12f
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:286:9
10: 0x7fcecaab56e4 - <rustc_driver[f4ad927b3c57833d]::DEFAULT_HOOK::{closure#0}::{closure#0} as core[d16e85342ea223d9]::ops::function::FnOnce<(&core[d16e85342ea223d9]::panic::panic_info::PanicInfo,)>>::call_once::{shim:vtable#0}
11: 0x7fcec776996a - <alloc::boxed::Box<F,A> as core::ops::function::Fn<Args>>::call::h4e6ced11e07d8b24
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/alloc/src/boxed.rs:2002:9
12: 0x7fcec776996a - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook::h8d5c434518ef298c
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:692:13
13: 0x7fcec77696e9 - std::panicking::begin_panic_handler::{{closure}}::hf33414f5dabf6faf
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:579:13
14: 0x7fcec7766a4c - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::hc50389427413bb75
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/sys_common/backtrace.rs:137:18
15: 0x7fcec77693f2 - rust_begin_unwind
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:575:5
16: 0x7fcec77c4d43 - core::panicking::panic_fmt::h2de7a7938f816de8
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/core/src/panicking.rs:64:14
17: 0x7fcec77cb492 - core::slice::index::slice_start_index_len_fail_rt::h0c87d85ce11d10f6
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/core/src/slice/index.rs:53:5
18: 0x7fcec77cb416 - core::slice::index::slice_start_index_len_fail::h504609f2a6b168d1
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/core/src/slice/index.rs:41:9
19: 0x7fceca0eca1f - rustc_driver[f4ad927b3c57833d]::handle_options
20: 0x7fceca0e037f - <rustc_driver[f4ad927b3c57833d]::RunCompiler>::run
21: 0x7fceca0dfd0d - <core[d16e85342ea223d9]::panic::unwind_safe::AssertUnwindSafe<rustc_driver[f4ad927b3c57833d]::main::{closure#0}> as core[d16e85342ea223d9]::ops::function::FnOnce<()>>::call_once
22: 0x7fceca17ce89 - rustc_driver[f4ad927b3c57833d]::main
23: 0x564f5f008a87 - rustc_main[f164605d1302e295]::main
24: 0x564f5f008973 - std[3da461b304582a2c]::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::<fn(), ()>
25: 0x564f5f008969 - <std[3da461b304582a2c]::rt::lang_start<()>::{closure#0} as core[d16e85342ea223d9]::ops::function::FnOnce<()>>::call_once::{shim:vtable#0}
26: 0x7fcec774795c - core::ops::function::impls::<impl core::ops::function::FnOnce<A> for &F>::call_once::h699977d052768608
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:287:13
27: 0x7fcec774795c - std::panicking::try::do_call::h4e121e623c70f903
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:483:40
28: 0x7fcec774795c - std::panicking::try::hf9d919e062bc178a
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:447:19
29: 0x7fcec774795c - std::panic::catch_unwind::h7a7b12272684cb97
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panic.rs:140:14
30: 0x7fcec774795c - std::rt::lang_start_internal::{{closure}}::hd96b0eb4844b8762
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/rt.rs:148:48
31: 0x7fcec774795c - std::panicking::try::do_call::h1af1f88f4f92a22c
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:483:40
32: 0x7fcec774795c - std::panicking::try::hf20d7abea7f0f097
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panicking.rs:447:19
33: 0x7fcec774795c - std::panic::catch_unwind::hb0e084c3a9c042e4
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/panic.rs:140:14
34: 0x7fcec774795c - std::rt::lang_start_internal::hca9d5c7277f5b67c
at /rustc/2c8cc343237b8f7d5a3c3703e3a87f2eb2c54a74/library/std/src/rt.rs:148:20
35: 0x564f5f008ab7 - main
36: 0x7fcec74a1790 - <unknown>
37: 0x7fcec74a184a - __libc_start_main
38: 0x564f5f00899e - <unknown>
39: 0x0 - <unknown>
error: internal compiler error: unexpected panic
note: the compiler unexpectedly panicked. this is a bug.
note: we would appreciate a bug report: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/new?labels=C-bug%2C+I-ICE%2C+T-compiler&template=ice.md
note: rustc 1.68.0 (2c8cc3432 2023-03-06) running on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
query stack during panic:
end of query stack
```
</details>
I also checked if I can trigger a similar problem by passing empty argument list to `execve`, but at least under Linux, it seems to always insert an empty first argument if there are none.
Perform MIR type ops locally in new solver
The new solver already does caching, and it's generally more correct to be using the infcx of the MIR typeck (which has the defining anchor set correctly and has already initialized all the opaques from HIR typeck).
This is based on #111918 so look at the final 3 commits.
This actually causes some tests to go from passing to failing, and failing to passing. Here's the full diff: https://www.diffchecker.com/hB4bh1A9/
Putting this up for exposure mostly.
r? `@lcnr`
fix for `Self` not respecting tuple Ctor privacy
This PR fixes#111220 by checking the privacy of tuple constructors using `Self`, so the following code now errors
```rust
mod my {
pub struct Foo(&'static str);
}
impl AsRef<str> for my::Foo {
fn as_ref(&self) -> &str {
let Self(s) = self; // previously compiled, now errors correctly
s
}
}
```
Change ty and const error's pretty printing to be in braces
`[const error]` and `[type error]` are slightly confusing since they look like either a slice with an error type for the element ty or a slice with a const argument as the type ???. This PR changes them to display as `{const error}` and `{type error}` similar to `{integer}`.
This does not update the `Debug` impls for them which is done in #111988.
I updated some error logic to avoid printing the substs of trait refs when unable to resolve an assoc item for them, this avoids emitting errors with `{type error}` in them. The substs are not relevant for these errors since we don't take into account the substs when resolving the assoc item.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
improve error message for calling a method on a raw pointer with an unknown pointee
The old error message had very confusing wording.
Also added some more test cases besides the single edition test.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Adds support for LLVM [SafeStack] which provides backward edge control
flow protection by separating the stack into two parts: data which is
only accessed in provable safe ways is allocated on the normal stack
(the "safe stack") and all other data is placed in a separate allocation
(the "unsafe stack").
SafeStack support is enabled by passing `-Zsanitizer=safestack`.
[SafeStack]: https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SafeStack.html
Previously, we would normalize *all* of
- the absolute path to the repository checkout
- the /rustc/$sha for stage1 (if `remap-debuginfo` was enabled)
- the /rustc/$sha for download-rustc
- the sysroot for download-rustc
Now, we consistently only normalize /rustc/FAKE_PREFIX. Not only is this
much simpler, but it also avoids ongoing maintenance for download-rustc
and makes it much less likely that tests break by accident.
- Change `tests/ui/track-diagnostics/track6.rs` to use a relative path
instead of an absolute one. I am not actually sure why `track_caller`
works here, but it does seem to work 🤷
- Pass `-Zsimulate-remapped-rust-src-base=/rustc/FAKE_PREFIX` to all
suites, not just UI. In particular, mir-opt tests emit /rustc/ paths
in their output.
Previously, we used the following info to determine whether to load the crate:
1. The METADATA_HEADER, which includes a METADATA_VERSION constant
2. The embedded rustc version
3. Various metadata in the `CrateRoot`, including the SVH
This worked ok most of the time. Unfortunately, when building locally the rustc version is always
the same because `omit-git-hash` is on by default. That meant that we depended only on 1 and 3, and
we are not very good about bumping METADATA_VERSION (it's currently at 7) so in practice we were
only depending on 3. `CrateRoot` is a very large struct and changes somewhat regularly, so this led
to a steady stream of crashes from trying to load it.
Change the logic to add an intermediate step between 2 and 3: introduce a new `CrateHeader` struct
that contains only the minimum info needed to decide whether the crate should be loaded or not. That
avoids having to load all of `CrateRoot`, which in practice means we should crash much less often.
Note that this works because the SVH should be different between any two dependencies, even if the
compiler has changed, because we use `-Zbinary-dep-depinfo` in bootstrap. See
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111329#issuecomment-1538303474 for more details about how the
original crash happened.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #111384 (Fix linking Mac Catalyst by including LC_BUILD_VERSION in object files)
- #111899 (CGU cleanups)
- #111940 (Clarify safety concern of `io::Read::read` is only relevant in unsafe code)
- #111947 (Add test for RPIT defined with different hidden types with different substs)
- #111951 (Correct comment on privately uninhabited pattern.)
Failed merges:
- #111954 (improve error message for calling a method on a raw pointer with an unknown pointee)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix linking Mac Catalyst by including LC_BUILD_VERSION in object files
Hello. My first rustc PR!
Issue #106021 prevents Rust code from being linked into Mac Catalyst applications. Apple's LD has started requiring object files to contain version information about the platform they were built for, such as:
* the "deployment target" (minimum supported OS version),
* the SDK version
* the type of the platform (macOS/iOS/catalyst/tvOS/watchOS all have a different number).
This is currently only enforced when building for Mac Catalyst.
Rust uses the `object` crate which added support for including this information starting with `0.31.0`. ~~I upgraded it along with `thorin-dwp` so that everything depends on 0.31.
Apparently 0.31 [pulls in](https://github.com/gimli-rs/object/issues/463) `ruzstd` due to a [new ELF standard](https://maskray.me/blog/2022-09-09-zstd-compressed-debug-sections) because its `compression` feature is enabled by thorin. If you find this objectionable, let me know what the best way to avoid pulling in those dependencies might be.~~
**(`object` upgraded in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111413)**
I then added two commits:
* The first one adds very basic, hard-coded support for calling `set_macho_build_version` for `-macabi` (Catalyst) targets, where it claims deployment target of Catalyst 14.0 and SDK of 16.2.
* The second weaves the versioning through `rust_target::spec::TargetOptions`, so that we can stick to specifying all target-related info in one place.
Kudos to ``@ara4n`` for writing [this gist](https://gist.github.com/ara4n/320a53ea768aba51afad4c9ed2168536).
This fixes#111220 by checking the privacy of tuple constructors using `Self`, so the following code now errors
```rust
mod my {
pub struct Foo(&'static str);
}
impl AsRef<str> for my::Foo {
fn as_ref(&self) -> &str {
let Self(s) = self; // previously compiled, now errors correctly
s
}
}
```
Ensure Fluent messages are in alphabetical order
Fixes#111847
This adds a tidy check to ensure Fluent messages are in alphabetical order, as well as sorting all existing messages. I think the error could be worded better, would appreciate suggestions.
<details>
<summary>Script used to sort files</summary>
```py
import sys
import re
fn = sys.argv[1]
with open(fn, 'r') as f:
data = f.read().split("\n")
chunks = []
cur = ""
for line in data:
if re.match(r"^([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)\s*=\s*", line):
chunks.append(cur)
cur = ""
cur += line + "\n"
chunks.append(cur)
chunks.sort()
with open(fn, 'w') as f:
f.write(''.join(chunks).strip("\n\n") + "\n")
```
</details>
Don't print newlines in APITs
This is kind of a hack, but it gets the job done because the only "special" formatting that (afaict) `rustc_ast_pretty` does is break with newlines sometimes.
Fixesrust-lang/measureme#207
Always capture slice when pattern requires checking the length
Fixes#111751
cc ``@zirconium-n,`` I see you were assigned to this but I've fixed some similar issues in the past and had an idea on how to investigate this.
Consider lint check attributes on match arms
Currently, lint check attributes on match arms have no effect for some lints. This PR makes some lint passes to take those attributes into account.
- `LateContextAndPass` for late lint doesn't update `last_node_with_lint_attrs` when it visits match arms. This leads to lint check attributes on match arms taking no effects on late lints that operate on the arms' pattern:
```rust
match value {
#[deny(non_snake_case)]
PAT => {} // `non_snake_case` only warned due to default lint level
}
```
To be honest, I'm not sure whether this is intentional or just an oversight. I've dug the implementation history and searched up issues/PRs but couldn't find any discussion on this.
- `MatchVisitor` doesn't update its lint level when it visits match arms. This leads to check lint attributes on match arms taking no effect on some lints handled by this visitor, namely: `bindings_with_variant_name` and `irrefutable_let_patterns`.
This seems to be a fallout from #108504. Before 05082f57af, when the visitor operated on HIR rather than THIR, check lint attributes for the said lints were effective. [This playground][play] compiles successfully on current stable (1.69) but fails on current beta and nightly.
I wasn't sure where best to place the test for this. Let me know if there's a better place.
[play]: https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=38432b79e535cb175f8f7d6d236d29c3
[play-match]: https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=beta&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=629aa71b7c84b269beadeba664e2221d
Because most of the other derived functions are inlined: `clone`,
`default`, `eq`, `partial_cmp`, `cmp`. The exception is `fmt`, but it
tends to not be on hot paths as much.
All other instructions assume that user works with separate repository than Rust compiler repository. When one follows default instructions, cranelift codegen tries to use different sys-root and compiler internal crates which leads to compiler errors when building it.
I needed to do all this steps while adding new intrinsic to rustc.
Support #[global_allocator] without the allocator shim
This makes it possible to use liballoc/libstd in combination with `--emit obj` if you use `#[global_allocator]`. This is what rust-for-linux uses right now and systemd may use in the future. Currently they have to depend on the exact implementation of the allocator shim to create one themself as `--emit obj` doesn't create an allocator shim.
Note that currently the allocator shim also defines the oom error handler, which is normally required too. Once `#![feature(default_alloc_error_handler)]` becomes the only option, this can be avoided. In addition when using only fallible allocator methods and either `--cfg no_global_oom_handling` for liballoc (like rust-for-linux) or `--gc-sections` no references to the oom error handler will exist.
To avoid this feature being insta-stable, you will have to define `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` to avoid linker errors.
(Labeling this with both T-compiler and T-lang as it originally involved both an implementation detail and had an insta-stable user facing change. As noted above, the `__rust_no_alloc_shim_is_unstable` symbol requirement should prevent unintended dependence on this unstable feature.)
Handle opaques in the new solver (take 2?)
Implement a new strategy for handling opaques in the new solver.
First, queries now carry both their defining anchor and the opaques that were defined in the inference context at the time of canonicalization. These are both used to pre-populate the inference context used by the canonical query.
Second, use the normalizes-to goal to handle opaque types in the new solver. This means that opaques are handled like projection aliases, but with their own rules:
* Can only define opaques if they're "defining uses" (i.e. have unique params in all their substs).
* Can only define opaques that are from the anchor.
* Opaque type definitions are modulo regions. So that means `Opaque<'?0r> = HiddenTy1` and `Opaque<?'1r> = HiddenTy2` equate `HiddenTy1` and `HiddenTy2` instead of defining them as different opaque type keys.
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #95198 (Add slice::{split_,}{first,last}_chunk{,_mut})
- #109899 (Use apple-m1 as target CPU for aarch64-apple-darwin.)
- #111624 (Emit diagnostic for privately uninhabited uncovered witnesses.)
- #111875 (Don't leak the function that is called on drop)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Don't leak the function that is called on drop
It probably wasn't causing problems anyway, but still, a `// this leaks, please don't pass anything that owns memory` is not sustainable.
I could implement a version which does not require `Option`, but it would require `unsafe`, at which point it's probably not worth it.
Use apple-m1 as target CPU for aarch64-apple-darwin.
This updates the target CPU for the `aarch64-apple-darwin` target to `apple-m1`, which is the first generation of CPUs with this target anyway.
This wasn't able to be done before because of the minimum supported version of LLVM being 12, now that it was updated to 13 (in fact we are already at 14), this is available.
See previous update: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90478.
See LLVM update: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100460.