Properly deal with GATs when looking for method chains to point at
Fixes#121898.
~~While it prevents an ICE and the structured suggestion is correct, the method chain diagnostic notes are weird / useless / incorrect judging by a quick look. I guess I should improve that in this PR.~~ Sufficiently taken care of.
r? estebank or compiler-errors (#105332, #105674).
Account for unmet T: !Copy in E0277 message
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `T: !Copy` is not satisfied
--> $DIR/simple.rs:10:16
|
LL | not_copy::<T>();
| ^ the trait bound `T: !Copy` is not satisfied
```
instead of the current
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `T: !Copy` is not satisfied
--> $DIR/simple.rs:10:16
|
LL | not_copy::<T>();
| ^ the trait `!Copy` is not implemented for `T`
```
Display short types for unimplemented trait
Shortens unimplemented trait diagnostics. Now shows:
```
error[E0277]: `Option<Option<Option<...>>>` doesn't implement `std::fmt::Display`
--> $DIR/on_unimplemented_long_types.rs:4:17
|
LL | pub fn foo() -> impl std::fmt::Display {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ `Option<Option<Option<...>>>` cannot be formatted with the default formatter
LL |
LL | / Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(S...
LL | | Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(So...
LL | | Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Som...
LL | | Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some(Some...
... |
LL | | ))))))))))),
LL | | )))))))))))
| |_______________- return type was inferred to be `Option<Option<Option<...>>>` here
|
= help: the trait `std::fmt::Display` is not implemented for `Option<Option<Option<...>>>`
= note: in format strings you may be able to use `{:?}` (or {:#?} for pretty-print) instead
error: aborting due to 1 previous error
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0277`.
```
I'm not 100% sure if this is desirable, or if we should just let the long types remain long. This is also kinda a short-term bandaid solution. The real long term solution is to properly migrate `rustc_trait_selection`'s error reporting to use translatable diagnostics and then properly handle type name printing.
Fixes#121687.
Never say "`Trait` is implemented for `{type error}`"
When a trait bound error occurs, we look for alternative types that would have made the bound succeed. For some reason `{type error}` sometimes would appear as a type that would do so.
We now remove `{type error}` from the list in every case to avoid nonsensical `note`s.
Combine `Sub` and `Equate`
Combine `Sub` and `Equate` into a new relation called `TypeRelating` (that name sounds familiar...)
Tracks the difference between `Sub` and `Equate` via `ambient_variance: ty::Variance` much like the `NllTypeRelating` relation, but implemented slightly jankier because it's a more general purpose relation.
r? lcnr
Add stubs in IR and ABI for `f16` and `f128`
This is the very first step toward the changes in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114607 and the [`f16` and `f128` RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3453-f16-and-f128.html). It adds the types to `rustc_type_ir::FloatTy` and `rustc_abi::Primitive`, and just propagates those out as `unimplemented!` stubs where necessary.
These types do not parse yet so there is no feature gate, and it should be okay to use `unimplemented!`.
The next steps will probably be AST support with parsing and the feature gate.
r? `@compiler-errors`
cc `@Nilstrieb` suggested breaking the PR up in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120645#issuecomment-1925900572
When a trait bound error occurs, we look for alternative types that
would have made the bound succeed. For some reason `{type error}`
sometimes would appear as a type that would do so.
We now remove `{type error}` from the list in every case to avoid
nonsensical `note`s.
Safe Transmute: Revise safety analysis
This PR migrates `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom` to a simplified safety analysis (described [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/project-safe-transmute/issues/15)) that does not rely on analyzing the visibility of types and fields.
The revised analysis treats primitive types as safe, and user-defined types as potentially carrying safety invariants. If Rust gains explicit (un)safe fields, this PR is structured so that it will be fairly easy to thread support for those annotations into the analysis.
Notably, this PR removes the `Context` type parameter from `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom`. Most of the files changed by this PR are just UI tests tweaked to accommodate the removed parameter.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Count stashed errors again
Stashed diagnostics are such a pain. Their "might be emitted, might not" semantics messes with lots of things.
#120828 and #121206 made some big changes to how they work, improving some things, but still leaving some problems, as seen by the issues caused by #121206. This PR aims to fix all of them by restricting them in a way that eliminates the "might be emitted, might not" semantics while still allowing 98% of their benefit. Details in the individual commit logs.
r? `@oli-obk`
Fix `async Fn` confirmation for `FnDef`/`FnPtr`/`Closure` types
Fixes three issues:
1. The code in `extract_tupled_inputs_and_output_from_async_callable` was accidentally getting the *future* type and the *output* type (returned by the future) messed up for fnptr/fndef/closure types. :/
2. We have a (class of) bug(s) in the old solver where we don't really support higher ranked built-in `Future` goals for generators. This is not possible to hit on stable code, but [can be hit with `unboxed_closures`](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=e935de7181e37e13515ad01720bcb899) (#121653).
* I'm opting not to fix that in this PR. Instead, I just instantiate placeholders when confirming `async Fn` goals.
4. Fixed a bug when generating `FnPtr` shims for `async Fn` trait goals.
r? oli-obk
Deeply normalize obligations in `refining_impl_trait`
We somewhat awkwardly use semantic comparison when checking the `refining_impl_trait` lint. This relies on us being able to normalize bounds eagerly to avoid cases where an unnormalized alias is not considered equal to a normalized alias. Since `normalize` in the new solver is a noop, let's use `deeply_normalize` instead.
r? lcnr
cc ``@tmandry,`` this should fix your bug lol
Stashed errors used to be counted as errors, but could then be
cancelled, leading to `ErrorGuaranteed` soundness holes. #120828 changed
that, closing the soundness hole. But it introduced other difficulties
because you sometimes have to account for pending stashed errors when
making decisions about whether errors have occured/will occur and it's
easy to overlook these.
This commit aims for a middle ground.
- Stashed errors (not warnings) are counted immediately as emitted
errors, avoiding the possibility of forgetting to consider them.
- The ability to cancel (or downgrade) stashed errors is eliminated, by
disallowing the use of `steal_diagnostic` with errors, and introducing
the more restrictive methods `try_steal_{modify,replace}_and_emit_err`
that can be used instead.
Other things:
- `DiagnosticBuilder::stash` and `DiagCtxt::stash_diagnostic` now both
return `Option<ErrorGuaranteed>`, which enables the removal of two
`delayed_bug` calls and one `Ty::new_error_with_message` call. This is
possible because we store error guarantees in
`DiagCtxt::stashed_diagnostics`.
- Storing the guarantees also saves us having to maintain a counter.
- Calls to the `stashed_err_count` method are no longer necessary
alongside calls to `has_errors`, which is a nice simplification, and
eliminates two more `span_delayed_bug` calls and one FIXME comment.
- Tests are added for three of the four fixed PRs mentioned below.
- `issue-121108.rs`'s output improved slightly, omitting a non-useful
error message.
Fixes#121451.
Fixes#121477.
Fixes#121504.
Fixes#121508.
Add `StructurallyRelateAliases` to allow instantiating infer vars with rigid aliases.
Change `instantiate_query_response` to be infallible in the new solver. This requires canonicalization to not hide any information used by the query, so weaken
universe compression. It also modifies `term_is_fully_unconstrained` to allow
region inference variables in a higher universe.
Add newtypes for bool fields/params/return types
Fixed all the cases of this found with some simple searches for `*/ bool` and `bool /*`; probably many more
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #121435 (Account for RPITIT in E0310 explicit lifetime constraint suggestion)
- #121490 (Rustdoc: include crate name in links for local primitives)
- #121520 (delay cloning of iterator items)
- #121522 (check that simd_insert/extract indices are in-bounds)
- #121531 (Ignore less tests in debug builds)
- #121539 (compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/base/apple/tests.rs: Avoid unnecessary large move)
- #121542 (update stdarch)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
remove `sub_relations` from the `InferCtxt`
While doing so, I tried to remove the `delay_span_bug` in `rematch_impl` again, which lead me to discover another `freshen` bug, fixing that one in the second commit. See commit descriptions for the reasoning behind each change.
r? `@compiler-errors`
No need to `validate_alias_bound_self_from_param_env` in `assemble_alias_bound_candidates`
We already fully normalize the self type before we reach `assemble_alias_bound_candidates`, so there's no reason to double check that a projection is truly rigid by checking param-env bounds.
I think this is also blocked on us making sure to always normalize opaques: #120549.
r? lcnr