Commit Graph

371 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Guillaume Gomez
ca9f0630a9 Rename ast::StmtKind::Local into ast::StmtKind::Let 2024-03-14 12:42:04 +01:00
Guillaume Boisseau
bc3bc2ba6b
Rollup merge of #121584 - klensy:itertools-up, r=Mark-Simulacrum
bump itertools to 0.12

still depend on 0.11 (temporary dupes version):
* <del>clippy</del>, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/12346
* rustfmt, sigh, https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/pull/6093

https://github.com/rust-itertools/itertools/blob/v0.12.1/CHANGELOG.md

removed unused `derive_more` dep from `rustc_middle`
2024-03-09 21:40:08 +01:00
klensy
52501c2a75 bump itertools to 0.12
still depend on 0.11:
* clippy
* rustfmt, sigh
2024-03-08 12:34:05 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
d774fbea7c
Rollup merge of #119365 - nbdd0121:asm-goto, r=Amanieu
Add asm goto support to `asm!`

Tracking issue: #119364

This PR implements asm-goto support, using the syntax described in "future possibilities" section of [RFC2873](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2873-inline-asm.html#asm-goto).

Currently I have only implemented the `label` part, not the `fallthrough` part (i.e. fallthrough is implicit). This doesn't reduce the expressive though, since you can use label-break to get arbitrary control flow or simply set a value and rely on jump threading optimisation to get the desired control flow. I can add that later if deemed necessary.

r? ``@Amanieu``
cc ``@ojeda``
2024-03-08 08:19:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9b2644030a
Rollup merge of #121815 - nnethercote:mv-gather_comments, r=est31
Move `gather_comments`.

To the module where it is used, so it doesn't have to be `pub`.

r? ```@est31```
2024-03-02 10:09:36 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
69f2c9c101 Move gather_comments.
To the module where it is used, so it doesn't have to be `pub`.
2024-03-01 08:34:42 +11:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
2b8060578a
AST: Refactor type alias where clauses 2024-02-29 17:18:40 +01:00
Lieselotte
c440a5b814
Add ErrorGuaranteed to ast::ExprKind::Err 2024-02-25 22:24:31 +01:00
Lieselotte
a3fce72a27
Add ast::ExprKind::Dummy 2024-02-25 22:22:09 +01:00
Gary Guo
93fa8579c6 Add asm label support to AST and HIR 2024-02-24 18:49:39 +00:00
clubby789
06d6c62f80 Add newtype for raw idents 2024-02-20 13:13:29 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
c73aa787f6
Rollup merge of #121109 - nnethercote:TyKind-Err-guar-2, r=oli-obk
Add an ErrorGuaranteed to ast::TyKind::Err (attempt 2)

This makes it more like `hir::TyKind::Err`, and avoids a `has_errors` assertion in `LoweringContext::lower_ty_direct`.

r? ```@oli-obk```
2024-02-16 00:27:32 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
25ed6e43b0 Add ErrorGuaranteed to ast::LitKind::Err, token::LitKind::Err.
This mostly works well, and eliminates a couple of delayed bugs.

One annoying thing is that we should really also add an
`ErrorGuaranteed` to `proc_macro::bridge::LitKind::Err`. But that's
difficult because `proc_macro` doesn't have access to `ErrorGuaranteed`,
so we have to fake it.
2024-02-15 14:46:08 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5233bc91da Add an ErrorGuaranteed to ast::TyKind::Err.
This makes it more like `hir::TyKind::Err`, and avoids a
`span_delayed_bug` call in `LoweringContext::lower_ty_direct`.

It also requires adding `ast::TyKind::Dummy`, now that
`ast::TyKind::Err` can't be used for that purpose in the absence of an
error emission.

There are a couple of cases that aren't as neat as I would have liked,
marked with `FIXME` comments.
2024-02-15 09:35:11 +11:00
Frank King
879a1e5713 Lower anonymous structs or unions to HIR 2024-02-12 12:47:23 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
46a0448405
Rollup merge of #120693 - nnethercote:invert-diagnostic-lints, r=davidtwco
Invert diagnostic lints.

That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and `untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than half of the compiler has been converted to use translated diagnostics.

This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow` attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.

r? ````@davidtwco````
2024-02-09 14:41:50 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0ac1195ee0 Invert diagnostic lints.
That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and
`untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than
half of the compiler has be converted to use translated diagnostics.

This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow`
attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.
2024-02-06 13:12:33 +11:00
Michael Goulet
0eb2adb7e8 Add async bound modifier to enable async Fn bounds 2024-01-31 16:59:19 +00:00
bors
80deabd098 Auto merge of #120227 - nnethercote:further-improve-space_between, r=petrochenkov
Further improve `space_between`

`space_between` is used by `print_tts` to decide when spaces should be put between  tokens. This PR improves it in two ways:
- avoid unnecessary spaces before semicolons, and
- don't omit some necessary spaces before/after some punctuation symbols.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2024-01-31 02:01:43 +00:00
clubby789
fd29f74ff8 Remove unused features 2024-01-25 14:01:33 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
1fbabeeb2e Fix some cases in space_between.
There are a number of cases where we erroneously omit the space between
two tokens, all involving an exception to a more general case. The
affected tokens are `$`, `!`, `.`, `,`, and `let` followed by a
parenthesis.

This fixes a lot of FIXME comments.
2024-01-22 20:19:17 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
41e4a3e086 Don't insert spaces before most semicolons in print_tts.
This gives better output for code produced by proc macros.
2024-01-22 20:14:59 +11:00
Lieselotte
7889e99b55
Add PatKind::Err 2024-01-17 03:14:16 +01:00
Bryanskiy
d69cd6473c Delegation implementation: step 1 2024-01-12 14:11:16 +03:00
bors
89e2160c4c Auto merge of #119105 - dtolnay:paren, r=WaffleLapkin
Fix parenthesization of subexprs containing statement boundary

This PR fixes a multitude of false negatives and false positives in the AST pretty printer's parenthesis insertion related to statement boundaries &mdash; statements which terminate unexpectedly early if there aren't parentheses.

Without this fix, the AST pretty printer (including both `stringify!` and `rustc -Zunpretty=expanded`) is prone to producing output which is not syntactically valid Rust. Invalid output is problematic because it means Rustfmt is unable to parse the output of `cargo expand`, for example, causing friction by forcing someone trying to debug a macro into reading poorly formatted code.

I believe the set of bugs fixed in this PR account for the most prevalent reason that `cargo expand` produces invalid output in real-world usage.

Fixes #98790.

## False negatives

The following is a correct program &mdash; `cargo check` succeeds.

```rust
macro_rules! m {
    ($e:expr) => {
        match () { _ => $e }
    };
}

fn main() {
    m!({ 1 } - 1);
}
```

But `rustc -Zunpretty=expanded main.rs` produces output that is invalid Rust syntax, because parenthesization is needed and not being done by the pretty printer.

```rust
fn main() { match () { _ => { 1 } - 1, }; }
```

Piping this expanded code to rustfmt, it fails to parse.

```console
error: unexpected `,` in pattern
 --> <stdin>:1:38
  |
1 | fn main() { match () { _ => { 1 } - 1, }; }
  |                                      ^
  |
help: try adding parentheses to match on a tuple...
  |
1 | fn main() { match () { _ => { 1 } (- 1,) }; }
  |                                   +    +
help: ...or a vertical bar to match on multiple alternatives
  |
1 | fn main() { match () { _ => { 1 } - 1 | }; }
  |                                   ~~~~~
```

Fixed output after this PR:

```rust
fn main() { match () { _ => ({ 1 }) - 1, }; }
```

## False positives

Less problematic, but worth fixing (just like #118726).

```rust
fn main() {
    let _ = match () { _ => 1 } - 1;
}
```

Output of `rustc -Zunpretty=expanded lib.rs` before this PR. There is no reason parentheses would need to be inserted there.

```rust
fn main() { let _ = (match () { _ => 1, }) - 1; }
```

After this PR:

```rust
fn main() { let _ = match () { _ => 1, } - 1; }
```

## Alternatives considered

In this PR I opted to parenthesize only the leading subexpression causing the statement boundary, rather than the entire statement. Example:

```rust
macro_rules! m {
    ($e:expr) => {
        $e
    };
}

fn main() {
    m!(loop { break [1]; }[0] - 1);
}
```

This PR produces the following pretty-printed contents for fn main:

```rust
(loop { break [1]; })[0] - 1;
```

A different equally correct output would be:

```rust
(loop { break [1]; }[0] - 1);
```

I chose the one I did because it is the *only* approach used by handwritten code in the standard library and compiler. There are 4 places where parenthesization is being used to prevent a statement boundary, and in all 4, the developer has chosen to parenthesize the smallest subexpression rather than the whole statement:

b37d43efd9/compiler/rustc_codegen_cranelift/example/alloc_system.rs (L102)

b37d43efd9/compiler/rustc_parse/src/errors.rs (L1021-L1029)

b37d43efd9/library/core/src/future/poll_fn.rs (L151)

b37d43efd9/library/core/src/ops/range.rs (L824-L828)
2023-12-27 21:27:26 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
3eb48a35c8
Introduce const Trait (always-const trait bounds) 2023-12-27 12:51:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bdc4480914
Rollup merge of #119231 - aDotInTheVoid:PatKind-struct-bool-docs, r=compiler-errors
Clairify `ast::PatKind::Struct` presese of `..` by using an enum instead of a bool

The bool is mainly used for when a `..` is present, but it is also set on recovery to avoid errors. The doc comment not describes both of these cases.

See cee794ee98/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/pat.rs (L890-L897) for the only place this is constructed.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2023-12-23 16:23:54 +01:00
Alona Enraght-Moony
1349d86c72 bool->enum for ast::PatKind::Struct presence of ..
See cee794ee98/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/pat.rs (L890-L897) for the only place this is constructed.
2023-12-23 02:50:31 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
15dc9f5bee
Rollup merge of #119169 - fmease:pretty-yeet-syntactic-cruft, r=compiler-errors
Rid the AST & HIR pretty printer of cruft

Found while working on #119163.

For `trait Trait: ?Sized {}` (semantically malformed), we currently output `trait Trait for ? Sized {}` (sic!) / `trait Trait for ? Sized { }` (sic!) if `-Zunpretty=expanded` / `-Zunpretty=hir` is passed.

`trait Tr for Sized? {}` (#15521) and later also `trait Tr for ?Sized {}` (I guess, #20194) is former Rust syntax. Hence I'm removing these outdated branches.

~~This will conflict with #119163, therefore marking this PR as blocked.~~ Rebased
2023-12-22 19:01:26 +01:00
bors
208dd2032b Auto merge of #118847 - eholk:for-await, r=compiler-errors
Add support for `for await` loops

This adds support for `for await` loops. This includes parsing, desugaring in AST->HIR lowering, and adding some support functions to the library.

Given a loop like:
```rust
for await i in iter {
    ...
}
```
this is desugared to something like:
```rust
let mut iter = iter.into_async_iter();
while let Some(i) = loop {
    match core::pin::Pin::new(&mut iter).poll_next(cx) {
        Poll::Ready(i) => break i,
        Poll::Pending => yield,
    }
} {
    ...
}
```

This PR also adds a basic `IntoAsyncIterator` trait. This is partly for symmetry with the way `Iterator` and `IntoIterator` work. The other reason is that for async iterators it's helpful to have a place apart from the data structure being iterated over to store state. `IntoAsyncIterator` gives us a good place to do this.

I've gated this feature behind `async_for_loop` and opened #118898 as the feature tracking issue.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-12-22 14:17:10 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
b09889b959
Rid the AST & HIR pretty printers of syntactic cruft 2023-12-22 14:32:40 +01:00
bors
aaef5fe497 Auto merge of #119163 - fmease:refactor-ast-trait-bound-modifiers, r=compiler-errors
Refactor AST trait bound modifiers

Instead of having two types to represent trait bound modifiers in the parser / the AST (`parser::ty::BoundModifiers` & `ast::TraitBoundModifier`), only to map one to the other later, just use `parser::ty::BoundModifiers` (moved & renamed to `ast::TraitBoundModifiers`).

The struct type is more extensible and easier to deal with (see [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119099/files#r1430749981) and [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119099/files#r1430752116) for context) since it more closely models what it represents: A compound of two kinds of modifiers, constness and polarity. Modeling this as an enum (the now removed `ast::TraitBoundModifier`) meant one had to add a new variant per *combination* of modifier kind, which simply isn't scalable and which lead to a lot of explicit non-DRY matches.

NB: `hir::TraitBoundModifier` being an enum is fine since HIR doesn't need to worry representing invalid modifier kind combinations as those get rejected during AST validation thereby immensely cutting down the number of possibilities.
2023-12-22 02:00:55 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
5e4f12b41a
Refactor AST trait bound modifiers 2023-12-20 19:39:46 +01:00
Alona Enraght-Moony
11337805fb Give VariantData::Struct named fields, to clairfy recovered. 2023-12-20 00:07:34 +00:00
Eric Holk
27d6539a46
Plumb awaitness of for loops 2023-12-19 12:26:20 -08:00
David Tolnay
17239d9b64
Fix parenthesization of subexprs containing statement boundary 2023-12-18 22:40:48 -08:00
Ross Smyth
663bea5a96 Add better ICE messages for some undescriptive panics 2023-12-15 00:50:55 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
3a0562b93c
Rollup merge of #118726 - dtolnay:matchguardlet, r=compiler-errors
Do not parenthesize exterior struct lit inside match guards

Before this PR, the AST pretty-printer injects parentheses around expressions any time parens _could_ be needed depending on what else is in the code that surrounds that expression. But the pretty-printer did not pass around enough context to understand whether parentheses really _are_ needed on any particular expression. As a consequence, there are false positives where unneeded parentheses are being inserted.

Example:

```rust
#![feature(if_let_guard)]

macro_rules! pp {
    ($e:expr) => {
        stringify!($e)
    };
}

fn main() {
    println!("{}", pp!(match () { () if let _ = Struct {} => {} }));
}
```

**Before:**

```console
match () { () if let _ = (Struct {}) => {} }
```

**After:**

```console
match () { () if let _ = Struct {} => {} }
```

This PR introduces a bit of state that is passed across various expression printing methods to help understand accurately whether particular situations require parentheses injected by the pretty printer, and it fixes one such false positive involving match guards as shown above.

There are other parenthesization false positive cases not fixed by this PR. I intend to address these in follow-up PRs. For example here is one: the expression `{ let _ = match x {} + 1; }` is pretty-printed as `{ let _ = (match x {}) + 1; }` despite there being no reason for parentheses to appear there.
2023-12-11 20:46:49 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4cfdbd328b Add spacing information to delimiters.
This is an extension of the previous commit. It means the output of
something like this:
```
stringify!(let a: Vec<u32> = vec![];)
```
goes from this:
```
let a: Vec<u32> = vec![] ;
```
With this PR, it now produces this string:
```
let a: Vec<u32> = vec![];
```
2023-12-11 09:36:40 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
925f7fad57 Improve print_tts by changing tokenstream::Spacing.
`tokenstream::Spacing` appears on all `TokenTree::Token` instances,
both punct and non-punct. Its current usage:
- `Joint` means "can join with the next token *and* that token is a
  punct".
- `Alone` means "cannot join with the next token *or* can join with the
  next token but that token is not a punct".

The fact that `Alone` is used for two different cases is awkward.
This commit augments `tokenstream::Spacing` with a new variant
`JointHidden`, resulting in:
- `Joint` means "can join with the next token *and* that token is a
  punct".
- `JointHidden` means "can join with the next token *and* that token is a
  not a punct".
- `Alone` means "cannot join with the next token".

This *drastically* improves the output of `print_tts`. For example,
this:
```
stringify!(let a: Vec<u32> = vec![];)
```
currently produces this string:
```
let a : Vec < u32 > = vec! [] ;
```
With this PR, it now produces this string:
```
let a: Vec<u32> = vec![] ;
```
(The space after the `]` is because `TokenTree::Delimited` currently
doesn't have spacing information. The subsequent commit fixes this.)

The new `print_tts` doesn't replicate original code perfectly. E.g.
multiple space characters will be condensed into a single space
character. But it's much improved.

`print_tts` still produces the old, uglier output for code produced by
proc macros. Because we have to translate the generated code from
`proc_macro::Spacing` to the more expressive `token::Spacing`, which
results in too much `proc_macro::Along` usage and no
`proc_macro::JointHidden` usage. So `space_between` still exists and
is used by `print_tts` in conjunction with the `Spacing` field.

This change will also help with the removal of `Token::Interpolated`.
Currently interpolated tokens are pretty-printed nicely via AST pretty
printing. `Token::Interpolated` removal will mean they get printed with
`print_tts`. Without this change, that would result in much uglier
output for code produced by decl macro expansions. With this change, AST
pretty printing and `print_tts` produce similar results.

The commit also tweaks the comments on `proc_macro::Spacing`. In
particular, it refers to "compound tokens" rather than "multi-char
operators" because lifetimes aren't operators.
2023-12-11 09:19:09 +11:00
David Tolnay
8997215a24
Fix tidy ```ignore error
tidy error: /git/rust/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pprust/state.rs:1165: unexplained "```ignore" doctest; try one:

    * make the test actually pass, by adding necessary imports and declarations, or
    * use "```text", if the code is not Rust code, or
    * use "```compile_fail,Ennnn", if the code is expected to fail at compile time, or
    * use "```should_panic", if the code is expected to fail at run time, or
    * use "```no_run", if the code should type-check but not necessary linkable/runnable, or
    * explain it like "```ignore (cannot-test-this-because-xxxx)", if the annotation cannot be avoided.

    tidy error: /git/rust/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pprust/state.rs:1176: unexplained "```ignore" doctest; try one:

    * make the test actually pass, by adding necessary imports and declarations, or
    * use "```text", if the code is not Rust code, or
    * use "```compile_fail,Ennnn", if the code is expected to fail at compile time, or
    * use "```should_panic", if the code is expected to fail at run time, or
    * use "```no_run", if the code should type-check but not necessary linkable/runnable, or
    * explain it like "```ignore (cannot-test-this-because-xxxx)", if the annotation cannot be avoided.
2023-12-08 15:15:44 -08:00
David Tolnay
6f1d7631fb
Do not parenthesize exterior struct lit inside match guards 2023-12-08 15:15:42 -08:00
David Tolnay
7f314acc34
Delete special handling of some expr kinds from print_let
In all four of Break, Closure, Ret, Yeet, the needs_par_as_let_scrutinee
is guaranteed to return true because the .precedence().order() of those
expr kinds is <= AssocOp::LAnd.precedence().

The relevant functions in rustc_ast::util::parser are:

    fn needs_par_as_let_scrutinee(order: i8) -> bool {
        order <= prec_let_scrutinee_needs_par() as i8
    }

    fn prec_let_scrutinee_needs_par() -> usize {
        AssocOp::LAnd.precedence()
    }

The .precedence().order() of Closure is PREC_CLOSURE (-40) and of Break,
Ret, Yeet is PREC_JUMP (-30).

The value of AssocOp::LAnd.precedence() is 6.

So this commit causes no change in behavior, only potentially
performance by doing a redundant call to contains_exterior_struct_lit in
those four cases. This is fine because Break, Closure, Ret, Yeet should
be exceedingly rare in the position of a let scrutinee.
2023-12-08 15:14:44 -08:00
David Tolnay
dc5ec724c0
Rearrange logic of needs_par computation in print_let
True || needs_par_as_let_scrutinee(...) is always true.
2023-12-08 15:14:44 -08:00
David Tolnay
8d64961589
Inline cond_needs_par into print_let 2023-12-08 15:14:44 -08:00
David Tolnay
d2b7bd4774
Inline npals closure 2023-12-08 15:14:44 -08:00
bors
f967532a47 Auto merge of #118420 - compiler-errors:async-gen, r=eholk
Introduce support for `async gen` blocks

I'm delighted to demonstrate that `async gen` block are not very difficult to support. They're simply coroutines that yield `Poll<Option<T>>` and return `()`.

**This PR is WIP and in draft mode for now** -- I'm mostly putting it up to show folks that it's possible. This PR needs a lang-team experiment associated with it or possible an RFC, since I don't think it falls under the jurisdiction of the `gen` RFC that was recently authored by oli (https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3513, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117078).

### Technical note on the pre-generator-transform yield type:

The reason that the underlying coroutines yield `Poll<Option<T>>` and not `Poll<T>` (which would make more sense, IMO, for the pre-transformed coroutine), is because the `TransformVisitor` that is used to turn coroutines into built-in state machine functions would have to destructure and reconstruct the latter into the former, which requires at least inserting a new basic block (for a `switchInt` terminator, to match on the `Poll` discriminant).

This does mean that the desugaring (at the `rustc_ast_lowering` level) of `async gen` blocks is a bit more involved. However, since we already need to intercept both `.await` and `yield` operators, I don't consider it much of a technical burden.

r? `@ghost`
2023-12-08 19:13:57 +00:00
Michael Goulet
a208bae00e Support async gen fn 2023-12-08 17:23:26 +00:00
Michael Goulet
2806c2df7b coro_kind -> coroutine_kind 2023-12-08 17:23:25 +00:00
bors
2b399b5275 Auto merge of #118527 - Nadrieril:never_patterns_parse, r=compiler-errors
never_patterns: Parse match arms with no body

Never patterns are meant to signal unreachable cases, and thus don't take bodies:
```rust
let ptr: *const Option<!> = ...;
match *ptr {
    None => { foo(); }
    Some(!),
}
```
This PR makes rustc accept the above, and enforces that an arm has a body xor is a never pattern. This affects parsing of match arms even with the feature off, so this is delicate. (Plus this is my first non-trivial change to the parser).

~~The last commit is optional; it introduces a bit of churn to allow the new suggestions to be machine-applicable. There may be a better solution? I'm not sure.~~ EDIT: I removed that commit

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-12-08 17:08:52 +00:00