Don't ICE when getting an input file name's stem fails
Fixes#128681
The file stem is only used as a user-friendly prefix on intermediary files. While nice to have, it's not the end of the world if it fails so there's no real reason to emit an error here. We can continue with a fixed name as we do when an anonymous string is used.
interpret: refactor function call handling to be better-abstracted
Add a new function `init_stack_frame` that pushes a stack frame and passes the arguments, and use that basically everywhere that the raw underlying `push_stack_frame` used to be called. This splits the previous monster function `eval_fn_call` into two parts: figuring out the MIR to call and the arguments to pass, and then actually setting up the stack frame.
Also re-organize the files a bit:
- The previous `terminator.rs` is split into a new `call.rs` with all the argument-passing logic, and the rest goes into `step.rs` where the other main dispatcher functions already live (in particular, `eval_statement`).
- All the stack frame handling from `eval_context.rs` is moved to a new `stack.rs`.
Pass the right `ParamEnv` to `might_permit_raw_init_strict`
Fixes#119620
`might_permit_raw_init_strict` currently passes an empty `ParamEnv` to the `InterpCx`, instead of the actual `ParamEnv` that was passed in to `check_validity_requirement` at callsite.
This leads to ICEs such as the linked issue where for `UnsafeCell<*mut T>` we initially get the layout with the right `ParamEnv` (which suceeds because it can prove that `T: Sized` and therefore `UnsafeCell<*mut T>` has a known layout) but then do the rest with an empty `ParamEnv` where `T: Sized` is not known to hold so getting the layout for `*mut T` later fails.
This runs into an assertion in other layout code where it's making the (valid) assumption that, when we already have a layout for a struct (`UnsafeCell<*mut T>`), getting the layout of one of its fields (`*mut T`) should also succeed, which wasn't the case here due to using the wrong `ParamEnv`.
So, this PR changes it to just use the same `ParamEnv` all the way throughout.
Fix ICE Caused by Incorrectly Delaying E0107
Fixes #128249
For the following code:
```rust
trait Foo<T> {}
impl Foo<T: Default> for u8 {}
```
#126054 added some logic to delay emitting E0107 as the names of associated type `T` in the impl header and generic parameter `T` in `trait Foo` match.
But it failed to ensure whether such unexpected associated type bounds are coming from a impl block header. This caused an ICE as the compiler was delaying E0107 for code like:
```rust
trait Trait<Type> {
type Type;
fn method(&self) -> impl Trait<Type: '_>;
}
```
because it assumed the associated type bound `Type: '_` is for the generic parameter `Type` in `trait Trait` since the names are same.
This PR adds a check to ensure that E0107 is delayed only in the context of impl block header.
When encountering an E0277, if the type and the trait both come from a crate with the same name but different crate number, we explain that there are multiple crate versions in the dependency tree.
If there's a type that fulfills the bound, and it has the same name as the passed in type and has the same crate name, we explain that the same type in two different versions of the same crate *are different*.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `Type: dependency::Trait` is not satisfied
--> src/main.rs:4:18
|
4 | do_something(Type);
| ------------ ^^^^ the trait `dependency::Trait` is not implemented for `Type`
| |
| required by a bound introduced by this call
|
help: you have multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in your dependency graph
--> src/main.rs:1:5
|
1 | use bar::do_something;
| ^^^ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a dependency of crate `bar`
2 | use dependency::Type;
| ^^^^^^^^^^ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
--> /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz-2/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct Type;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this type doesn't implement the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct Type;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this type implements the required trait
2 | pub trait Trait {}
| --------------- this is the required trait
note: required by a bound in `bar::do_something`
--> /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz/src/lib.rs:4:24
|
4 | pub fn do_something<X: Trait>(_: X) {}
| ^^^^^ required by this bound in `do_something`
```
Address #22750.
On short error format, append primary span label to message
The `error-format=short` output only displays the path, error code and main error message all in the same line. We now add the primary span label as well after the error message, to provide more context.
The `error-format=short` output only displays the path, error code and
main error message all in the same line. We now add the primary span label
as well after the error message, to provide more context.
Change output normalization logic to be linear against size of output
Modify the rendered output normalization routine to scan each character *once* and construct a `String` to be printed out to the terminal *once*, instead of using `String::replace` in a loop multiple times. The output doesn't change, but the time spent to prepare a diagnostic is now faster (or rather, closer to what it was before #127528).
Tweak type inference for `const` operands in inline asm
Previously these would be treated like integer literals and default to `i32` if a type could not be determined. To allow for forward-compatibility with `str` constants in the future, this PR changes type inference to use an unbound type variable instead.
The actual type checking is deferred until after typeck where we still ensure that the final type for the `const` operand is an integer type.
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interpret: move nullary-op evaluation into operator.rs
We call it an operator, so we might as well treat it like one. :)
Also use more consistent naming for the "evaluate intrinsic" functions. "emulate" is really the wrong term, this *is* a genuine implementation of the intrinsic semantics after all.
Use `ParamEnv::reveal_all` in CFI
I left a huge comment for why this ICEs in the test I committed.
`typeid_for_instance` should only be called on monomorphic instances during codegen, and we should just be using `ParamEnv::reveal_all()` rather than the param-env of the instance itself. I added an assertion to ensure that we only do this for fully substituted instances (this may break with polymorphization, but I kinda don't care lol).
Fixes#114160
cc `@rcvalle`
Add `Debug` impls to API types in `rustc_codegen_ssa`
Some types used in `rustc_codegen_ssa`'s interface traits are missing `Debug` impls. Though I did not smear `#[derive(Debug)]` all over the crate (some structs are quite large).
Don't re-elaborated already elaborated caller bounds in method probe
Caller bounds are already elaborated. Only elaborate object candidates' principals.
Also removes the only usage of `transitive_bounds`.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #128026 (std:🧵 available_parallelism implementation for vxWorks proposal.)
- #128471 (rustdoc: Fix handling of `Self` type in search index and refactor its representation)
- #128607 (Use `object` in `run-make/symbols-visibility`)
- #128609 (Remove unnecessary constants from flt2dec dragon)
- #128611 (run-make: Remove cygpath)
- #128619 (Correct the const stabilization of `<[T]>::last_chunk`)
- #128630 (docs(resolve): more explain about `target`)
- #128660 (tests: more crashes)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do not fire unhandled attribute assertion on multi-segment `AttributeType::Normal` attributes with builtin attribute as first segment
### The Problem
In #128581 I introduced an assertion to check that all builtin attributes are actually checked via
`CheckAttrVisitor` and aren't accidentally usable on completely unrelated HIR nodes.
Unfortunately, the assertion had correctness problems as revealed in #128622.
The match on attribute path segments looked like
```rs,ignore
// Normal handler
[sym::should_panic] => /* check is implemented */
// Fallback handler
[name, ..] => match BUILTIN_ATTRIBUTE_MAP.get(name) {
// checked below
Some(BuiltinAttribute { type_: AttributeType::CrateLevel, .. }) => {}
Some(_) => {
if !name.as_str().starts_with("rustc_") {
span_bug!(
attr.span,
"builtin attribute {name:?} not handled by `CheckAttrVisitor`"
)
}
}
None => (),
}
```
However, it failed to account for edge cases such as an attribute whose:
1. path segments *starts* with a segment matching the name of a builtin attribute such as `should_panic`, and
2. the first segment's symbol does not start with `rustc_`, and
3. the matched builtin attribute is also of `AttributeType::Normal` attribute type upon registration with the builtin attribute map.
These conditions when all satisfied cause the span bug to be issued for e.g.
`#[should_panic::skip]` because the `[sym::should_panic]` arm is not matched (since it's
`[sym::should_panic, sym::skip]`).
### Proposed Solution
This PR tries to remedy that by adjusting all normal/specific handlers to not match exactly on a single segment, but instead match a prefix segment.
i.e.
```rs,ignore
// Normal handler, notice the `, ..` rest pattern
[sym::should_panic, ..] => /* check is implemented */
// Fallback handler
[name, ..] => match BUILTIN_ATTRIBUTE_MAP.get(name) {
// checked below
Some(BuiltinAttribute { type_: AttributeType::CrateLevel, .. }) => {}
Some(_) => {
if !name.as_str().starts_with("rustc_") {
span_bug!(
attr.span,
"builtin attribute {name:?} not handled by `CheckAttrVisitor`"
)
}
}
None => (),
}
```
### Review Remarks
This PR contains 2 commits:
1. The first commit adds a regression test. This will ICE without the `CheckAttrVisitor` changes.
2. The second commit adjusts `CheckAttrVisitor` assertion logic. Once this commit is applied, the test should no longer ICE and produce the expected bless stderr.
Fixes#128622.
r? ``@nnethercote`` (since you reviewed #128581)
turn `invalid_type_param_default` into a `FutureReleaseErrorReportInDeps`
`````@rust-lang/types````` I assume the plan is still to disallow this? It has been a future-compat lint for a long time, seems ripe to go for hard error.
However, turns out that outright removing it right now would lead to [tons of crater regressions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127655#issuecomment-2228285460), so for now this PR just makes this future-compat lint show up in cargo's reports, so people are warned when they use a dependency that is affected by this.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/27336 by removing the feature gate (so there's no way to silence the lint even on nightly)
CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/36887
Check divergence value first before doing span operations in `warn_if_unreachable`
It's more expensive to extract the span's desugaring first rather than check the value of the divergence enum. For some reason I inverted these checks, probably for readability, but as a consequence I regressed perf:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128443#issuecomment-2265425016
r? fmease