Do not feed param_env for RPITITs impl side
r? `@compiler-errors`
I don't think this needs more comments or things that we already have but please let me know if you want some comments or something else in this PR.
Custom MIR: Allow optional RET type annotation
This currently doesn't compile because the type of `RET` is inferred, which fails if RET is a composite type and fields are initialised separately.
```rust
#![feature(custom_mir, core_intrinsics)]
extern crate core;
use core::intrinsics::mir::*;
#[custom_mir(dialect = "runtime", phase = "optimized")]
fn fn0() -> (i32, bool) {
mir! ({
RET.0 = 0;
RET.1 = true;
Return()
})
}
```
```
error[E0282]: type annotations needed
--> src/lib.rs:8:9
|
8 | RET.0 = 0;
| ^^^ cannot infer type
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0282`.
```
This PR allows the user to manually specify the return type with `type RET = ...;` if required:
```rust
#[custom_mir(dialect = "runtime", phase = "optimized")]
fn fn0() -> (i32, bool) {
mir! (
type RET = (i32, bool);
{
RET.0 = 0;
RET.1 = true;
Return()
}
)
}
```
The syntax is not optimal, I'm happy to see other suggestions. Ideally I wanted it to be a normal type annotation like `let RET: ...;`, but this runs into the multiple parsing options error during macro expansion, as it can be parsed as a normal `let` declaration as well.
r? ```@oli-obk``` or ```@tmiasko``` or ```@JakobDegen```
Detect uninhabited types early in const eval
r? `@RalfJung`
implements https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108442#discussion_r1143003840
this is a breaking change, as some UB during const eval is now detected instead of silently being ignored. Users can see this and other UB that may cause future breakage with `-Zextra-const-ub-checks` or just by running miri on their code, which sets that flag by default.
Do not consider synthesized RPITITs on missing items checks
Without this patch for `tests/ui/impl-trait/in-trait/dont-project-to-rpitit-with-no-value.rs` we get ...
```
warning: the feature `return_position_impl_trait_in_trait` is incomplete and may not be safe to use and/or cause compiler crashes
--> tests/ui/impl-trait/in-trait/dont-project-to-rpitit-with-no-value.rs:4:12
|
4 | #![feature(return_position_impl_trait_in_trait)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: see issue #91611 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91611> for more information
= note: `#[warn(incomplete_features)]` on by default
error[E0046]: not all trait items implemented, missing: `foo`, ``
--> tests/ui/impl-trait/in-trait/dont-project-to-rpitit-with-no-value.rs:12:1
|
8 | fn foo(&self) -> impl Sized;
| ----------------------------
| | |
| | `` from trait
| `foo` from trait
...
12 | impl MyTrait for i32 {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ missing `foo`, `` in implementation
error: aborting due to previous error; 1 warning emitted
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0046`.
```
instead of ...
```
warning: the feature `return_position_impl_trait_in_trait` is incomplete and may not be safe to use and/or cause compiler crashes
--> $DIR/dont-project-to-rpitit-with-no-value.rs:4:12
|
LL | #![feature(return_position_impl_trait_in_trait)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: see issue #91611 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91611> for more information
= note: `#[warn(incomplete_features)]` on by default
error[E0046]: not all trait items implemented, missing: `foo`
--> $DIR/dont-project-to-rpitit-with-no-value.rs:12:1
|
LL | fn foo(&self) -> impl Sized;
| ---------------------------- `foo` from trait
...
LL | impl MyTrait for i32 {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ missing `foo` in implementation
error: aborting due to previous error; 1 warning emitted
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0046`.
```
r? `@compiler-errors`
rustdoc: Cleanup parent module tracking for doc links
Keep ids of the documented items themselves, not their parent modules. Parent modules can be retreived from those ids when necessary.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108501.
That issue could be fixed in a more local way, but this refactoring is something that I wanted to do since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/93805 anyway.
move Option::as_slice to intrinsic
````@scottmcm```` suggested on #109095 I use a direct approach of unpacking the operation in MIR lowering, so here's the implementation.
cc ````@nikic```` as this should hopefully unblock #107224 (though perhaps other changes to the prior implementation, which I left for bootstrapping, are needed).
a general type system cleanup
removes the helper functions `traits::fully_solve_X` as they add more complexity then they are worth. It's confusing which of these helpers should be used in which context.
changes the way we deal with overflow to always add depth in `evaluate_predicates_recursively`. It may make sense to actually fully transition to not have `recursion_depth` on obligations but that's probably a bit too much for this PR.
also removes some other small - and imo unnecessary - helpers.
r? types
Do not suggest bounds restrictions for synthesized RPITITs
Before this PR we were getting ...
```
warning: the feature `async_fn_in_trait` is incomplete and may not be safe to use and/or cause compiler crashes
--> tests/ui/async-await/in-trait/missing-send-bound.rs:5:12
|
5 | #![feature(async_fn_in_trait)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: see issue #91611 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91611> for more information
= note: `#[warn(incomplete_features)]` on by default
error: future cannot be sent between threads safely
--> tests/ui/async-await/in-trait/missing-send-bound.rs:17:20
|
17 | assert_is_send(test::<T>());
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ future returned by `test` is not `Send`
|
= help: within `impl Future<Output = ()>`, the trait `Send` is not implemented for `impl Future<Output = ()>`
note: future is not `Send` as it awaits another future which is not `Send`
--> tests/ui/async-await/in-trait/missing-send-bound.rs:13:5
|
13 | T::bar().await;
| ^^^^^^^^ await occurs here on type `impl Future<Output = ()>`, which is not `Send`
note: required by a bound in `assert_is_send`
--> tests/ui/async-await/in-trait/missing-send-bound.rs:21:27
|
21 | fn assert_is_send(_: impl Send) {}
| ^^^^ required by this bound in `assert_is_send`
help: consider further restricting the associated type
|
16 | fn test2<T: Foo>() where impl Future<Output = ()>: Send {
| ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
error: aborting due to previous error; 1 warning emitted
```
and we want this output ...
```
warning: the feature `async_fn_in_trait` is incomplete and may not be safe to use and/or cause compiler crashes
--> $DIR/missing-send-bound.rs:5:12
|
LL | #![feature(async_fn_in_trait)]
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: see issue #91611 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91611> for more information
= note: `#[warn(incomplete_features)]` on by default
error: future cannot be sent between threads safely
--> $DIR/missing-send-bound.rs:17:20
|
LL | assert_is_send(test::<T>());
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ future returned by `test` is not `Send`
|
= help: within `impl Future<Output = ()>`, the trait `Send` is not implemented for `impl Future<Output = ()>`
note: future is not `Send` as it awaits another future which is not `Send`
--> $DIR/missing-send-bound.rs:13:5
|
LL | T::bar().await;
| ^^^^^^^^ await occurs here on type `impl Future<Output = ()>`, which is not `Send`
note: required by a bound in `assert_is_send`
--> $DIR/missing-send-bound.rs:21:27
|
LL | fn assert_is_send(_: impl Send) {}
| ^^^^ required by this bound in `assert_is_send`
error: aborting due to previous error; 1 warning emitted
```
r? `@compiler-errors`
Only implement Fn* traits for extern "Rust" safe function pointers and items
Since calling the function via an `Fn` trait will assume `extern "Rust"` ABI and not do any safety checks, only safe `extern "Rust"` function can implement the `Fn` traits. This syncs the logic between the old solver and the new solver.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Constrain const vars to error if const types are mismatched
When equating two consts of different types, if either are const variables, constrain them to the correct const error kind.
This helps us avoid "successfully" matching a const against an impl signature but leaving unconstrained const vars, which will lead to incremental ICEs when we call const-eval queries during const projection.
Fixes#109296
The second commit in the stack fixes a regression in the first commit where we end up mentioning `[const error]` in an impl overlap error message. I think the error message changes for the better, but I could implement alternative strategies to avoid this without delaying the overlap error message...
r? `@BoxyUwU`
Custom MIR: Support aggregate expressions
Add support for tuple, array and ADT expressions in custom mir
r? `````@oli-obk````` or `````@tmiasko````` or `````@JakobDegen`````
Walk un-shifted nested `impl Trait` in trait when setting up default trait method assumptions
Fixes a double subtraction in some binder math in return-position `impl Trait` in trait handling code.
Fixes#109239
Remove the assume(!is_null) from Vec::as_ptr
At a guess, this code is leftover from LLVM was worse at keeping track of the niche information here. In any case, we don't need this anymore: Removing this `assume` doesn't get rid of the `nonnull` attribute on the return type.
This makes sense, since the search index has the information in it,
and it's more useful for function signature searches since a
function signature search's item type is, by definition, some type
of function (there's more than one, but not very many).
Distribute libntdll.a with windows-gnu toolchains
This allows the OS loader to load essential functions (e.g. read/write file) at load time instead of lazily doing so at runtime.
r? libs
Only expect a GAT const param for `type_of` of GAT const arg
IDK why we were account for both `is_ty_or_const` instead of just for a const param, since we're computing the `type_of` a const param specifically.
Fixes#109300
Fix generics_of for impl's RPITIT synthesized associated type
The only useful commit is the last one.
This makes `generics_of` for the impl side RPITIT copy from the trait's associated type and avoid the fn on the impl side which was previously wrongly used.
This solution is better but we still need to fix resolution of the generated generics.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
fix ClashingExternDeclarations lint ICE
Fixes#109334
First "real" contribution, please let me know if I did something wrong.
As I understand it, it's OK if a `#[repr(transparent)]` type has no non-zero sized types (aka is a ZST itself) and the function should just return the type normally instead of panicking
r? `@Nilstrieb`
rustdoc: Remove footnote references from doc summary
Since it's one line, we don't have the footnote definition so it doesn't make sense to have the reference.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109024.
r? `@notriddle`
rustdoc: implement bag semantics for function parameter search
This tweak to the function signature search engine makes things so that, if a type is repeated in the search query, it'll only match if the function actually includes it that many times.
fix: fix ICE in `custom-test-frameworks` feature
Fixes#107454
Simple fix to emit error instead of ICEing. At some point, all the code in `tests.rs` should be refactored, there is a bit of duplication (this PR's code is repeated five times over lol).
r? `@Nilstrieb` (active on the linked issue?)
rustdoc: Fix missing private inlining
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109258.
If the item isn't inlined, it shouldn't have been added into `view_item_stack`. The problem here was that it was not removed, preventing sub items to be inlined if they have a re-export in "upper levels".
cc `@epage`
r? `@notriddle`
This tweak to the function signature search engine makes things so that,
if a type is repeated in the search query, it'll only match if the
function actually includes it that many times.
The name of NativeLib will be presented
Fixes#109144
I was working on a quick fix, but found change the name from `Option<Symbol>` to `Symbol` make life a little bit easier.
fix: don't suggest similar method when unstable
Fixes#109177
Don't display typo suggestions for unstable things, unless the feature flag is enabled.
AFAIK, there are two places this occurs:
- `rustc_resolve`: before type checking, effectively just `FnCtxt::Free`.
- `rustc_hir_typck`: during type checking, for `FnCtxt::Assoc(..)`s.
The linked issue is about the latter, obviously the issue is applicable to both.
r? `@estebank`
Add `useless_anonymous_reexport` lint
This is a follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108936. We once again show all anonymous re-exports in rustdoc, however we also wanted to add a lint to let users know that it very likely doesn't have the effect they think it has.
Add note for mismatched types because of circular dependencies
If you have crate A with a dependency on crate B, and crate B with a dev-dependency on A, then you might see "mismatched types" errors on types that seem to be equal. This PR adds a note that explains that the types are different, because crate B is compiled twice, one time with `cfg(test)` and one time without.
I haven't found a good way to create circular dependencies in UI tests, so I abused the incremental tests instead. As a bonus, incremental tests support "cpass" now.
related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/22750
Upgrade to LLVM 16
This updates Rust to LLVM 16. It also updates our host compiler for dist-x86_64-linux to LLVM 16. The reason for that is that Bolt from LLVM 15 is not capable of compiling LLVM 16 (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/61114).
LLVM 16.0.0 has been [released](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/llvm-16-0-0-release/69326) on March 18, while Rust 1.70 will become stable on June 1.
Tested images: `dist-x86_64-linux`, `dist-riscv64-linux` (alt), `dist-x86_64-illumos`, `dist-various-1`, `dist-various-2`, `dist-powerpc-linux`, `wasm32`, `armhf-gnu`
Tested images until the usual IPv6 failures: `test-various`
Fix generics mismatch errors for RPITITs on -Zlower-impl-trait-in-trait-to-assoc-ty
This PR stops reporting errors due to different count of generics on the new synthesized associated types for RPITITs. Those were already reported when we compare the function on the triat with the function on the impl.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Pass the right HIR back from `get_fn_decl`
Fixes#109232
Makes sure that the `fn_id: HirId` that we pass to `suggest_missing_return_type` matches up with the `fn_decl: hir::FnDecl` that we pass to it, so the late-bound vars that we fetch from the former match up with the types in the latter...
This HIR suggestion code really needs a big refactor. I've tried to do it in the past (a couple of attempts), but it's a super tangled mess. It really shouldn't be passing around things like `hir::Node` and just deal with `LocalDefId`s everywhere... Anyways, I'd rather fix this ICE, now.
Do not ICE for unexpected lifetime with ConstGeneric rib
Fixes#109143
r? ````@petrochenkov````
Combining this test with the previous test will affect the previous diagnostics, so I added a separate test case.
Use index based drop loop for slices and arrays
Instead of building two kinds of drop pair loops, of which only one will be eventually used at runtime in a given monomorphization, always use index based loop.
Install projection from RPITIT to default trait method opaque correctly
1. For new lowering strategy `-Zlower-impl-trait-in-trait-to-assoc-ty`, install the correct default trait method projection predicates (RPITIT -> opaque). This makes default trait body tests pass!
2. Fix two WF-checking bugs -- first, we want to make sure that we're always looking for an opaque type in `check_return_position_impl_trait_in_trait_bounds`. That's because the RPITIT projections are normalized to opaques during wfcheck. Second, fix RPITIT's param-envs by not adding the projection predicates that we install on trait methods to make default RPITITs work -- I left a comment why.
3. Also, just a small drive-by for `rustc_on_unimplemented`. Not sure if it affects any tests, but can't hurt.
r? ````@spastorino,```` based off of #109140
inherit_overflow: adapt pattern to also work with v0 mangling
This test was failing under new-symbol-mangling = true. Adapt pattern to work in both cases.
Related to #106002 from December.
Wrap the whole LocalInfo in ClearCrossCrate.
MIR contains a lot of information about locals. The primary purpose of this information is the quality of borrowck diagnostics.
This PR aims to drop this information after MIR analyses are finished, ie. starting from post-cleanup runtime MIR.
In cases where it is legal, we should prefer poison values over
undef values.
This replaces undef with poison for aggregate construction and
for uninhabited types. There are more places where we can likely
use poison, but I wanted to stay conservative to start with.
In particular the aggregate case is important for newer LLVM
versions, which are not able to handle an undef base value during
early optimization due to poison-propagation concerns.
Flatten/inline format_args!() and (string and int) literal arguments into format_args!()
Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78356
Gated behind `-Zflatten-format-args=yes`.
Part of #99012
This change inlines string literals, integer literals and nested format_args!() into format_args!() during ast lowering, making all of the following pairs result in equivalent hir:
```rust
println!("Hello, {}!", "World");
println!("Hello, World!");
```
```rust
println!("[info] {}", format_args!("error"));
println!("[info] error");
```
```rust
println!("[{}] {}", status, format_args!("error: {}", msg));
println!("[{}] error: {}", status, msg);
```
```rust
println!("{} + {} = {}", 1, 2, 1 + 2);
println!("1 + 2 = {}", 1 + 2);
```
And so on.
This is useful for macros. E.g. a `log::info!()` macro could just pass the tokens from the user directly into a `format_args!()` that gets efficiently flattened/inlined into a `format_args!("info: {}")`.
It also means that `dbg!(x)` will have its file, line, and expression name inlined:
```rust
eprintln!("[{}:{}] {} = {:#?}", file!(), line!(), stringify!(x), x); // before
eprintln!("[example.rs:1] x = {:#?}", x); // after
```
Which can be nice in some cases, but also means a lot more unique static strings than before if dbg!() is used a lot.
error-msg: impl better suggestion for `E0532`
Fixes#106862
No test as there is already a test which is nearly identical to the example in the linked issue.
Revert #107376 to fix potential `bincode` breakage and `rustc-perf` benchmark.
#107376 caused `rustc-perf`'s `webrender` benchmark to break, by regressing on the `bincode-1.3.3` crate.
~~This PR is a draft revert in case we can't land a fix soon enough, and we'd like to land the revert instead~~
(Though I myself think it'd be safer to do the revert, and run crater when relanding #107376.)
cc `@aliemjay`
Implement checked Shl/Shr at MIR building.
This does not require any special handling by codegen backends,
as the overflow behaviour is entirely determined by the rhs (shift amount).
This allows MIR ConstProp to remove the overflow check for constant shifts.
~There is an existing different behaviour between cg_llvm and cg_clif (cc `@bjorn3).`
I took cg_llvm's one as reference: overflow if `rhs < 0 || rhs > number_of_bits_in_lhs_ty`.~
EDIT: `cg_llvm` and `cg_clif` implement the overflow check differently. This PR uses `cg_llvm`'s implementation based on a `BitAnd` instead of `cg_clif`'s one based on an unsigned comparison.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #108991 (add `enable-warnings` flag for llvm, and disable it by default.)
- #109109 (Use `unused_generic_params` from crate metadata)
- #109111 (Create dirs for build_triple)
- #109136 (Simplify proc macro signature validity check)
- #109150 (Update cargo)
- #109154 (Fix MappingToUnit to support no span of arg_ty)
- #109157 (Remove mw from review rotation for a while)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Simplify proc macro signature validity check
Use an `ObligationCtxt` instead of `normalize_erasing_regions` + `DeepRejectCtxt`. This should both give us a more accurate error message, and also avoid issues like not-well-formed proc macro signatures. Also, let's fall back on the regular type mismatch error reporting for making these diagnostic notes, instead of hard-coding a bunch of specific diagnostics.
Fixes#109129
Use `unused_generic_params` from crate metadata
Due to the way that `separate_provide_extern` interacted with the implementation of `<ty::InstanceDef<'tcx> as Key>::query_crate_is_local`, we actually never hit the foreign provider for `unused_generic_params`.
Additionally, since the *local* provider of `unused_generic_params` calls `should_polymorphize`, which always returns false if the def-id is foreign, this means that we never actually polymorphize monomorphic instances originating from foreign crates.
We don't actually encode `unused_generic_params` for items where all generics are used, so I had to tweak the foreign provider to fall back to `ty::UnusedGenericParams::new_all_used()` to avoid more ICEs when the above bugs were fixed.
Ensure `ptr::read` gets all the same LLVM `load` metadata that dereferencing does
I was looking into `array::IntoIter` optimization, and noticed that it wasn't annotating the loads with `noundef` for simple things like `array::IntoIter<i32, N>`. Trying to narrow it down, it seems that was because `MaybeUninit::assume_init_read` isn't marking the load as initialized (<https://rust.godbolt.org/z/Mxd8TPTnv>), which is unfortunate since that's basically its reason to exist.
The root cause is that `ptr::read` is currently implemented via the *untyped* `copy_nonoverlapping`, and thus the `load` doesn't get any type-aware metadata: no `noundef`, no `!range`. This PR solves that by lowering `ptr::read(p)` to `copy *p` in MIR, for which the backends already do the right thing.
Fortuitiously, this also improves the IR we give to LLVM for things like `mem::replace`, and fixes a couple of long-standing bugs where `ptr::read` on `Copy` types was worse than `*`ing them.
Zulip conversation: <https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/219381-t-libs/topic/Move.20array.3A.3AIntoIter.20to.20ManuallyDrop/near/341189936>
cc `@erikdesjardins` `@JakobDegen` `@workingjubilee` `@the8472`
Fixes#106369Fixes#73258
Instead of building two kinds of drop pair loops, of which only one will
be eventually used at runtime in a given monomorphization, always use
index based loop.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #108722 (Support for Fuchsia RISC-V target)
- #108880 (Remove tests/ui/impl-trait/in-trait/new-lowering-strategy in favor of using revisions on existing tests)
- #108909 (Fix object safety checks for new RPITITs)
- #108915 (Remove some direct calls to local_def_id_to_hir_id on diagnostics)
- #108923 (Make fns from other crates with RPITIT work for -Zlower-impl-trait-in-trait-to-assoc-ty)
- #109101 (Fall back to old metadata computation when type references errors)
- #109105 (Don't ICE for late-bound consts across `AnonConstBoundary`)
- #109110 (Don't codegen impossible to satisfy impls)
- #109116 (Emit diagnostic when calling methods on the unit type in method chains)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Emit diagnostic when calling methods on the unit type in method chains
Fixes#104204.
What this PR does: If a method is not found somewhere in a call chain, we check if we called earlier a method with signature `(&mut T, ...) -> ()`. If this is the case then we emit a diagnostic message.
For example given input:
```
vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().collect::<Vec<i32>>().sort_by_key(|i| i).sort();
```
the current output is:
```
error[E0599]: no method named `sort` found for unit type `()` in the current scope
--> hello.rs:3:72
|
3 | vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().collect::<Vec<i32>>().sort_by_key(|i| i).sort();
| ^^^^ method not found in `()`
```
after this PR it will be:
```
error[E0599]: no method named `sort` found for unit type `()` in the current scope
--> ./hello.rs:3:72
|
3 | vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().collect::<Vec<i32>>().sort_by_key(|i| i).sort();
| ^^^^ method not found in `()`
|
note: method `sort_by_key` modifies its receiver in-place, it is not meant to be used in method chains.
--> ./hello.rs:3:53
|
3 | vec![1, 2, 3].into_iter().collect::<Vec<i32>>().sort_by_key(|i| i).sort();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ this call modifies its receiver in-place
```
Fall back to old metadata computation when type references errors
Projection is a bit too aggressive normalizing `<dyn Trait<[type error]> as Pointee>::Metadata` to `[type error]`, rather than to `DynMetadata<..>`. Side-step that by just falling back to the old structural metadata computation.
Fixes#109078
Make fns from other crates with RPITIT work for -Zlower-impl-trait-in-trait-to-assoc-ty
Only the last two commits are meaningful.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Remove tests/ui/impl-trait/in-trait/new-lowering-strategy in favor of using revisions on existing tests
r? `@compiler-errors`
This one again sits on top of existing approved PRs and it still needs to add revisions to tests in `tests/ui/impl-trait/in-trait` as it only does so for async in traits.
If no method is found when checking method call, we check if we called a method with signature (&mut T, ...) -> (). If this is the case then we emit a diagnostic message
Properly allow macro expanded `format_args` invocations to uses captures
Originally, this was kinda half-allowed. There were some primitive checks in place that looked at the span to see whether the input was likely a literal. These "source literal" checks are needed because the spans created during `format_args` parsing only make sense when it is indeed a literal that was written in the source code directly.
This is orthogonal to the restriction that the first argument must be a "direct literal", not being exanpanded from macros. This restriction was imposed by [RFC 2795] on the basis of being too confusing. But this was only concerned with the argument of the invocation being a literal, not whether it was a source literal (maybe in spirit it meant it being a source literal, this is not clear to me).
Since the original check only really cared about source literals (which is good enough to deny the `format_args!(concat!())` example), macros expanding to `format_args` invocations were able to use implicit captures if they spanned the string in a way that lead back to a source string.
The "source literal" checks were not strict enough and caused ICEs in certain cases (see #106191). So I tightened it up in #106195 to really only work if it's a direct source literal.
This caused the `indoc` crate to break. `indoc` transformed the source literal by removing whitespace, which made it not a "source literal" anymore (which is required to fix the ICE). But since `indoc` spanned the literal in ways that made the old check think that it's a literal, it was able to use implicit captures (which is useful and nice for the users of `indoc`).
This commit properly seperates the previously introduced concepts of "source literal" and "direct literal" and therefore allows `indoc` invocations, which don't create "source literals" to use implicit captures again.
Fixes#106191
[RFC 2795]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2795-format-args-implicit-identifiers.html#macro-hygiene
Originally, this was kinda half-allowed. There were some primitive
checks in place that looked at the span to see whether the input was
likely a literal. These "source literal" checks are needed because the
spans created during `format_args` parsing only make sense when it is
indeed a literal that was written in the source code directly.
This is orthogonal to the restriction that the first argument must be a
"direct literal", not being exanpanded from macros. This restriction was
imposed by [RFC 2795] on the basis of being too confusing. But this was
only concerned with the argument of the invocation being a literal, not
whether it was a source literal (maybe in spirit it meant it being a
source literal, this is not clear to me).
Since the original check only really cared about source literals (which
is good enough to deny the `format_args!(concat!())` example), macros
expanding to `format_args` invocations were able to use implicit
captures if they spanned the string in a way that lead back to a source
string.
The "source literal" checks were not strict enough and caused ICEs in
certain cases (see # 106191 (the space is intended to avoid spammy
backreferences)). So I tightened it up in # 106195 to really only work
if it's a direct source literal.
This caused the `indoc` crate to break. `indoc` transformed the source
literal by removing whitespace, which made it not a "source literal"
anymore (which is required to fix the ICE). But since `indoc` spanned
the literal in ways that made the old check think that it's a literal,
it was able to use implicit captures (which is useful and nice for the
users of `indoc`).
This commit properly seperates the previously introduced concepts of
"source literal" and "direct literal" and therefore allows `indoc`
invocations, which don't create "source literals" to use implicit
captures again.
[RFC 2795]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2795-format-args-implicit-identifiers.html#macro-hygiene
Remove `identity_future` indirection
This was previously needed because the indirection used to hide some unexplained lifetime errors, which it turned out were related to the `min_choice` algorithm.
Removing the indirection also solves a couple of cycle errors, large moves and makes async blocks support the `#[track_caller]`annotation.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104826.
Gracefully handle `#[target_feature]` on statics
The was careful around not calling `fn_sig` on not-functions but well, it wasn't careful enough. This commit makes it a little more careful and also adds tests for a bunch more item kinds.
I was sadly not able to fully bless the test locally because I'm on an aarch64 machine but I hope some manual editing made it work 😅Fix#109079
Treat projections with infer as placeholder during fast reject in new solver
r? ``@lcnr``
Kind of a shame that we need to change all of the call sites for `for_each_relevant_impl`, etc. to pass an extra parameter. I guess I could have the "default" fn which calls a configurable fn?
The was careful around not calling `fn_sig` on not-functions but well,
it wasn't careful enough. This commit makes it a little more careful and
also adds tests for a bunch more item kinds.
Move `Option::as_slice` to an always-sound implementation
This approach depends on CSE to not have any branches or selects when the guessed offset is correct -- which it always will be right now -- but to also be *sound* (just less efficient) if the layout algorithms change such that the guess is incorrect.
The codegen test confirms that CSE handles this as expected, leaving the optimal codegen.
cc JakobDegen #108545
Remove `box_syntax`
r? `@Nilstrieb`
This removes the feature `box_syntax`, which allows the use of `box <expr>` to create a Box, and finalises removing use of the feature from the compiler. `box_patterns` (allowing the use of `box <pat>` in a pattern) is unaffected.
It also removes `ast::ExprKind::Box` - the only way to create a 'box' expression now is with the rustc-internal `#[rustc_box]` attribute.
As a temporary measure to help users move away, `box <expr>` now parses the inner expression, and emits a `MachineApplicable` lint to replace it with `Box::new`
Closes#49733
Strengthen state tracking in const-prop
Some/many of the changes are replicated between both the const-prop lint and the const-prop optimization.
Behaviour changes:
- const-prop opt does not give a span to propagated values. This was useless as that span's primary purpose is to diagnose evaluation failure in codegen.
- we remove the `OnlyPropagateInto` mode. It was only used for function arguments, which are better modeled by a write before entry.
- the tracking of assignments and discriminants make clearer that we do nothing in `NoPropagation` mode or on indirect places.
Gate usages of `dyn*` and const closures in macros
We silently accepted `dyn*` and const closures in macros as long as they didn't expand to anything containing these experimental features, unlike other gated features such as `for<'a>` binders on closures, etc. Let's not do that, to make sure nobody begins relying on this.
rustdoc: use restricted Damerau-Levenshtein distance for search
Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108200, for the same rationale.
> This replaces the existing Levenshtein algorithm with the Damerau-Levenshtein algorithm. This means that "ab" to "ba" is one change (a transposition) instead of two (a deletion and insertion). More specifically, this is a restricted implementation, in that "ca" to "abc" cannot be performed as "ca" → "ac" → "abc", as there is an insertion in the middle of a transposition. I believe that errors like that are sufficiently rare that it's not worth taking into account.
Before this change, searching [`prinltn!`] listed `print!` first, followed by `println!`. With this change, `println!` matches more closely.
[`prinltn!`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/?search=prinltn!
Commit some tests for the new solver + lazy norm
Also consolidate `typeck/lazy-norm` into `traits/new-solver`, since it's not really useful to maintain a distinction, like when a test really is due to "lazy norm" or "the new solver" (usually both!)
Add suggestion to diagnostic when user has array but trait wants slice. (rebased)
Rebase of #91314, except for change to multipart suggestion
Resolves#90528
r? ``@compiler-errors`` since you requested the multipart suggestion
This approach depends on CSE to not have any branches or selects when the guessed offset is correct -- which it always will be right now -- but to also be *sound* (just less efficient) if the layout algorithms change such that the guess is incorrect.
I was looking into `array::IntoIter` optimization, and noticed that it wasn't annotating the loads with `noundef` for simple things like `array::IntoIter<i32, N>`.
Turned out to be a more general problem as `MaybeUninit::assume_init_read` isn't marking the load as initialized (<https://rust.godbolt.org/z/Mxd8TPTnv>), which is unfortunate since that's basically its reason to exist.
This PR lowers `ptr::read(p)` to `copy *p` in MIR, which fortuitiously also improves the IR we give to LLVM for things like `mem::replace`.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104363 (Make `unused_allocation` lint against `Box::new` too)
- #106633 (Stabilize `nonzero_min_max`)
- #106844 (allow negative numeric literals in `concat!`)
- #108071 (Implement goal caching with the new solver)
- #108542 (Force parentheses around `match` expression in binary expression)
- #108690 (Place size limits on query keys and values)
- #108708 (Prevent overflow through Arc::downgrade)
- #108739 (Prevent the `start_bx` basic block in codegen from having two `Builder`s at the same time)
- #108806 (Querify register_tools and post-expansion early lints)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
allow negative numeric literals in `concat!`
Fixes#106837
While *technically* negative numeric literals are implemented as unary operations, users can reasonably expect that negative literals are treated the same as positive literals.
Make `unused_allocation` lint against `Box::new` too
Previously it only linted against `box` syntax, which likely won't ever be stabilized, which is pretty useless. Even now I'm not sure if it's a meaningful lint, but it's at least something 🤷
This means that code like the following will be linted against:
```rust
Box::new([1, 2, 3]).len();
f(&Box::new(1)); // where f : &i32 -> ()
```
The lint works by checking if a `Box::new` (or `box`) expression has an a borrow adjustment, meaning that the code that first stores the box in a variable won't be linted against:
```rust
let boxed = Box::new([1, 2, 3]); // no lint
boxed.len();
```
Honor current target when checking conditional compilation values
This is fixed by simply using the currently registered target in the current session. We need to use it because of target json that are not by design included in the rustc list of targets.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108941
Move __thread_local_inner to sys
Move `__thread_local_inner` macro in `crate:🧵:local` to `crate::sys`. Initially, I was thinking about removing this macro completely, but I could not find a way to create the generic statics without macros, so in the end, I just moved to code around.
This probably will need a rebase once https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108917 is merged
r? ``@workingjubilee``
Add note when matching token with nonterminal
The current error message is _really_ confusing. The implementation is slightly hacky, but not that much more hacky than all this nonterminal stuff..
r? ``@petrochenkov``
Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108200, for the same
rationale.
> This replaces the existing Levenshtein algorithm with the
> Damerau-Levenshtein algorithm. This means that "ab" to "ba" is one change
> (a transposition) instead of two (a deletion and insertion). More
> specifically, this is a restricted implementation, in that "ca" to "abc"
> cannot be performed as "ca" → "ac" → "abc", as there is an insertion in the
> middle of a transposition. I believe that errors like that are sufficiently
> rare that it's not worth taking into account.
Before this change, searching `prinltn!` listed `print!` first, followed
by `println!`. With this change, `println!` matches more closely.
Relax ordering rules for `asm!` operands
The `asm!` and `global_asm!` macros require their operands to appear strictly in the following order:
- Template strings
- Positional operands
- Named operands
- Explicit register operands
- `clobber_abi`
- `options`
This is overly strict and can be inconvienent when building complex `asm!` statements with macros. This PR relaxes the ordering requirements as follows:
- Template strings must still come before all other operands.
- Positional operands must still come before named and explicit register operands.
- Named and explicit register operands can be freely mixed.
- `options` and `clobber_abi` can appear in any position after the template strings.
r? ```````@joshtriplett```````
Don't even try to combine consts with incompatible types
~I left a more detailed explanation for why this fixes this issue in the UI test, but in general, we should not try to unify const infer vars and rigid consts if they have incompatible types. That's because we don't want something like a `ConstArgHasType` predicate to suddenly go from passing to failing, or vice versa, due to a shallow resolve.~
1. Use the `type_of` for a parameter in `try_eval_lit_or_param`, instead of the "expected" type from a `WithOptConstParam` def id.
2. Don't combine consts that have incompatible types.
Fixes#108781
feat: implement better error for manual impl of `Fn*` traits
Fixes#39259
cc `@estebank` (you gave me some advice in the linked issue, would you like to review?)
Do not ICE when we have fn pointer `Fn` obligations with bound vars in the self type
We never supported solving `for<'a> fn(&'a ()): Fn(&'a ())` -- I tried to add that support in #104929, but iirc `@lcnr` wanted to support this more generally by eagerly instantiating trait predicate binders with placeholders. That never happened due to blockers in the old solver, but we probably shouldn't ICE in any case.
On the bright side, this passes on the new solver :^)
Emit alias-eq when equating numeric var and projection
This doesn't fix everything having to do with projections and infer vars, but it does fix a common case I saw in HIR typeck.
r? `@lcnr`
This allows removing all the platform-dependent code from `library/std/src/thread/local.rs` and `library/std/src/thread/mod.rs`
Signed-off-by: Ayush Singh <ayushsingh1325@gmail.com>
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #108879 (Unconstrained terms should account for infer vars being equated)
- #108936 (Rustdoc: don't hide anonymous reexport)
- #108940 (Add myself to compiler reviewers list)
- #108945 (Make some report and emit errors take DefIds instead of BodyIds)
- #108946 (Document the resulting values produced when using `From<bool>` on floats)
- #108956 (Make ptr::from_ref and ptr::from_mut in #106116 const.)
- #108960 (Remove `body_def_id` from `Inherited`)
- #108963 (only call git on git checkouts during bootstrap)
- #108964 (Fix the docs for pointer method with_metadata_of)
Failed merges:
- #108950 (Directly construct Inherited in typeck.)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup