enable parallel rustc front end in nightly builds
Refers to the [MCP](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/681), this pr does:
1. Enable the parallel front end in nightly builds, and keep the default number of threads as 1. Then users can use the parallel rustc front end via -Z threads=n option.
2. Set it up to serial front end for beta/stable builds via bootstrap.
3. Switch over the alt builders from parallel rustc to serial, so we have artifacts without parallel to test against the artifacts with parallel.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@cjgillot` `@nnethercote` `@bjorn3` `@Kobzol`
Make sure that predicates with unmentioned bound vars are still considered global in the old solver
In the old solver, we consider predicates with late-bound vars to not be "global":
9c8a2694fa/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L1840-L1844)
The implementation of `has_late_bound_vars` was modified in #115834 so that we'd properly anonymize binders that had late-bound vars but didn't reference them. This fixed an ICE.
However, this also led to a behavioral change in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117056#issuecomment-1775014545 for a couple of crates, which now consider `for<'a> GL33: Shader` (note the binder var that is *not* used in the predicate) to not be "global". This forces associated types to not be normalizable due to the old trait solver being dumb.
This PR distinguishes types which *reference* late-bound vars and binders which *have* late-bound vars. The latter is represented with the new type flag `TypeFlags::HAS_BINDER_VARS`, which is used when we only care about knowing whether binders have vars in their bound var list (even if they're not used, like for binder anonymization).
This should fix (after beta backport) the `luminance-gl` and `luminance-webgl` crates in #117056.
r? types
**(priority is kinda high on a review here given beta becomes stable on November 16.)**
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #110340 (Deref docs: expand and remove "smart pointer" qualifier)
- #116894 (Guarantee that `char` has the same size and alignment as `u32`)
- #117534 (clarify that the str invariant is a safety, not validity, invariant)
- #117562 (triagebot no-merges: exclude different case)
- #117570 (fallback for `construct_generic_bound_failure`)
- #117583 (Remove `'tcx` lifetime on `PlaceholderConst`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
fallback for `construct_generic_bound_failure`
Fixes#117547
This case regressed at #115882.
In this context, `generic_param_scope` is produced by `RPITVisitor` and not included by `hir_owner`. Therefore, I've added a fallback to address this.
Update the alignment checks to match rust-lang/reference#1387
Previously, we had a special case to not check `Rvalue::AddressOf` in this pass because we weren't quite sure if pointers needed to be aligned in the Place passed to it: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112026
Since https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1387 merged, this PR updates this pass to match. The behavior of the check is nearly unchanged, except we also avoid inserting a check for creating references. Most of the changes in this PR are cleanup and new tests.
consts: remove dead code around `i1` constant values
`LLVMConstZext` recently got deleted, and it turns out (thanks to `@nikic` for knowing!) that this is dead code. Tests all pass for me without this logic, and per nikic:
> We always generate constants in "relocatable bag of bytes"
> representation, so you're never going to get a plain bool.
So this should be a safe thing to do.
r? `@nikic`
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
Use `filter_map` in `try_par_for_each_in`
This simplifies the expression, especially for the rayon part, and also
lets us drop the `E: Copy` constraint.
Cleanup `rustc_mir_build/../check_match.rs`
The file had become pretty unwieldy, with a fair amount of duplication. As a bonus, I discovered that we weren't running some pattern checks in if-let chains.
I recommend looking commit-by-commit. The last commit is a whim, I think it makes more sense that way but I don't hold this opinion strongly.
By using SCC for better performance, we also have to take into account
SCCs whose representative is an existential region but also contains a
placeholder.
By only checking the representative, we may miss that the loan escapes
the function. This can be fixed by picking a better representative, or
removing placeholders from the main path.
This is the simplest fix: forgo efficiency and traverse the region graph
instead of the SCCs.
They've been deprecated for four years.
This commit includes the following changes.
- It eliminates the `rustc_plugin_impl` crate.
- It changes the language used for lints in
`compiler/rustc_driver_impl/src/lib.rs` and
`compiler/rustc_lint/src/context.rs`. External lints are now called
"loaded" lints, rather than "plugins" to avoid confusion with the old
plugins. This only has a tiny effect on the output of `-W help`.
- E0457 and E0498 are no longer used.
- E0463 is narrowed, now only relating to unfound crates, not plugins.
- The `plugin` feature was moved from "active" to "removed".
- It removes the entire plugins chapter from the unstable book.
- It removes quite a few tests, mostly all of those in
`tests/ui-fulldeps/plugin/`.
Closes#29597.
`LLVMConstZext` recently got deleted, and it turns out (thanks to @nikic
for knowing!) that this is dead code. Tests all pass for me without this
logic, and per nikic:
> We always generate constants in "relocatable bag of bytes"
> representation, so you're never going to get a plain bool.
So this should be a safe thing to do.
r? @nikic
@rustbot label: +llvm-main
Fix incorrect trait bound restriction suggestion
Suggest
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/restrict-assoc-type-of-generic-bound.rs:9:12
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait, B>(a: A) -> B {
| - - expected `B` because of return type
| |
| expected this type parameter
LL | return a.bar();
| ^^^^^^^ expected type parameter `B`, found associated type
|
= note: expected type parameter `B`
found associated type `<A as MyTrait>::T`
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait<T = B>, B>(a: A) -> B {
| +++++++
```
instead of
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/restrict-assoc-type-of-generic-bound.rs:9:12
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait, B>(a: A) -> B {
| - - expected `B` because of return type
| |
| expected this type parameter
LL | return a.bar();
| ^^^^^^^ expected type parameter `B`, found associated type
|
= note: expected type parameter `B`
found associated type `<A as MyTrait>::T`
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait + <T = B>, B>(a: A) -> B {
| +++++++++
```
Fix#117501.
Pretty print `Fn` traits in `rustc_on_unimplemented`
I don't think that users really ever should need to think about `Fn*` traits' tupled args for a simple trait error.
r? diagnostics
Derive expansions for packed structs cause move errors because
they prefer copying over borrowing since borrowing the fields of a
packed struct can result in unaligned access and therefore undefined
behaviour.
This underlying cause of the errors, however, is not apparent
to the user. We add a diagnostic note here to remedy that.
Add all RPITITs when augmenting param-env with GAT bounds in `check_type_bounds`
When checking that associated type definitions actually satisfy their associated type bounds in `check_type_bounds`, we construct a "`normalize_param_env`" which adds a projection predicate that allows us to assume that we can project the GAT to the definition we're checking. For example, in:
```rust
type Foo {
type Bar: Display = i32;
}
```
We would add `<Self as Foo>::Bar = i32` as a projection predicate when checking that `i32: Display` holds.
That `normalize_param_env` was, for some reason, only being used to normalize the predicate before it was registered. This is sketchy, because a nested obligation may require the GAT bound to hold, and also the projection cache is broken and doesn't differentiate projection cache keys that differ by param-envs 😿.
This `normalize_param_env` is also not sufficient when we have nested RPITITs and default trait methods, since we need to be able to assume we can normalize both the RPITIT and all of its child RPITITs to sufficiently prove all of its bounds. This is the cause of #117104, which only starts to fail for RPITITs that are nested 3 and above due to the projection-cache bug above.[^1]
## First fix
Use the `normalize_param_env` everywhere in `check_type_bounds`. This is reflected in a test I've constructed that fixes a GAT-only failure.
## Second fix
For RPITITs, install projection predicates for each RPITIT in the same function in `check_type_bounds`. This fixes#117104.
not sure who to request, so...
r? `@lcnr` hehe feel free to reassign :3
[^1]: The projection cache bug specifically occurs because we try normalizing the `assumed_wf_types` with the non-normalization param-env. This causes us to insert a projection cache entry that keeps the outermost RPITIT rigid, and it trivially satisifes all its own bounds. Super sketchy![^2]
[^2]: I haven't actually gone and fixed the projection cache bug because it's only marginally related, but I could, and it should no longer be triggered here.
Suggest
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/restrict-assoc-type-of-generic-bound.rs:9:12
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait, B>(a: A) -> B {
| - - expected `B` because of return type
| |
| expected this type parameter
LL | return a.bar();
| ^^^^^^^ expected type parameter `B`, found associated type
|
= note: expected type parameter `B`
found associated type `<A as MyTrait>::T`
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait<T = B>, B>(a: A) -> B {
| +++++++
```
instead of
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/restrict-assoc-type-of-generic-bound.rs:9:12
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait, B>(a: A) -> B {
| - - expected `B` because of return type
| |
| expected this type parameter
LL | return a.bar();
| ^^^^^^^ expected type parameter `B`, found associated type
|
= note: expected type parameter `B`
found associated type `<A as MyTrait>::T`
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
LL | pub fn foo<A: MyTrait + <T = B>, B>(a: A) -> B {
| +++++++++
```
Fix#117501.
Remove support for alias `-Z symbol-mangling-version`
(This is very similar to the removal of `-Z instrument-coverage` in #117111.)
`-C symbol-mangling-version` was stabilized back in rustc 1.59.0 (2022-02-24) via #90128, with the old unstable flag kept around (with a warning) as an alias to ease migration.
use global cache when computing proof trees
we're writing the solver while relying on the existence of the global cache to avoid exponential blowup. By disabling the global cache when building proof trees, it is easy to get hangs, e.g. when computing intercrate ambiguity causes.
Removes the unstable `-Zdump_solver_proof_tree_use_cache` option, as we now always return a full proof tree.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Don't check for alias bounds in liveness when aliases have escaping bound vars
I actually have no idea how we *should* be treating aliases with escaping bound vars here... but the simplest behavior is just doing what we used to do before.
r? aliemjay
Fixes#117455
Most notably, this commit changes the `pub use crate::*;` in that file
to `use crate::*;`. This requires a lot of `use` items in other crates
to be adjusted, because everything defined within `rustc_span::*` was
also available via `rustc_span::source_map::*`, which is bizarre.
The commit also removes `SourceMap::span_to_relative_line_string`, which
is unused.
The comment just below the first one describes how the `impl !Send for
FatalError` makes it impossible to `panic!(FatalError)`.
And the second one should be `panic_any` instead of `panic!`.
Do not assert in op_to_const.
`op_to_const` is used in `try_destructure_mir_constant_for_diagnostics`, which may encounter invalid constants created by optimizations and debugging.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117368
Avoid the path trimming ICE lint in error reporting
Types or really anything in MIR should never be formatted without path trimming disabled, because its formatting often tries to construct trimmed paths. In this case, the lint turns a nice error report into an irrelevant ICE.
Account for `ref` and `mut` in the wrong place for pattern ident renaming
If the user writes `S { ref field: name }` instead of `S { field: ref name }`, we suggest the correct code.
Fix#72298.
Set max_atomic_width for riscv32*-esp-espidf to 32
Fixes#117305
> Since riscv32 does not have 64-bit atomic instructions, I do not believe there is any way to fix this problem other than setting max_atomic_width of these targets to 32.
This is a breaking change because Atomic\*64 will become unavailable, but all affected targets are tier 3, and the current Atomic*64 violates the standard library's API contract and can cause problems with code that rely on the standard library's atomic types being lock-free.
r? `@Amanieu`
cc `@ivmarkov` `@MabezDev`