adjust how closure/generator types are printed
I saw `&[closure@$DIR/issue-20862.rs:2:5]` and I thought it is a slice type, because that's usually what `&[_]` is... it took me a while to realize that this is just a confusing printer and actually there's no slice. Let's use something that cannot be mistaken for a regular type.
give FutureIncompatibilityReason variants more explicit names
Also make the `reason` field mandatory when declaring a lint, to make sure this is a deliberate decision.
Move `DepKind` to `rustc_query_system` and define it as `u16`
This moves the `DepKind` type to `rustc_query_system` where it's defined with an inner `u16` field. This decouples it from `rustc_middle` and is a step towards letting other crates define dep kinds. It also allows some type parameters to be removed. The `DepKind` trait is replaced with a `Deps` trait. That's used when some operations or information about dep kinds which is unavailable in `rustc_query_system` are still needed.
r? `@cjgillot`
rustc_hir_analysis: add a helper to check function the signature mismatches
This function is now used to check `#[panic_handler]`, `start` lang item, `main`, `#[start]` and intrinsic functions.
The diagnosis produced are now closer to the ones produced by trait/impl method signature mismatch.
This is the first time I do anything with rustc_hir_analysis/rustc_hir_typeck, so comments and suggestions about things I did wrong or that could be improved will be appreciated.
Suggest desugaring to return-position `impl Future` when an `async fn` in trait fails an auto trait bound
First commit allows us to store the span of the `async` keyword in HIR.
Second commit implements a suggestion to desugar an `async fn` to a return-position `impl Future` in trait to slightly improve the `Send` situation being discussed in #115822.
This suggestion is only made when `#![feature(return_type_notation)]` is not enabled -- if it is, we should instead suggest an appropriate where-clause bound.
coverage: Don't bother renumbering expressions on the Rust side
The LLVM API that we use to encode coverage mappings already has its own code for removing unused coverage expressions and renumbering the rest.
This lets us get rid of our own complex renumbering code, making it easier to change our coverage code in other ways.
---
Now that we have tests for coverage mappings (#114843), I've been able to verify that this PR doesn't make the coverage mappings worse, thanks to an explicit simplification step.
rename mir::Constant -> mir::ConstOperand, mir::ConstKind -> mir::Const
Also, be more consistent with the `to/eval_bits` methods... we had some that take a type and some that take a size, and then sometimes the one that takes a type is called `bits_for_ty`.
Turns out that `ty::Const`/`mir::ConstKind` carry their type with them, so we don't need to even pass the type to those `eval_bits` functions at all.
However this is not properly consistent yet: in `ty` we have most of the methods on `ty::Const`, but in `mir` we have them on `mir::ConstKind`. And indeed those two types are the ones that correspond to each other. So `mir::ConstantKind` should actually be renamed to `mir::Const`. But what to do with `mir::Constant`? It carries around a span, that's really more like a constant operand that appears as a MIR operand... it's more suited for `syntax.rs` than `consts.rs`, but the bigger question is, which name should it get if we want to align the `mir` and `ty` types? `ConstOperand`? `ConstOp`? `Literal`? It's not a literal but it has a field called `literal` so it would at least be consistently wrong-ish...
``@oli-obk`` any ideas?
Prevent promotion of const fn calls in inline consts
We don't wanna make that mistake we did for statics and consts worse by letting more code use it.
r? ``@RalfJung``
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76001
The LLVM API that we use to encode coverage mappings already has its own code
for removing unused coverage expressions and renumbering the rest.
This lets us get rid of our own complex renumbering code, making it easier to
change our coverage code in other ways.
adjust ConstValue::Slice to work for arbitrary slice types
valtrees have already been assuming that this works; this PR makes it a reality. Also further restrict `ConstValue::Slice` to what it is actually used for; this even shrinks `ConstValue` from 32 to 24 bytes which is a nice win. :)
The alternative to this approach is to make `ConstValue::Slice` work really only for `&str`/`&[u8]` literals, and never return it in `op_to_const`. That would make `op_to_const` very clean. We could then even remove the `meta` field; the length would always be `data.inner().len()`. We could *almost* just use a `Symbol` instead of a `ConstAllocation`, but we have to support byte strings and there doesn't seem to be an interned representation of them (or rather, `ConstAllocation` *is* their interned representation). In this world, valtrees of slice reference types would then become noticeably more expensive to turn into a `ConstValue` -- but does that matter? Specifically for `&str`/`&[u8]` we could still use the optimized representation if we wanted.
If byte strings were already interned somewhere I'd gravitate towards the alternative, but the way things stand, we need a `ConstAllocation` case anyway to support byte strings, and then we might as well support arbitrary slices. (Or we say that byte strings don't get an optimized representation at all. Such a performance cliff between `str` and byte strings is probably unexpected, though due to the lack of interning for byte strings I think there might already be a performance cliff there.)
clean up unneeded `ToPredicate` impls
Part of #107250.
Removed all totally unused impls. And inlined two impls not need to satisify trait bound.
r? `@oli-obk`
miri: reduce code duplication in some SSE/SSE2 intrinsics
Reduces code duplication in the Miri implementation of some SSE and SSE2 using generics and rustc_const_eval helper functions.
There are also some other minor changes.
r? `@RalfJung`
Pretty-print argument-position impl trait to name it.
This removes a corner case.
RPIT and TAIT keep having no name, and it would be wrong to use the one in HIR (Ident::empty), so I make this case ICE.
rustc_target/riscv: Fix passing of transparent unions with only one non-ZST member
This ensures that `MaybeUninit<T>` has the same ABI as `T` when passed through an `extern "C"` function.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115481.
r? `@RalfJung`
This function is now used to check `#[panic_handler]`, `start` lang item, `main`, `#[start]` and intrinsic functions.
The diagnosis produced are now closer to the ones produced by trait/impl method signature mismatch.
move things out of mir/mod.rs
This moves a bunch of things out of `mir/mod.rs`:
- all const-related stuff to a new file consts.rs
- all statement/place/operand-related stuff to a new file statement.rs
- all pretty-printing related stuff to pretty.rs
`mod.rs` started out with 3100 lines and ends up with 1600. :)
Also there was some pretty-printing stuff in terminator.rs, that also got moved to pretty.rs, and I reordered things in pretty.rs so that it can be grouped by functionality.
Only the commit "use pretty_print_const_value from MIR constant 'extra' printing" has any behavior changes; it resolves the issue of having a fancy and a very crude pretty-printer for `ConstValue`.
r? `@oli-obk`
Make `TyKind::Adt`'s `Debug` impl be more pretty
Currently `{:?}` on `Ty` for a `TyKind::Adt` would print as `Adt(Foo, [])`. This PR changes it to be `Foo` when there are no generics or `Foo<T>`/`Foo<T, U>` when there _are_ generics. Example from debug log:
`├─0ms DEBUG rustc_hir_analysis::astconv return=Bar<T/#0, U/#1>`
I should have done this in my initial PR for a prettier TyKind: Debug impl but I thought I would need to be accessing generics_of to figure out where in the "path" the generics would have to go??? but no, adts literally only have a single place the generics can go (on the end). Feel a bit silly about this :)
r? `@oli-obk`
move required_consts check to general post-mono-check function
This factors some code that is common between the interpreter and the codegen backends into shared helper functions. Also as a side-effect the interpreter now uses the same `eval` functions as everyone else to get the evaluated MIR constants.
Also this is in preparation for another post-mono check that will be needed for (the current hackfix for) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115709: ensuring that all locals are dynamically sized.
I didn't expect this to change diagnostics, but it's just cycle errors that change.
r? `@oli-obk`
nop_lift macros: ensure that we are using the right interner
Right now someone could put down the wrong list name when using these macros, and everything would still build. Nothing does a type-check to ensure that the `$set` contains element of type `Self::Lifted`. Let's fix that.
For lists this is fairly easy; for the other interners we need to unwrap some newtypes which makes this more complicated.