Use `Option<Ident>` for lowered param names.
Parameter patterns are lowered to an `Ident` by `lower_fn_params_to_names`, which is used when lowering bare function types, trait methods, and foreign functions. Currently, there are two exceptional cases where the lowered param can become an empty `Ident`.
- If the incoming pattern is an empty `Ident`. This occurs if the parameter is anonymous, e.g. in a bare function type.
- If the incoming pattern is neither an ident nor an underscore. Any such parameter will have triggered a compile error (hence the `span_delayed_bug`), but lowering still occurs.
This commit replaces these empty `Ident` results with `None`, which eliminates a number of `kw::Empty` uses, and makes it impossible to fail to check for these exceptional cases.
Note: the `FIXME` comment in `is_unwrap_or_empty_symbol` is removed. It actually should have been removed in #138482, the precursor to this PR. That PR changed the lowering of wild patterns to `_` symbols instead of empty symbols, which made the mentioned underscore check load-bearing.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
It's very useful. There are some false positives involving integration
tests in `rustc_pattern_analysis` and `rustc_serialize`. There is also a
false positive involving `rustc_driver_impl`'s
`rustc_randomized_layouts` feature. And I removed a `rustc_span` mention
in a doc comment in `rustc_log` because it wasn't integral to the
comment but caused a dev-dependency.
Parameter patterns are lowered to an `Ident` by
`lower_fn_params_to_names`, which is used when lowering bare function
types, trait methods, and foreign functions. Currently, there are two
exceptional cases where the lowered param can become an empty `Ident`.
- If the incoming pattern is an empty `Ident`. This occurs if the
parameter is anonymous, e.g. in a bare function type.
- If the incoming pattern is neither an ident nor an underscore. Any
such parameter will have triggered a compile error (hence the
`span_delayed_bug`), but lowering still occurs.
This commit replaces these empty `Ident` results with `None`, which
eliminates a number of `kw::Empty` uses, and makes it impossible to fail
to check for these exceptional cases.
Note: the `FIXME` comment in `is_unwrap_or_empty_symbol` is removed. It
actually should have been removed in #138482, the precursor to this PR.
That PR changed the lowering of wild patterns to `_` symbols instead of
empty symbols, which made the mentioned underscore check load-bearing.
Move `hir::Item::ident` into `hir::ItemKind`.
`hir::Item` has an `ident` field.
- It's always non-empty for these item kinds: `ExternCrate`, `Static`, `Const`, `Fn`, `Macro`, `Mod`, `TyAlias`, `Enum`, `Struct`, `Union`, Trait`, TraitAalis`.
- It's always empty for these item kinds: `ForeignMod`, `GlobalAsm`, `Impl`.
- For `Use`, it is non-empty for `UseKind::Single` and empty for `UseKind::{Glob,ListStem}`.
All of this is quite non-obvious; the only documentation is a single comment saying "The name might be a dummy name in case of anonymous items". Some sites that handle items check for an empty ident, some don't. This is a very C-like way of doing things, but this is Rust, we have sum types, we can do this properly and never forget to check for the exceptional case and never YOLO possibly empty identifiers (or possibly dummy spans) around and hope that things will work out.
This is step towards `kw::Empty` elimination (#137978).
r? `@fmease`
`hir::Item` has an `ident` field.
- It's always non-empty for these item kinds: `ExternCrate`, `Static`,
`Const`, `Fn`, `Macro`, `Mod`, `TyAlias`, `Enum`, `Struct`, `Union`,
Trait`, TraitAalis`.
- It's always empty for these item kinds: `ForeignMod`, `GlobalAsm`,
`Impl`.
- For `Use`, it is non-empty for `UseKind::Single` and empty for
`UseKind::{Glob,ListStem}`.
All of this is quite non-obvious; the only documentation is a single
comment saying "The name might be a dummy name in case of anonymous
items". Some sites that handle items check for an empty ident, some
don't. This is a very C-like way of doing things, but this is Rust, we
have sum types, we can do this properly and never forget to check for
the exceptional case and never YOLO possibly empty identifiers (or
possibly dummy spans) around and hope that things will work out.
The commit is large but it's mostly obvious plumbing work. Some notable
things.
- A similar transformation makes sense for `ast::Item`, but this is
already a big change. That can be done later.
- Lots of assertions are added to item lowering to ensure that
identifiers are empty/non-empty as expected. These will be removable
when `ast::Item` is done later.
- `ItemKind::Use` doesn't get an `Ident`, but `UseKind::Single` does.
- `lower_use_tree` is significantly simpler. No more confusing `&mut
Ident` to deal with.
- `ItemKind::ident` is a new method, it returns an `Option<Ident>`. It's
used with `unwrap` in a few places; sometimes it's hard to tell
exactly which item kinds might occur. None of these unwraps fail on
the test suite. It's conceivable that some might fail on alternative
input. We can deal with those if/when they happen.
- In `trait_path` the `find_map`/`if let` is replaced with a loop, and
things end up much clearer that way.
- `named_span` no longer checks for an empty name; instead the call site
now checks for a missing identifier if necessary.
- `maybe_inline_local` doesn't need the `glob` argument, it can be
computed in-function from the `renamed` argument.
- `arbitrary_source_item_ordering::check_mod` had a big `if` statement
that was just getting the ident from the item kinds that had one. It
could be mostly replaced by a single call to the new `ItemKind::ident`
method.
- `ItemKind` grows from 56 to 64 bytes, but `Item` stays the same size,
and that's what matters, because `ItemKind` only occurs within `Item`.
make precise capturing args in rustdoc Json typed
close#137616
This PR includes below changes.
- Add `rustc_hir::PreciseCapturingArgKind` which allows the query system to return a arg's data.
- Add `rustdoc::clean::types::PreciseCapturingArg` and change to use it.
- Add `rustdoc-json-types::PreciseCapturingArg` and change to use it.
- Update `tests/rustdoc-json/impl-trait-precise-capturing.rs`.
- Bump `rustdoc_json_types::FORMAT_VERSION`.
metadata: Ignore sysroot when doing the manual native lib search in rustc
This is the opposite alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138170 and another way to make native library search consistent between rustc and linker.
This way the directory list searched by rustc is still a prefix of the directory list considered by linker, but it's a shorter prefix than in #138170.
We can include the sysroot directories into rustc's search again later if the issues with #138170 are resolved, it will be a backward compatible change.
This may break some code doing weird things on unstable rustc, or tier 2-3 targets, like bundling `libunwind.a` or sanitizers into something.
Note that this doesn't affect shipped `libc.a`, because it lives in `self-contained` directories in sysroot, and `self-contained` sysroot is already not included into the rustc's search. All libunwind and sanitizer libs should be moved to `self-contained` sysroot too eventually.
With the consistent search directory list between rustc and linker we can make rustc own the native library search (at least for static libs) and use linker search only as a fallback (like in #123436). This will allow addressing issues like https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132394 once and for all on all targets.
r? ``@bjorn3``
Support rmeta inputs for --crate-type=bin --emit=obj
This already works for --emit=metadata, but is possible anytime we're not linking.
Tests:
- `rmeta_bin` checks we're not changing --emit=link (already passes)
- `rmeta_bin-pass` tests the new behavior for --emit=obj (would fail today) and also --emit=metadata which isn't changing
Continuing the work from #137350.
Removes the unused methods: `expect_variant`, `expect_field`,
`expect_foreign_item`.
Every method gains a `hir_` prefix.
Revert <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138084> to buy time to
consider options that avoids breaking downstream usages of cargo on
distributed `rustc-src` artifacts, where such cargo invocations fail due
to inability to inherit `lints` from workspace root manifest's
`workspace.lints` (this is only valid for the source rust-lang/rust
workspace, but not really the distributed `rustc-src` artifacts).
This breakage was reported in
<https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138304>.
This reverts commit 48caf81484, reversing
changes made to c6662879b2.
By naming them in `[workspace.lints.rust]` in the top-level
`Cargo.toml`, and then making all `compiler/` crates inherit them with
`[lints] workspace = true`. (I omitted `rustc_codegen_{cranelift,gcc}`,
because they're a bit different.)
The advantages of this over the current approach:
- It uses a standard Cargo feature, rather than special handling in
bootstrap. So, easier to understand, and less likely to get
accidentally broken in the future.
- It works for proc macro crates.
It's a shame it doesn't work for rustc-specific lints, as the comments
explain.
This already works for --emit=metadata, but is possible anytime we're not
linking.
Tests:
`rmeta_bin` checks we're not changing --emit=link (already passes)
`rmeta_bin-pass` tests the new behavior for --emit=obj (would fail today)
and also --emit=metadata which isn't changing
Support raw-dylib link kind on ELF
raw-dylib is a link kind that allows rustc to link against a library without having any library files present.
This currently only exists on Windows. rustc will take all the symbols from raw-dylib link blocks and put them in an import library, where they can then be resolved by the linker.
While import libraries don't exist on ELF, it would still be convenient to have this same functionality. Not having the libraries present at build-time can be convenient for several reasons, especially cross-compilation. With raw-dylib, code linking against a library can be cross-compiled without needing to have these libraries available on the build machine. If the libc crate makes use of this, it would allow cross-compilation without having any libc available on the build machine. This is not yet possible with this implementation, at least against libc's like glibc that use symbol versioning. The raw-dylib kind could be extended with support for symbol versioning in the future.
This implementation is very experimental and I have not tested it very well. I have tested it for a toy example and the lz4-sys crate, where it was able to successfully link a binary despite not having a corresponding library at build-time.
I was inspired by Björn's comments in https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/bundle-zig-cc-in-rustup-by-default/22096/27
Tracking issue: #135694
r? bjorn3
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-msvc-2
try-job: test-various
raw-dylib is a link kind that allows rustc to link against a library
without having any library files present.
This currently only exists on Windows. rustc will take all the symbols
from raw-dylib link blocks and put them in an import library, where they
can then be resolved by the linker.
While import libraries don't exist on ELF, it would still be convenient
to have this same functionality. Not having the libraries present at
build-time can be convenient for several reasons, especially
cross-compilation. With raw-dylib, code linking against a library can be
cross-compiled without needing to have these libraries available on the
build machine. If the libc crate makes use of this, it would allow
cross-compilation without having any libc available on the build
machine. This is not yet possible with this implementation, at least
against libc's like glibc that use symbol versioning.
The raw-dylib kind could be extended with support for symbol versioning
in the future.
This implementation is very experimental and I have not tested it very
well. I have tested it for a toy example and the lz4-sys crate, where it
was able to successfully link a binary despite not having a
corresponding library at build-time.
Teach structured errors to display short `Ty<'_>`
Make it so that in every structured error annotated with `#[derive(Diagnostic)]` that has a field of type `Ty<'_>`, the printing of that value into a `String` will look at the thread-local storage `TyCtxt` in order to shorten to a length appropriate with the terminal width. When this happen, the resulting error will have a note with the file where the full type name was written to.
```
error[E0618]: expected function, found `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)``
--> long.rs:7:5
|
6 | fn foo(x: D) { //~ `x` has type `(...
| - `x` has type `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
7 | x(); //~ ERROR expected function, found `(...
| ^--
| |
| call expression requires function
|
= note: the full name for the type has been written to 'long.long-type-14182675702747116984.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
Follow up to and response to the comments on #136898.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Make it so that every structured error annotated with `#[derive(Diagnostic)]` that has a field of type `Ty<'_>`, the printing of that value into a `String` will look at the thread-local storage `TyCtxt` in order to shorten to a length appropriate with the terminal width. When this happen, the resulting error will have a note with the file where the full type name was written to.
```
error[E0618]: expected function, found `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)``
--> long.rs:7:5
|
6 | fn foo(x: D) { //~ `x` has type `(...
| - `x` has type `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
7 | x(); //~ ERROR expected function, found `(...
| ^--
| |
| call expression requires function
|
= note: the full name for the type has been written to 'long.long-type-14182675702747116984.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
Greatly simplify lifetime captures in edition 2024
Remove most of the `+ Captures` and `+ '_` from the compiler, since they are now unnecessary with the new edition 2021 lifetime capture rules. Use some `+ 'tcx` and `+ 'static` rather than being overly verbose with precise capturing syntax.
Inject `compiler_builtins` during postprocessing and ensure it is made private
Follow up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135278
Do the following:
* Inject `compiler_builtins` during postprocessing, rather than injecting `extern crate compiler_builtins as _` into the AST
* Do not make dependencies of `std` private by default (this was added in #135278)
* Make sure sysroot crates correctly mark their dependencies private/public
* Ensure that marking a dependency private makes its dependents private by default as well, unless otherwise specified
* Do the `compiler_builtins` update that has been blocked on this
There is more detail in the commit messages. This includes the changes I was working on in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136226.
try-job: test-various
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
try-job: x86_64-msvc-2
try-job: i686-mingw-1
try-job: i686-mingw-2
Always allow reusing cratenum in CrateLoader::load
The only case where can_reuse_cratenum could have been false in the past are rustc plugins, support for which has been removed over a year ago now. Nowadays the only case where locator.tuple is not target_triple is when loading a proc macro, in which case we also set can_reuse_cratenum to true. As such it is always true and we can remove some dead code.
Currently, marking a dependency private does not automatically make all
its child dependencies private. Resolve this by making its children
private by default as well.
This also resolves some FIXMEs for tests that are intended to fail but
previously passed.
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135501#issuecomment-2620242419
Remove the portion of ed63539282 that automatically sets crates private
based on whether they are dependencies of `std`. Instead, this is
controlled by dependency configuration in `Cargo.toml`.
`compiler_builtins` is currently injected as `extern crate
compiler_builtins as _`. This has made gating via diagnostics difficult
because it appears in the crate graph as a non-private dependency, and
there isn't an easy way to differentiate between the injected AST and
user-specified `extern crate compiler_builtins`.
Resolve this by injecting `compiler_builtins` during postprocessing
rather than early in the AST. Most of the time this isn't even needed
because it shows up in `std` or `core`'s crate graph, but injection is
still needed to ensure `#![no_core]` works correctly.
A similar change was attempted at [1] but this encountered errors
building `proc_macro` and `rustc-std-workspace-std`. Similar failures
showed up while working on this patch, which were traced back to
`compiler_builtins` showing up in the graph twice (once via dependency
and once via injection). This is resolved by not injecting if a
`#![compiler_builtins]` crate already exists.
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113634
The only case where can_reuse_cratenum could have been false in the past
are rustc plugins, support for which has been removed over a year ago
now. Nowadays the only case where locator.tuple is not target_triple is
when loading a proc macro, in which case we also set can_reuse_cratenum
to true. As such it is always true and we can remove some dead code.
I had to do a lot of debug by printing; having these `Debug` traits in
place made it easier. Additionally, add some more information to
existing `info!` statements.
Introduce an enum that represents the different possible sources for
dependencies, and use them where possible. This will enable more fine
grained control and provides better context than passing the `dep_root`
tuple.
Use this to ensure that injected crates always show up as private by
default.
Continuing the work started in #136466.
Every method gains a `hir_` prefix, though for the ones that already
have a `par_` or `try_par_` prefix I added the `hir_` after that.
First of all, note that `Map` has three different relevant meanings.
- The `intravisit::Map` trait.
- The `map::Map` struct.
- The `NestedFilter::Map` associated type.
The `intravisit::Map` trait is impl'd twice.
- For `!`, where the methods are all unreachable.
- For `map::Map`, which gets HIR stuff from the `TyCtxt`.
As part of getting rid of `map::Map`, this commit changes `impl
intravisit::Map for map::Map` to `impl intravisit::Map for TyCtxt`. It's
fairly straightforward except various things are renamed, because the
existing names would no longer have made sense.
- `trait intravisit::Map` becomes `trait intravisit::HirTyCtxt`, so named
because it gets some HIR stuff from a `TyCtxt`.
- `NestedFilter::Map` assoc type becomes `NestedFilter::MaybeTyCtxt`,
because it's always `!` or `TyCtxt`.
- `Visitor::nested_visit_map` becomes `Visitor::maybe_tcx`.
I deliberately made the new trait and associated type names different to
avoid the old `type Map: Map` situation, which I found confusing. We now
have `type MaybeTyCtxt: HirTyCtxt`.
The end goal is to eliminate `Map` altogether.
I added a `hir_` prefix to all of them, that seemed simplest. The
exceptions are `module_items` which became `hir_module_free_items` because
there was already a `hir_module_items`, and `items` which became
`hir_free_items` for consistency with `hir_module_free_items`.
tree-wide: parallel: Fully removed all `Lrc`, replaced with `Arc`
tree-wide: parallel: Fully removed all `Lrc`, replaced with `Arc`
This is continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132282 .
I'm pretty sure I did everything right. In particular, I searched all occurrences of `Lrc` in submodules and made sure that they don't need replacement.
There are other possibilities, through.
We can define `enum Lrc<T> { Rc(Rc<T>), Arc(Arc<T>) }`. Or we can make `Lrc` a union and on every clone we can read from special thread-local variable. Or we can add a generic parameter to `Lrc` and, yes, this parameter will be everywhere across all codebase.
So, if you think we should take some alternative approach, then don't merge this PR. But if it is decided to stick with `Arc`, then, please, merge.
cc "Parallel Rustc Front-end" ( https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113349 )
r? SparrowLii
`@rustbot` label WG-compiler-parallel
Remove hook calling via `TyCtxtAt`.
All hooks receive a `TyCtxtAt` argument.
Currently hooks can be called through `TyCtxtAt` or `TyCtxt`. In the latter case, a `TyCtxtAt` is constructed with a dummy span and passed to the hook.
However, in practice hooks are never called through `TyCtxtAt`, and always receive a dummy span. (I confirmed this via code inspection, and double-checked it by temporarily making the `TyCtxtAt` code path panic and running all the tests.)
This commit removes all the `TyCtxtAt` machinery for hooks. All hooks now receive `TyCtxt` instead of `TyCtxtAt`. There are two existing hooks that use `TyCtxtAt::span`: `const_caller_location_provider` and `try_destructure_mir_constant_for_user_output`. For both hooks the span is always a dummy span, probably unintentionally. This dummy span use is now explicit. If a non-dummy span is needed for these two hooks it would be easy to add it as an extra argument because hooks are less constrained than queries.
r? `@oli-obk`
Target modifiers (special marked options) are recorded in metainfo
Target modifiers (special marked options) are recorded in metainfo and compared to be equal in different linked crates.
PR for this RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3716
Option may be marked as `TARGET_MODIFIER`, example: `regparm: Option<u32> = (None, parse_opt_number, [TRACKED TARGET_MODIFIER]`.
If an TARGET_MODIFIER-marked option has non-default value, it will be recorded in crate metainfo as a `Vec<TargetModifier>`:
```
pub struct TargetModifier {
pub opt: OptionsTargetModifiers,
pub value_name: String,
}
```
OptionsTargetModifiers is a macro-generated enum.
Option value code (for comparison) is generated using `Debug` trait.
Error example:
```
error: mixing `-Zregparm` will cause an ABI mismatch in crate `incompatible_regparm`
--> $DIR/incompatible_regparm.rs:10:1
|
LL | #![crate_type = "lib"]
| ^
|
= help: the `-Zregparm` flag modifies the ABI so Rust crates compiled with different values of this flag cannot be used together safely
= note: `-Zregparm=1` in this crate is incompatible with `-Zregparm=2` in dependency `wrong_regparm`
= help: set `-Zregparm=2` in this crate or `-Zregparm=1` in `wrong_regparm`
= help: if you are sure this will not cause problems, use `-Cunsafe-allow-abi-mismatch=regparm` to silence this error
error: aborting due to 1 previous error
```
`-Cunsafe-allow-abi-mismatch=regparm,reg-struct-return` to disable list of flags.
All hooks receive a `TyCtxtAt` argument.
Currently hooks can be called through `TyCtxtAt` or `TyCtxt`. In the
latter case, a `TyCtxtAt` is constructed with a dummy span and passed to
the hook.
However, in practice hooks are never called through `TyCtxtAt`, and
always receive a dummy span. (I confirmed this via code inspection, and
double-checked it by temporarily making the `TyCtxtAt` code path panic
and running all the tests.)
This commit removes all the `TyCtxtAt` machinery for hooks. All hooks
now receive `TyCtxt` instead of `TyCtxtAt`. There are two existing hooks
that use `TyCtxtAt::span`: `const_caller_location_provider` and
`try_destructure_mir_constant_for_user_output`. For both hooks the span
is always a dummy span, probably unintentionally. This dummy span use is
now explicit. If a non-dummy span is needed for these two hooks it would
be easy to add it as an extra argument because hooks are less
constrained than queries.
It's a function that prints numbers with underscores inserted for
readability (e.g. "1_234_567"), used by `-Zmeta-stats` and
`-Zinput-stats`. It's the only thing in `rustc_middle::util::common`,
which is a bizarre location for it.
This commit:
- moves it to `rustc_data_structures`, a more logical crate for it;
- puts it in a module `thousands`, like the similar crates.io crate;
- renames it `format_with_underscores`, which is a clearer name;
- rewrites it to be more concise;
- slightly improves the testing.
In order to avoid diagnostics suggesting stdlib-private dependencies,
make everything that is a direct dependency of any `std` crates private
by default. Note that this will be overridden, if the same crate is
public elsewhere in the crate graph then that overrides the private
default.
It may also be feasible to do this in the library crate, marking `std`'s
dependencies private via Cargo. However, given that the feature is still
rather unstable, doing this within the compiler seems more
straightforward.
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135232 [1]
Currently `root` or `crate_root` is used to refer to an instance of
`CrateRoot` (representation of a crate's serialized metadata), but the
name `root` sometimes also refers to a `CratePath` representing a "root"
node in the dependency graph. In order to disambiguate, rename all
instances of the latter to `dep_root`.
Re-export more `rustc_span::symbol` things from `rustc_span`.
`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from `rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good reason.
This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`, and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers to `rustc_span::`. This is a 300+ net line of code reduction, mostly because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to one.
r? `@jieyouxu`
`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from
`rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some
closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use
rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use
rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good
reason.
This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`,
and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers in `compiler/` to
`rustc_span::`. This is a 200+ net line of code reduction, mostly
because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to
one.
A bunch of cleanups (part 2)
Just like https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133567 these were all found while looking at the respective code, but are not blocking any other changes I want to make in the short term.
It is treated as a map already. This is using FxIndexMap rather than
UnordMap because the latter doesn't provide an api to pick a single
value iff all values are equal, which each_linked_rlib depends on.
Initial implementation of `#[feature(default_field_values]`, proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3681.
Support default fields in enum struct variant
Allow default values in an enum struct variant definition:
```rust
pub enum Bar {
Foo {
bar: S = S,
baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
}
}
```
Allow using `..` without a base on an enum struct variant
```rust
Bar::Foo { .. }
```
`#[derive(Default)]` doesn't account for these as it is still gating `#[default]` only being allowed on unit variants.
Support `#[derive(Default)]` on enum struct variants with all defaulted fields
```rust
pub enum Bar {
#[default]
Foo {
bar: S = S,
baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
}
}
```
Check for missing fields in typeck instead of mir_build.
Expand test with `const` param case (needs `generic_const_exprs` enabled).
Properly instantiate MIR const
The following works:
```rust
struct S<A> {
a: Vec<A> = Vec::new(),
}
S::<i32> { .. }
```
Add lint for default fields that will always fail const-eval
We *allow* this to happen for API writers that might want to rely on users'
getting a compile error when using the default field, different to the error
that they would get when the field isn't default. We could change this to
*always* error instead of being a lint, if we wanted.
This will *not* catch errors for partially evaluated consts, like when the
expression relies on a const parameter.
Suggestions when encountering `Foo { .. }` without `#[feature(default_field_values)]`:
- Suggest adding a base expression if there are missing fields.
- Suggest enabling the feature if all the missing fields have optional values.
- Suggest removing `..` if there are no missing fields.
Use correct `hir_id` for array const arg infers
Fixes#133771
`self.next_id()` results in the `DefId` for the const argument, created from the hack introduced by #133468, having no `HirId` associated with it. This then results in an ICE in metadata encoding. Fixing this then results in *another* ICE where `encode_defs` was not skipping encoding `type_of` and other queries for `DefId`s when they correspond to a `ConstArgKind::Infer` node.
This only reproduces with a library crate as metadata is not encoded for binaries, and apparently we had 0 tests for `generic_arg_infer` for array lengths in a library crate so this was not caught :<
cc #133589 `@voidc`
r? `@compiler-errors` `@lcnr`
[AIX] handle libunwind native_libs
AIX should follow a similar path here to other libunwind platforms, with regards to system vs in-tree libunwind and the native lib search directories.
Having the right native lib search directories here is also required to get the correct default library search paths, due to some quirks of the AIX linker.
Allow injecting a profiler runtime into `#![no_core]` crates
An alternative to #133300, allowing `-Cinstrument-coverage` to be used with `-Zbuild-std`.
The incompatibility between `profiler_builtins` and `#![no_core]` crates appears to have been caused by profiler_builtins depending on core, and therefore conflicting with core (or minicore).
But that's a false dependency, because the profiler doesn't contain any actual Rust code. So we can just mark the profiler itself as `#![no_core]`, and remove the incompatibility error.
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For context, the error was originally added by #79958.