Commit Graph

4928 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
lcnr
675c99f4d5 more eagerly discard constraints on overflow 2024-09-12 14:32:44 +02:00
Stuart Cook
57020e0f8c
Rollup merge of #130250 - compiler-errors:useless-conversion, r=jieyouxu
Fix `clippy::useless_conversion`

Self-explanatory. Probably the last clippy change I'll actually put up since this is the only other one I've actually seen in the wild.
2024-09-12 20:37:17 +10:00
Michael Goulet
e866f8a97d Revert 'Stabilize -Znext-solver=coherence' 2024-09-11 17:57:04 -04:00
Michael Goulet
6d064295c8 clippy::useless_conversion 2024-09-11 17:52:53 -04:00
Michael Goulet
af8d911d63 Also fix if in else 2024-09-11 17:24:01 -04:00
Michael Goulet
954419aab0 Simplify some nested if statements 2024-09-11 13:45:23 -04:00
Jubilee
68ae3b27f5
Rollup merge of #130149 - GrigorenkoPV:lifetime-suggestion, r=cjgillot
Helper function for formatting with `LifetimeSuggestionPosition`
2024-09-09 19:20:38 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
3b0221bf63
Rollup merge of #130137 - gurry:master, r=cjgillot
Fix ICE caused by missing span in a region error

Fixes #130012

The ICE occurs on line 634 in this error handling code: 085744b7ad/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/error_reporting/infer/region.rs (L617-L637) It is caused by the span being a dummy span and `!span.is_dummy()` on line 628 evaluating to `false`.

A dummy span, however, is expected here thanks to the `Self: Trait` predicate from `predicates_of` (see line 61): 085744b7ad/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/collect/predicates_of.rs (L61-L69)

This PR changes the error handling code to omit the note which needed the span instead of ICE'ing in the presence of a dummy span.
2024-09-09 20:20:20 +02:00
Pavel Grigorenko
db6361184e Helper function for formatting with LifetimeSuggestionPosition 2024-09-09 14:39:04 +03:00
Jubilee
09373b997d
Rollup merge of #130070 - gurry:rename-regionkind-addof-to-ref, r=compiler-errors
Rename variant `AddrOfRegion` of `RegionVariableOrigin` to `BorrowRegion`

because "Borrow" is the more idiomatic Rust term than "AddrOf".
2024-09-09 00:17:49 -07:00
Gurinder Singh
0f8efb3b5c Fix ICE caused by missing span in a region error 2024-09-09 12:27:36 +05:30
bors
ec867f03bc Auto merge of #126161 - Bryanskiy:delegation-generics-4, r=petrochenkov
Delegation: support generics in associated delegation items

This is a continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125929.

[design](https://github.com/Bryanskiy/posts/blob/master/delegation%20in%20generic%20contexts.md)

Generic parameters inheritance was implemented in all contexts. Generic arguments are not yet supported.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2024-09-07 18:12:05 +00:00
Gurinder Singh
c0b06273f2 Rename variant AddrOfRegion of RegionVariableOrigin to BorrowRegion
because "Borrow" is the more idiomatic Rust term than "AddrOf".
2024-09-07 18:50:51 +05:30
bors
26b5599e4d Auto merge of #128776 - Bryanskiy:deep-reject-ctxt, r=lcnr
Use `DeepRejectCtxt` to quickly reject `ParamEnv` candidates

The description is on the [zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/144729-t-types/topic/.5Basking.20for.20help.5D.20.60DeepRejectCtxt.60.20for.20param.20env.20candidates)

r? `@lcnr`
2024-09-06 19:50:48 +00:00
bors
17b322fa69 Auto merge of #121848 - lcnr:stabilize-next-solver, r=compiler-errors
stabilize `-Znext-solver=coherence`

r? `@compiler-errors`

---

This PR stabilizes the use of the next generation trait solver in coherence checking by enabling `-Znext-solver=coherence` by default. More specifically its use in the *implicit negative overlap check*. The tracking issue for this is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114862. Closes #114862.

## Background

### The next generation trait solver

The new solver lives in [`rustc_trait_selection::solve`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/solve/mod.rs) and is intended to replace the existing *evaluate*, *fulfill*, and *project* implementation. It also has a wider impact on the rest of the type system, for example by changing our approach to handling associated types.

For a more detailed explanation of the new trait solver, see the [rustc-dev-guide](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/solve/trait-solving.html). This does not stabilize the current behavior of the new trait solver, only the behavior impacting the implicit negative overlap check. There are many areas in the new solver which are not yet finalized. We are confident that their final design will not conflict with the user-facing behavior observable via coherence. More on that further down.

Please check out [the chapter](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/solve/significant-changes.html) summarizing the most significant changes between the existing and new implementations.

### Coherence and the implicit negative overlap check

Coherence checking detects any overlapping impls. Overlapping trait impls always error while overlapping inherent impls result in an error if they have methods with the same name. Coherence also results in an error if any other impls could exist, even if they are currently unknown. This affects impls which may get added to upstream crates in a backwards compatible way and impls from downstream crates.

Coherence failing to detect overlap is generally considered to be unsound, even if it is difficult to actually get runtime UB this way. It is quite easy to get ICEs due to bugs in coherence.

It currently consists of two checks:

The [orphan check] validates that impls do not overlap with other impls we do not know about: either because they may be defined in a sibling crate, or because an upstream crate is allowed to add it without being considered a breaking change.

The [overlap check] validates that impls do not overlap with other impls we know about. This is done as follows:
- Instantiate the generic parameters of both impls with inference variables
- Equate the `TraitRef`s of both impls. If it fails there is no overlap.
- [implicit negative]: Check whether any of the instantiated `where`-bounds of one of the impls definitely do not hold when using the constraints from the previous step. If a `where`-bound does not hold, there is no overlap.
- *explicit negative (still unstable, ignored going forward)*: Check whether the any negated `where`-bounds can be proven, e.g. a `&mut u32: Clone` bound definitely does not hold as an explicit `impl<T> !Clone for &mut T` exists.

The overlap check has to *prove that unifying the impls does not succeed*. This means that **incorrectly getting a type error during coherence is unsound** as it would allow impls to overlap: coherence has to be *complete*.

Completeness means that we never incorrectly error. This means that during coherence we must only add inference constraints if they are definitely necessary. During ordinary type checking [this does not hold](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=01d93b592bd9036ac96071cbf1d624a9), so the trait solver has to behave differently, depending on whether we're in coherence or not.

The implicit negative check only considers goals to "definitely not hold" if they could not be implemented downstream, by a sibling, or upstream in a backwards compatible way. If the goal is is "unknowable" as it may get added in another crate, we add an ambiguous candidate: [source](bea5bebf3d/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/solve/assembly/mod.rs (L858-L883)).

[orphan check]: fd80c02c16/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/coherence.rs (L566-L579)
[overlap check]: fd80c02c16/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/coherence.rs (L92-L98)
[implicit negative]: fd80c02c16/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/coherence.rs (L223-L281)

## Motivation

Replacing the existing solver in coherence fixes soundness bugs by removing sources of incompleteness in the type system. The new solver separately strengthens coherence, resulting in more impls being disjoint and passing the coherence check. The concrete changes will be elaborated further down. We believe the stabilization to reduce the likelihood of future bugs in coherence as the new implementation is easier to understand and reason about.

It allows us to remove the support for coherence and implicit-negative reasoning in the old solver, allowing us to remove some code and simplifying the old trait solver. We will only remove the old solver support once this stabilization has reached stable to make sure we're able to quickly revert in case any unexpected issues are detected before then.

Stabilizing the use of the next-generation trait solver expresses our confidence that its current behavior is intended and our work towards enabling its use everywhere will not require any breaking changes to the areas used by coherence checking. We are also confident that we will be able to replace the existing solver everywhere, as maintaining two separate systems adds a significant maintainance burden.

## User-facing impact and reasoning

### Breakage due to improved handling of associated types

The new solver fixes multiple issues related to associated types. As these issues caused coherence to consider more types distinct, fixing them results in more overlap errors. This is therefore a breaking change.

#### Structurally relating aliases containing bound vars

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102048. In the existing solver relating ambiguous projections containing bound variables is structural. This is *incomplete* and allows overlapping impls. These was mostly not exploitable as the same issue also caused impls to not apply when trying to use them. The new solver defers alias-relating to a nested goal, fixing this issue:
```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence
trait Trait {}

trait Project {
    type Assoc<'a>;
}

impl Project for u32 {
    type Assoc<'a> = &'a u32;
}

// Eagerly normalizing `<?infer as Project>::Assoc<'a>` is ambiguous,
// so the old solver ended up structurally relating
//
//     (?infer, for<'a> fn(<?infer as Project>::Assoc<'a>))
//
// with
//
//     ((u32, fn(&'a u32)))
//
// Equating `&'a u32` with `<u32 as Project>::Assoc<'a>` failed, even
// though these types are equal modulo normalization.
impl<T: Project> Trait for (T, for<'a> fn(<T as Project>::Assoc<'a>)) {}

impl<'a> Trait for (u32, fn(&'a u32)) {}
//[next]~^ ERROR conflicting implementations of trait `Trait` for type `(u32, for<'a> fn(&'a u32))`
```

A crater run did not discover any breakage due to this change.

#### Unknowable candidates for higher ranked trait goals

This avoids an unsoundness by attempting to normalize in `trait_ref_is_knowable`, fixing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114061. This is a side-effect of supporting lazy normalization, as that forces us to attempt to normalize when checking whether a `TraitRef` is knowable: [source](47dd709bed/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/solve/assembly/mod.rs (L754-L764)).

```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence
trait IsUnit {}
impl IsUnit for () {}

pub trait WithAssoc<'a> {
    type Assoc;
}

// We considered `for<'a> <T as WithAssoc<'a>>::Assoc: IsUnit`
// to be knowable, even though the projection is ambiguous.
pub trait Trait {}
impl<T> Trait for T
where
    T: 'static,
    for<'a> T: WithAssoc<'a>,
    for<'a> <T as WithAssoc<'a>>::Assoc: IsUnit,
{
}
impl<T> Trait for Box<T> {}
//[next]~^ ERROR conflicting implementations of trait `Trait`
```
The two impls of `Trait` overlap given the following downstream crate:
```rust
use dep::*;
struct Local;
impl WithAssoc<'_> for Box<Local> {
    type Assoc = ();
}
```

There a similar coherence unsoundness caused by our handling of aliases which is fixed separately in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117164.

This change breaks the [`derive-visitor`](https://crates.io/crates/derive-visitor) crate. I have opened an issue in that repo: nikis05/derive-visitor#16.

### Evaluating goals to a fixpoint and applying inference constraints

In the old implementation of the implicit-negative check, each obligation is [checked separately without applying its inference constraints](bea5bebf3d/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/coherence.rs (L323-L338)). The new solver instead [uses a `FulfillmentCtxt`](bea5bebf3d/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/coherence.rs (L315-L321)) for this, which evaluates all obligations in a loop until there's no further inference progress.

This is necessary for backwards compatibility as we do not eagerly normalize with the new solver, resulting in constraints from normalization to only get applied by evaluating a separate obligation. This also allows more code to compile:
```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence
trait Mirror {
    type Assoc;
}
impl<T> Mirror for T {
    type Assoc = T;
}

trait Foo {}
trait Bar {}

// The self type starts out as `?0` but is constrained to `()`
// due to the where-clause below. Because `(): Bar` is known to
// not hold, we can prove the impls disjoint.
impl<T> Foo for T where (): Mirror<Assoc = T> {}
//[current]~^ ERROR conflicting implementations of trait `Foo` for type `()`
impl<T> Foo for T where T: Bar {}

fn main() {}
```
The old solver does not run nested goals to a fixpoint in evaluation. The new solver does do so, strengthening inference and improving the overlap check:
```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence
trait Foo {}
impl<T> Foo for (u8, T, T) {}
trait NotU8 {}
trait Bar {}
impl<T, U: NotU8> Bar for (T, T, U) {}

trait NeedsFixpoint {}
impl<T: Foo + Bar> NeedsFixpoint for T {}
impl NeedsFixpoint for (u8, u8, u8) {}

trait Overlap {}
impl<T: NeedsFixpoint> Overlap for T {}
impl<T, U: NotU8, V> Overlap for (T, U, V) {}
//[current]~^ ERROR conflicting implementations of trait `Foo`
```

### Breakage due to removal of incomplete candidate preference

Fixes #107887. In the old solver we incompletely prefer the builtin trait object impl over user defined impls. This can break inference guidance, inferring `?x` in `dyn Trait<u32>: Trait<?x>` to `u32`, even if an explicit impl of `Trait<u64>` also exists.

This caused coherence to incorrectly allow overlapping impls, resulting in ICEs and a theoretical unsoundness. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107887#issuecomment-1997261676. This compiles on stable but results in an overlap error with `-Znext-solver=coherence`:

```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence
struct W<T: ?Sized>(*const T);

trait Trait<T: ?Sized> {
    type Assoc;
}

// This would trigger the check for overlap between automatic and custom impl.
// They actually don't overlap so an impl like this should remain possible
// forever.
//
// impl Trait<u64> for dyn Trait<u32> {}
trait Indirect {}
impl Indirect for dyn Trait<u32, Assoc = ()> {}
impl<T: Indirect + ?Sized> Trait<u64> for T {
    type Assoc = ();
}

// Incomplete impl where `dyn Trait<u32>: Trait<_>` does not hold, but
// `dyn Trait<u32>: Trait<u64>` does.
trait EvaluateHack<U: ?Sized> {}
impl<T: ?Sized, U: ?Sized> EvaluateHack<W<U>> for T
where
    T: Trait<U, Assoc = ()>, // incompletely constrains `_` to `u32`
    U: IsU64,
    T: Trait<U, Assoc = ()>, // incompletely constrains `_` to `u32`
{
}

trait IsU64 {}
impl IsU64 for u64 {}

trait Overlap<U: ?Sized> {
    type Assoc: Default;
}
impl<T: ?Sized + EvaluateHack<W<U>>, U: ?Sized> Overlap<U> for T {
    type Assoc = Box<u32>;
}
impl<U: ?Sized> Overlap<U> for dyn Trait<u32, Assoc = ()> {
//[next]~^ ERROR conflicting implementations of trait `Overlap<_>`
    type Assoc = usize;
}
```

### Considering region outlives bounds in the `leak_check`

For details on the `leak_check`, see the FCP proposal in #119820.[^leak_check]

[^leak_check]: which should get moved to the dev-guide once that PR lands :3

In both coherence and during candidate selection, the `leak_check` relies on the region constraints added in `evaluate`. It therefore currently does not register outlives obligations: [source](ccb1415eac/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L792-L810)). This was likely done as a performance optimization without considering its impact on the `leak_check`. This is the case as in the old solver, *evaluatation* and *fulfillment* are split, with evaluation being responsible for candidate selection and fulfillment actually registering all the constraints.

This split does not exist with the new solver. The `leak_check` can therefore eagerly detect errors caused by region outlives obligations. This improves both coherence itself and candidate selection:

```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence
trait LeakErr<'a, 'b> {}
// Using this impl adds an `'b: 'a` bound which results
// in a higher-ranked region error. This bound has been
// previously ignored but is now considered.
impl<'a, 'b: 'a> LeakErr<'a, 'b> for () {}

trait NoOverlapDir<'a> {}
impl<'a, T: for<'b> LeakErr<'a, 'b>> NoOverlapDir<'a> for T {}
impl<'a> NoOverlapDir<'a> for () {}
//[current]~^ ERROR conflicting implementations of trait `NoOverlapDir<'_>`

// --------------------------------------

// necessary to avoid coherence unknowable candidates
struct W<T>(T);

trait GuidesSelection<'a, U> {}
impl<'a, T: for<'b> LeakErr<'a, 'b>> GuidesSelection<'a, W<u32>> for T {}
impl<'a, T> GuidesSelection<'a, W<u8>> for T {}

trait NotImplementedByU8 {}
trait NoOverlapInd<'a, U> {}
impl<'a, T: GuidesSelection<'a, W<U>>, U> NoOverlapInd<'a, U> for T {}
impl<'a, U: NotImplementedByU8> NoOverlapInd<'a, U> for () {}
//[current]~^ conflicting implementations of trait `NoOverlapInd<'_, _>`
```

### Removal of `fn match_fresh_trait_refs`

The old solver tries to [eagerly detect unbounded recursion](b14fd2359f/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L1196-L1211)), forcing the affected goals to be ambiguous. This check is only an approximation and has not been added to the new solver.

The check is not necessary in the new solver and it would be problematic for caching. As it depends on all goals currently on the stack, using a global cache entry would have to always make sure that doing so does not circumvent this check.

This changes some goals to error - or succeed - instead of failing with ambiguity. This allows more code to compile:

```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence

// Need to use this local wrapper for the impls to be fully
// knowable as unknowable candidate result in ambiguity.
struct Local<T>(T);

trait Trait<U> {}
// This impl does not hold, but is ambiguous in the old
// solver due to its overflow approximation.
impl<U> Trait<U> for Local<u32> where Local<u16>: Trait<U> {}
// This impl holds.
impl Trait<Local<()>> for Local<u8> {}

// In the old solver, `Local<?t>: Trait<Local<?u>>` is ambiguous,
// resulting in `Local<?u>: NoImpl`, also being ambiguous.
//
// In the new solver the first impl does not apply, constraining
// `?u` to `Local<()>`, causing `Local<()>: NoImpl` to error.
trait Indirect<T> {}
impl<T, U> Indirect<U> for T
where
    T: Trait<U>,
    U: NoImpl
{}

// Not implemented for `Local<()>`
trait NoImpl {}
impl NoImpl for Local<u8> {}
impl NoImpl for Local<u16> {}

// `Local<?t>: Indirect<Local<?u>>` cannot hold, so
// these impls do not overlap.
trait NoOverlap<U> {}
impl<T: Indirect<U>, U> NoOverlap<U> for T {}
impl<T, U> NoOverlap<Local<U>> for Local<T> {}
//~^ ERROR conflicting implementations of trait `NoOverlap<Local<_>>`
```

### Non-fatal overflow

The old solver immediately emits a fatal error when hitting the recursion limit. The new solver instead returns overflow. This both allows more code to compile and is results in performance and potential future compatability issues.

Non-fatal overflow is generally desirable. With fatal overflow, changing the order in which we evaluate nested goals easily causes breakage if we have goal which errors and one which overflows. It is also required to prevent breakage due to the removal of `fn match_fresh_trait_refs`, e.g. [in `typenum`](https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/73).

#### Enabling more code to compile

In the below example, the old solver first tried to prove an overflowing goal, resulting in a fatal error. The new solver instead returns ambiguity due to overflow for that goal, causing the implicit negative overlap check to succeed as `Box<u32>: NotImplemented` does not hold.
```rust
// revisions: current next
//[next] compile-flags: -Znext-solver=coherence
//[current] ERROR overflow evaluating the requirement

trait Indirect<T> {}
impl<T: Overflow<()>> Indirect<T> for () {}

trait Overflow<U> {}
impl<T, U> Overflow<U> for Box<T>
where
    U: Indirect<Box<Box<T>>>,
{}

trait NotImplemented {}

trait Trait<U> {}
impl<T, U> Trait<U> for T
where
    // T: NotImplemented, // causes old solver to succeed
    U: Indirect<T>,
    T: NotImplemented,
{}

impl Trait<()> for Box<u32> {}
```

#### Avoiding hangs with non-fatal overflow

Simply returning ambiguity when reaching the recursion limit can very easily result in hangs, e.g.
```rust
trait Recur {}
impl<T, U> Recur for ((T, U), (U, T))
where
    (T, U): Recur,
    (U, T): Recur,
{}

trait NotImplemented {}
impl<T: NotImplemented> Recur for T {}
```
This can happen quite frequently as it's easy to have exponential blowup due to multiple nested goals at each step. As the trait solver is depth-first, this immediately caused a fatal overflow error in the old solver. In the new solver we have to handle the whole proof tree instead, which can very easily hang.

To avoid this we restrict the recursion depth after hitting the recursion limit for the first time. We also **ignore all inference constraints from goals resulting in overflow**. This is mostly backwards compatible as any overflow in the old solver resulted in a fatal error.

### sidenote about normalization

We return ambiguous nested goals of `NormalizesTo` goals to the caller and ignore their impact when computing the `Certainty` of the current goal. See the [normalization chapter](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/solve/normalization.html) for more details.This means we apply constraints resulting from other nested goals and from equating the impl header when normalizing, even if a nested goal results in overflow. This is necessary to avoid breaking the following example:
```rust
trait Trait {
    type Assoc;
}

struct W<T: ?Sized>(*mut T);
impl<T: ?Sized> Trait for W<W<T>>
where
    W<T>: Trait,
{
    type Assoc = ();
}

// `W<?t>: Trait<Assoc = u32>` does not hold as
// `Assoc` gets normalized to `()`. However, proving
// the where-bounds of the impl results in overflow.
//
// For this to continue to compile we must not discard
// constraints from normalizing associated types.
trait NoOverlap {}
impl<T: Trait<Assoc = u32>> NoOverlap for T {}
impl<T: ?Sized> NoOverlap for W<T> {}
```

#### Future compatability concerns

Non-fatal overflow results in some unfortunate future compatability concerns. Changing the approach to avoid more hangs by more strongly penalizing overflow can cause breakage as we either drop constraints or ignore candidates necessary to successfully compile. Weakening the overflow penalities instead allows more code to compile and strengthens inference while potentially causing more code to hang.

While the current approach is not perfect, we believe it to be good enough. We believe it to apply the necessary inference constraints to avoid breakage and expect there to not be any desirable patterns broken by our current penalities. Similarly we believe the current constraints to avoid most accidental hangs. Ignoring constraints of overflowing goals is especially useful, as it may allow major future optimizations to our overflow handling. See [this summary](https://hackmd.io/ATf4hN0NRY-w2LIVgeFsVg) and the linked documents in case you want to know more.

### changes to performance

In general, trait solving during coherence checking is not significant for performance. Enabling the next-generation trait solver in coherence does not impact our compile time benchmarks. We are still unable to compile the benchmark suite when fully enabling the new trait solver.

There are rare cases where the new solver has significantly worse performance due to non-fatal overflow, its reliance on fixpoint algorithms and the removal of the `fn match_fresh_trait_refs` approximation. We encountered such issues in [`typenum`](https://crates.io/crates/typenum) and believe it should be [pretty much as bad as it can get](https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/73).

Due to an improved structure and far better caching, we believe that there is a lot of room for improvement and that the new solver will outperform the existing implementation in nearly all cases, sometimes significantly. We have not yet spent any time micro-optimizing the implementation and have many unimplemented major improvements, such as fast-paths for trivial goals.

TODO: get some rough results here and put them in a table

### Unstable features

#### Unsupported unstable features

The new solver currently does not support all unstable features, most notably `#![feature(generic_const_exprs)]`, `#![feature(associated_const_equality)]` and `#![feature(adt_const_params)]` are not yet fully supported in the new solver. We are confident that supporting them is possible, but did not consider this to be a priority. This stabilization introduces new ICE when using these features in impl headers.

#### fixes to `#![feature(specialization)]`

- fixes #105782
- fixes #118987

#### fixes to `#![feature(type_alias_impl_trait)]`

- fixes #119272
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105787#issuecomment-1750112388
- fixes #124207

## This does not stabilize the whole solver

While this stabilizes the use of the new solver in coherence checking, there are many parts of the solver which will remain fully unstable. We may still adapt these areas while working towards stabilizing the new solver everywhere. We are confident that we are able to do so without negatively impacting coherence.

### goals with a non-empty `ParamEnv`

Coherence always uses an empty environment. We therefore do not depend on the behavior of `AliasBound` and `ParamEnv` candidates. We only stabilizes the behavior of user-defined and builtin implementations of traits. There are still many open questions there.

### opaque types in the defining scope

The handling of opaque types - `impl Trait` - in both the new and old solver is still not fully figured out. Luckily this can be ignored for now. While opaque types are reachable during coherence checking by using `impl_trait_in_associated_types`, the behavior during coherence is separate and self-contained. The old and new solver fully agree here.

### normalization is hard

This stabilizes that we equate associated types involving bound variables using deferred-alias-equality. We also stop eagerly normalizing in coherence, which should not have any user-facing impact.

We do not stabilize the normalization behavior outside of coherence, e.g. we currently deeply normalize all types during writeback with the new solver. This may change going forward

### how to replace `select` from the old solver

We sometimes depend on getting a single `impl` for a given trait bound, e.g. when resolving a concrete method for codegen/CTFE. We do not depend on this during coherence, so the exact approach here can still be freely changed going forward.

## Acknowledgements

This work would not have been possible without `@compiler-errors.` He implemented large chunks of the solver himself but also and did a lot of testing and experimentation, eagerly discovering multiple issues which had a significant impact on our approach. `@BoxyUwU` has also done some amazing work on the solver. Thank you for the endless hours of discussion resulting in the current approach. Especially the way aliases are handled has gone through multiple revisions to get to its current state.

There were also many contributions from - and discussions with - other members of the community and the rest of `@rust-lang/types.` This solver builds upon previous improvements to the compiler, as well as lessons learned from `chalk` and `a-mir-formality`. Getting to this point  would not have been possible without that and I am incredibly thankful to everyone involved. See the [list of relevant PRs](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pulls?q=is%3Apr+is%3Amerged+label%3AWG-trait-system-refactor+-label%3Arollup+closed%3A%3C2024-03-22+).
2024-09-06 13:12:14 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
0180b8fff0
Rollup merge of #129969 - GrigorenkoPV:boxed-ty, r=compiler-errors
Make `Ty::boxed_ty` return an `Option`

Looks like a good place to use Rust's type system.

---

Most of 4ac7bcbaad/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/sty.rs (L971-L1963) looks like it could be moved to `TyKind` (then I guess  `Ty` should be made to deref to `TyKind`).
2024-09-06 07:33:58 +02:00
Pavel Grigorenko
f6e8a84eea Make Ty::boxed_ty return an Option 2024-09-06 00:30:36 +03:00
Bryanskiy
588dce1421 Delegation: support generics in associated delegation items 2024-09-05 16:04:50 +03:00
lcnr
1a893ac648 stabilize -Znext-solver=coherence 2024-09-05 07:57:16 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
485fd3815c
Rollup merge of #129896 - lcnr:bail-on-unknowable, r=jackh726
do not attempt to prove unknowable goals

In case a goal is unknowable, we previously still checked all other possible ways to prove this goal, even though its final result is already guaranteed to be ambiguous. By ignoring all other candidates in that case we can avoid a lot of unnecessary work, fixing the performance regression in typenum found in #121848.

This is already the behavior in the old solver. This could in theory cause future-compatability issues as considering fewer goals unknowable may end up causing performance regressions/hangs. I am quite confident that this will not be an issue.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2024-09-03 19:13:26 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
f75a1954eb
Rollup merge of #127692 - veera-sivarajan:bugfix-125139, r=estebank
Suggest `impl Trait` for References to Bare Trait in Function Header

Fixes #125139

This PR suggests `impl Trait` when `&Trait` is found as a function parameter type or return type. This makes use of existing diagnostics by adding `peel_refs()` when checking for type equality.

Additionaly, it makes a few other improvements:
1. Checks if functions inside impl blocks have bare trait in their headers.
2. Introduces a trait `NextLifetimeParamName` similar to the existing `NextTypeParamName` for suggesting a lifetime name. Also, abstracts out the common logic between the two trait impls.

### Related Issues
I ran into a bunch of related diagnostic issues but couldn't fix them within the scope of this PR. So, I have created the following issues:
1. [Misleading Suggestion when Returning a Reference to a Bare Trait from a Function](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127689)
2. [Verbose Error When a Function Takes a Bare Trait as Parameter](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127690)
3. [Incorrect Suggestion when Returning a Bare Trait from a Function](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127691)

r​? ```@estebank``` since you implemented  #119148
2024-09-03 19:13:23 +02:00
lcnr
6188aae369 do not attempt to prove unknowable goals 2024-09-03 08:35:23 +02:00
bors
6199b69c53 Auto merge of #129777 - nnethercote:unreachable_pub-4, r=Urgau
Add `unreachable_pub`, round 4

A follow-up to #129732.

r? `@Urgau`
2024-09-03 01:27:20 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2e358e633d Add warn(unreachable_pub) to rustc_trait_selection. 2024-09-03 08:49:54 +10:00
Matthias Krüger
929b308579
Rollup merge of #129878 - Sajjon:sajjon_fix_typos_batch_3, r=jieyouxu
chore: Fix typos in 'compiler' (batch 3)

Batch 3/3: Fixes typos in `compiler`

(See [issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129874) tracking all PRs with typos fixes)
2024-09-02 22:35:21 +02:00
Bryanskiy
c51953f4d8 Use DeepRejectCtxt to quickly reject ParamEnv candidates 2024-09-02 19:59:18 +03:00
Alexander Cyon
5780c1ca5e
chore: Fix typos in 'compiler' (batch 3) 2024-09-02 07:33:41 +02:00
Jakub Beránek
47e6b5deed Revert "Auto merge of #127537 - veluca93:struct_tf, r=BoxyUwU"
This reverts commit acb4e8b625, reversing
changes made to 100fde5246.
2024-09-01 16:35:53 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
7d025bb63d
Rollup merge of #129767 - nnethercote:rm-extern-crate-tracing-4, r=jieyouxu
Remove `#[macro_use] extern crate tracing`, round 4

Because explicit importing of macros via use items is nicer (more standard and readable) than implicit importing via #[macro_use]. Continuing the work from #124511, #124914, and #125434. After this PR no `rustc_*` crates use `#[macro_use] extern crate tracing` except for `rustc_codegen_gcc` which is a special case and I will do separately.

r? ```@jieyouxu```
2024-08-31 14:46:11 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
5f10a99c7a
Rollup merge of #129725 - compiler-errors:predicates-of, r=fmease
Stop using `ty::GenericPredicates` for non-predicates_of queries

`GenericPredicates` is a struct of several parts: A list of of an item's own predicates, and a parent def id (and some effects related stuff, but ignore that since it's kinda irrelevant). When instantiating these generic predicates, it calls `predicates_of` on the parent and instantiates its predicates, and appends the item's own instantiated predicates too:

acb4e8b625/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/generics.rs (L407-L413)

Notice how this should result in a recursive set of calls to `predicates_of`... However, `GenericPredicates` is *also* misused by a bunch of *other* queries as a convenient way of passing around a list of predicates. For these queries, we don't ever set the parent def id of the `GenericPredicates`, but if we did, then this would be very easy to mistakenly call `predicates_of` instead of some other intended parent query.

Given that footgun, and the fact that we don't ever even *use* the parent def id in the `GenericPredicates` returned from queries like `explicit_super_predicates_of`, It really has no benefit over just returning `&'tcx [(Clause<'tcx>, Span)]`.

This PR additionally opts to wrap the results of `EarlyBinder`, as we've tended to use that in the return type of these kinds of queries to properly convey that the user has params to deal with, and it also gives a convenient way of iterating over a slice of things after instantiating.
2024-08-31 10:08:57 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4b3fa8e9f0 Remove #[macro_use] extern crate tracing from rustc_trait_selection. 2024-08-30 17:14:59 +10:00
Michael Goulet
92004523db Stop using ty::GenericPredicates for non-predicates_of queries 2024-08-29 00:17:40 -04:00
Jubilee
26f75a65d7
Rollup merge of #129343 - estebank:time-version, r=jieyouxu
Emit specific message for time<=0.3.35

```
error[E0282]: type annotations needed for `Box<_>`
  --> /home/gh-estebank/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/time-0.3.34/src/format_description/parse/mod.rs:83:9
   |
83 |     let items = format_items
   |         ^^^^^
...
86 |     Ok(items.into())
   |              ---- type must be known at this point
   |
   = note: this is an inference error on `time` caused by a change in Rust 1.80.0; update `time` to version `>=0.3.36`
```

Partially mitigate the fallout from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127343. Although the biggest benefit of this would have been if we had had this in 1.80 before it became stable, the long-tail of that change will be felt for a *long* time, so better late than never.

We can also emit an even more targeted error instead of this inference failure.
2024-08-28 19:12:50 -07:00
Esteban Küber
b013a3ddf0 Emit specific message for time<0.3.35 inference failure
```
error[E0282]: type annotations needed for `Box<_>`
  --> ~/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/time-0.3.34/src/format_description/parse/mod.rs:83:9
   |
83 |     let items = format_items
   |         ^^^^^
...
86 |     Ok(items.into())
   |              ---- type must be known at this point
   |
   = note: this is an inference error on crate `time` caused by a change in Rust 1.80.0; update `time` to version `>=0.3.35`
```

Partially address #127343.
2024-08-28 22:53:02 +00:00
Luca Versari
7eb4cfeace Implement RFC 3525. 2024-08-28 09:54:23 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
d6a3aa4fc4
Rollup merge of #129590 - compiler-errors:ref-tykind, r=fmease
Avoid taking reference of &TyKind

It's already a ref anyways. Just a tiny cleanup here.
2024-08-26 01:49:04 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
6228bd6ef6
Rollup merge of #129405 - surechen:fix_span_x, r=cjgillot
Fixing span manipulation and indentation of the suggestion introduced by #126187

According to comments:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128084#issuecomment-2295254576
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126187/files#r1634897691
2024-08-26 01:49:00 +02:00
Michael Goulet
48f43fa0ed Avoid taking reference of &TyKind 2024-08-25 16:02:29 -04:00
surechen
8750e24247 Fixing span manipulation and indentation of the suggestion introduced by #126187
According to comments:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128084#issuecomment-2295254576
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126187/files#r1634897691
2024-08-25 20:30:06 +08:00
Trevor Gross
00308920ae
Rollup merge of #128467 - estebank:unsized-args, r=cjgillot
Detect `*` operator on `!Sized` expression

The suggestion is new:

```
error[E0277]: the size for values of type `str` cannot be known at compilation time
  --> $DIR/unsized-str-in-return-expr-arg-and-local.rs:15:9
   |
LL |     let x = *"";
   |         ^ doesn't have a size known at compile-time
   |
   = help: the trait `Sized` is not implemented for `str`
   = note: all local variables must have a statically known size
   = help: unsized locals are gated as an unstable feature
help: references to `!Sized` types like `&str` are `Sized`; consider not dereferencing the expression
   |
LL -     let x = *"";
LL +     let x = "";
   |
```

Fix #128199.
2024-08-24 21:03:30 -05:00
bors
a60a9e567a Auto merge of #129464 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-ckfqd7h, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #128511 (Document WebAssembly target feature expectations)
 - #129243 (do not build `cargo-miri` by default on stable channel)
 - #129263 (Add a missing compatibility note in the 1.80.0 release notes)
 - #129276 (Stabilize feature `char_indices_offset`)
 - #129350 (adapt integer comparison tests for LLVM 20 IR changes)
 - #129408 (Fix handling of macro arguments within the `dropping_copy_types` lint)
 - #129426 (rustdoc-search: use tighter json for names and parents)
 - #129437 (Fix typo in a help diagnostic)
 - #129457 (kobzol vacation)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-23 10:56:34 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
09b37855f6
Rollup merge of #129437 - gurry:fix-diagnostic-typo, r=jieyouxu
Fix typo in a help diagnostic

Replaced "**the your** dependency graph" with "**in the** dependency graph".
2024-08-23 12:32:17 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
487b3d92cf
Rollup merge of #129386 - cjgillot:local-resolved-arg, r=compiler-errors
Use a LocalDefId in ResolvedArg.
2024-08-23 06:26:53 +02:00
Gurinder Singh
b544603c03 Fix typo in help diagnostic 2024-08-23 08:21:25 +05:30
bors
8269be147b Auto merge of #129398 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-50l01ry, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #128432 (WASI: forbid `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` for `std::{os, sys}`)
 - #129373 (Add missing module flags for CFI and KCFI sanitizers)
 - #129374 (Use `assert_unsafe_precondition!` in `AsciiChar::digit_unchecked`)
 - #129376 (Change `assert_unsafe_precondition` docs to refer to `check_language_ub`)
 - #129382 (Add `const_cell_into_inner` to `OnceCell`)
 - #129387 (Advise against removing the remaining Python scripts from `tests/run-make`)
 - #129388 (Do not rely on names to find lifetimes.)
 - #129395 (Pretty-print own args of existential projections (dyn-Trait w/ GAT constraints))

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-22 08:20:49 +00:00
bors
739b1fdb15 Auto merge of #129365 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-ebwx6ya, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #127279 (use old ctx if has same expand environment during decode span)
 - #127945 (Implement `debug_more_non_exhaustive`)
 - #128941 ( Improve diagnostic-related lints: `untranslatable_diagnostic` & `diagnostic_outside_of_impl`)
 - #129070 (Point at explicit `'static` obligations on a trait)
 - #129187 (bootstrap: fix clean's remove_dir_all implementation)
 - #129231 (improve submodule updates)
 - #129264 (Update `library/Cargo.toml` in weekly job)
 - #129284 (rustdoc: animate the `:target` highlight)
 - #129302 (compiletest: use `std::fs::remove_dir_all` now that it is available)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-22 05:17:27 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
ca7c55f050 Do not rely on names to find lifetimes. 2024-08-22 02:20:05 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
c51f2d24d1 Use a LocalDefId in ResolvedArg. 2024-08-22 01:17:01 +00:00
Esteban Küber
f5bae722be Point at explicit 'static obligations on a trait
Given `trait Any: 'static` and a `struct` with a `Box<dyn Any + 'a>` field, point at the `'static` bound in `Any` to explain why `'a: 'static`.

```
error[E0478]: lifetime bound not satisfied
   --> f202.rs:2:12
    |
2   |     value: Box<dyn std::any::Any + 'a>,
    |            ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    |
note: lifetime parameter instantiated with the lifetime `'a` as defined here
   --> f202.rs:1:14
    |
1   | struct Hello<'a> {
    |              ^^
note: but lifetime parameter must outlive the static lifetime
   --> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/any.rs:113:16
    |
113 | pub trait Any: 'static {
    |                ^^^^^^^
```

Partially address #33652.
2024-08-21 16:40:15 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4137f3bc15
Rollup merge of #129345 - compiler-errors:scratch4, r=jieyouxu
Use shorthand field initialization syntax more aggressively in the compiler

Caught these when cleaning up #129344 and decided to run clippy to find the rest
2024-08-21 18:15:06 +02:00
Michael Goulet
0b2525c787 Simplify some redundant field names 2024-08-21 01:31:42 -04:00
Michael Goulet
25ff9b6bcb Use bool in favor of Option<()> for diagnostics 2024-08-21 01:31:11 -04:00
bors
a971212545 Auto merge of #127672 - compiler-errors:precise-capturing, r=spastorino
Stabilize opaque type precise capturing (RFC 3617)

This PR partially stabilizes opaque type *precise capturing*, which was specified in [RFC 3617](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3617), and whose syntax was amended by FCP in [#125836](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125836).

This feature, as stabilized here, gives us a way to explicitly specify the generic lifetime parameters that an RPIT-like opaque type captures.  This solves the problem of overcapturing, for lifetime parameters in these opaque types, and will allow the Lifetime Capture Rules 2024 ([RFC 3498](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3498)) to be fully stabilized for RPIT in Rust 2024.

### What are we stabilizing?

This PR stabilizes the use of a `use<'a, T>` bound in return-position impl Trait opaque types.  Such a bound fully specifies the set of generic parameters captured by the RPIT opaque type, entirely overriding the implicit default behavior.  E.g.:

```rust
fn does_not_capture<'a, 'b>() -> impl Sized + use<'a> {}
//                               ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
//                This RPIT opaque type does not capture `'b`.
```

The way we would suggest thinking of `impl Trait` types *without* an explicit `use<..>` bound is that the `use<..>` bound has been *elided*, and that the bound is filled in automatically by the compiler according to the edition-specific capture rules.

All non-`'static` lifetime parameters, named (i.e. non-APIT) type parameters, and const parameters in scope are valid to name, including an elided lifetime if such a lifetime would also be valid in an outlives bound, e.g.:

```rust
fn elided(x: &u8) -> impl Sized + use<'_> { x }
```

Lifetimes must be listed before type and const parameters, but otherwise the ordering is not relevant to the `use<..>` bound.  Captured parameters may not be duplicated.  For now, only one `use<..>` bound may appear in a bounds list.  It may appear anywhere within the bounds list.

### How does this differ from the RFC?

This stabilization differs from the RFC in one respect: the RFC originally specified `use<'a, T>` as syntactically part of the RPIT type itself, e.g.:

```rust
fn capture<'a>() -> impl use<'a> Sized {}
```

However, settling on the final syntax was left as an open question.  T-lang later decided via FCP in [#125836](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125836) to treat `use<..>` as a syntactic bound instead, e.g.:

```rust
fn capture<'a>() -> impl Sized + use<'a> {}
```

### What aren't we stabilizing?

The key goal of this PR is to stabilize the parts of *precise capturing* that are needed to enable the migration to Rust 2024.

There are some capabilities of *precise capturing* that the RFC specifies but that we're not stabilizing here, as these require further work on the type system.  We hope to lift these limitations later.

The limitations that are part of this PR were specified in the [RFC's stabilization strategy](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3617-precise-capturing.html#stabilization-strategy).

#### Not capturing type or const parameters

The RFC addresses the overcapturing of type and const parameters; that is, it allows for them to not be captured in opaque types.  We're not stabilizing that in this PR.  Since all in scope generic type and const parameters are implicitly captured in all editions, this is not needed for the migration to Rust 2024.

For now, when using `use<..>`, all in scope type and const parameters must be nameable (i.e., APIT cannot be used) and included as arguments.  For example, this is an error because `T` is in scope and not included as an argument:

```rust
fn test<T>() -> impl Sized + use<> {}
//~^ ERROR `impl Trait` must mention all type parameters in scope in `use<...>`
```

This is due to certain current limitations in the type system related to how generic parameters are represented as captured (i.e. bivariance) and how inference operates.

We hope to relax this in the future, and this stabilization is forward compatible with doing so.

#### Precise capturing for return-position impl Trait **in trait** (RPITIT)

The RFC specifies precise capturing for RPITIT.  We're not stabilizing that in this PR.  Since RPITIT already adheres to the Lifetime Capture Rules 2024, this isn't needed for the migration to Rust 2024.

The effect of this is that the anonymous associated types created by RPITITs must continue to capture all of the lifetime parameters in scope, e.g.:

```rust
trait Foo<'a> {
    fn test() -> impl Sized + use<Self>;
    //~^ ERROR `use<...>` precise capturing syntax is currently not allowed in return-position `impl Trait` in traits
}
```

To allow this involves a meaningful amount of type system work related to adding variance to GATs or reworking how generics are represented in RPITITs.  We plan to do this work separately from the stabilization.  See:

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124029

Supporting precise capturing for RPITIT will also require us to implement a new algorithm for detecting refining capture behavior.  This may involve looking through type parameters to detect cases where the impl Trait type in an implementation captures fewer lifetimes than the corresponding RPITIT in the trait definition, e.g.:

```rust
trait Foo {
    fn rpit() -> impl Sized + use<Self>;
}

impl<'a> Foo for &'a () {
    // This is "refining" due to not capturing `'a` which
    // is implied by the trait's `use<Self>`.
    fn rpit() -> impl Sized + use<>;

    // This is not "refining".
    fn rpit() -> impl Sized + use<'a>;
}
```

This stabilization is forward compatible with adding support for this later.

### The technical details

This bound is purely syntactical and does not lower to a [`Clause`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.79.0/nightly-rustc/rustc_middle/ty/type.ClauseKind.html) in the type system.  For the purposes of the type system (and for the types team's curiosity regarding this stabilization), we have no current need to represent this as a `ClauseKind`.

Since opaques already capture a variable set of lifetimes depending on edition and their syntactical position (e.g. RPIT vs RPITIT), a `use<..>` bound is just a way to explicitly rather than implicitly specify that set of lifetimes, and this only affects opaque type lowering from AST to HIR.

### FCP plan

While there's much discussion of the type system here, the feature in this PR is implemented internally as a transformation that happens before lowering to the type system layer.  We already support impl Trait types partially capturing the in scope lifetimes; we just currently only expose that implicitly.

So, in my (errs's) view as a types team member, there's nothing for types to weigh in on here with respect to the implementation being stabilized, and I'd suggest a lang-only proposed FCP (though we'll of course CC the team below).

### Authorship and acknowledgments

This stabilization report was coauthored by compiler-errors and TC.

TC would like to acknowledge the outstanding and speedy work that compiler-errors has done to make this feature happen.

compiler-errors thanks TC for authoring the RFC, for all of his involvement in this feature's development, and pushing the Rust 2024 edition forward.

### Open items

We're doing some things in parallel here.  In signaling the intention to stabilize, we want to uncover any latent issues so we can be sure they get addressed.  We want to give the maximum time for discussion here to happen by starting it while other remaining miscellaneous work proceeds.  That work includes:

- [x] Look into `syn` support.
  - https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/issues/1677
  - https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/pull/1707
- [x] Look into `rustfmt` support.
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126754
- [x] Look into `rust-analyzer` support.
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/17598
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/17676
- [x] Look into `rustdoc` support.
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127228
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127632
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127658
- [x] Suggest this feature to RfL (a known nightly user).
- [x] Add a chapter to the edition guide.
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/edition-guide/pull/316
- [x] Update the Reference.
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1577

### (Selected) implementation history

* https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3498
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3617
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123468
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125836
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126049
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126753

Closes #123432.

cc `@rust-lang/lang` `@rust-lang/types`

`@rustbot` labels +T-lang +I-lang-nominated +A-impl-trait +F-precise_capturing

Tracking:

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123432

----

For the compiler reviewer, I'll leave some inline comments about diagnostics fallout :^)

r? compiler
2024-08-20 10:42:55 +00:00
Veera
12de141df2 Suggest impl Trait for References to Bare Trait in Function Header 2024-08-19 15:19:43 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
5cb30b7e9d
Rollup merge of #129217 - jswrenn:transmute-lifetimes, r=compiler-errors
safe transmute: check lifetimes

Modifies `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom` to forbid lifetime extensions on references. This static check can be opted out of with the `Assume::lifetimes` flag.

Fixes #129097

Tracking Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99571

 r​? `@compiler-errors`
2024-08-19 20:14:56 +02:00
Trevor Gross
8a513f1720
Rollup merge of #129208 - veluca93:adt_const_fix, r=BoxyUwU
Fix order of normalization and recursion in const folding.

Fixes #126831.

Without this patch, type normalization is not always idempotent, which leads to all sorts of bugs in places that assume that normalizing a normalized type does nothing.

Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95174

r? BoxyUwU
2024-08-18 23:41:49 -05:00
Trevor Gross
d21b6f2715
Rollup merge of #128084 - surechen:fix_125997_v1, r=cjgillot
Suggest adding Result return type for associated method in E0277.

Recommit #126515 because I messed up during rebase,

Suggest adding Result return type for associated method in E0277.

For following:

```rust
struct A;
impl A {
    fn test4(&self) {
        let mut _file = File::create("foo.txt")?;
        //~^ ERROR the `?` operator can only be used in a method
    }
```

Suggest:

```rust
impl A {
    fn test4(&self) -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
        let mut _file = File::create("foo.txt")?;
        //~^ ERROR the `?` operator can only be used in a method

    Ok(())
    }
}
```

For #125997

r? `@cjgillot`
2024-08-18 23:41:46 -05:00
Jack Wrenn
17995d5cc2 safe transmute: forbid reference lifetime extension
Modifies `BikeshedIntrinsicFrom` to forbid lifetime extensions on
references. This static check can be opted out of with the
`Assume::lifetimes` flag.

Fixes #129097
2024-08-18 18:31:06 +00:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
130cb9e30c
Rollup merge of #129203 - compiler-errors:extern_crate_data, r=jieyouxu
Use cnum for extern crate data key

Noticed this when fixing #129184. I still have yet to put up a fix for that (mostly because I'm too lazy to minimize a test, that will come soon though).
2024-08-18 14:55:23 +08:00
Luca Versari
7fd62320fe Fix order of normalization and recursion in const folding.
Fixes #126831.

Without this patch, type normalization is not always idempotent, which
leads to all sorts of bugs in places that assume that normalizing a
normalized type does nothing.
2024-08-18 00:07:41 +02:00
bors
feeba198f2 Auto merge of #128792 - compiler-errors:foreign-sig, r=spastorino
Use `FnSig` instead of raw `FnDecl` for `ForeignItemKind::Fn`, fix ICE for `Fn` trait error on safe foreign fn

Let's use `hir::FnSig` instead of `hir::FnDecl + hir::Safety` for `ForeignItemKind::Fn`. This consolidates some handling code between normal fns and foreign fns.

Separetly, fix an ICE where we weren't handling `Fn` trait errors for safe foreign fns.

If perf is bad for the first commit, I can rework the ICE fix to not rely on it. But if perf is good, I prefer we fix and clean up things all at once 👍

r? spastorino

Fixes #128764
2024-08-17 19:35:01 +00:00
Michael Goulet
b2dd943d4b Use cnum for extern crate data 2024-08-17 12:50:18 -04:00
Michael Goulet
84044cd50f Bless test fallout 2024-08-17 12:43:25 -04:00
bors
9b318d2e93 Auto merge of #128786 - estebank:multiple-crate-versions, r=fee1-dead
Detect multiple crate versions on method not found

When a type comes indirectly from one crate version but the imported trait comes from a separate crate version, the called method won't be found. We now show additional context:

```
error[E0599]: no method named `foo` found for struct `dep_2_reexport::Type` in the current scope
 --> multiple-dep-versions.rs:8:10
  |
8 |     Type.foo();
  |          ^^^ method not found in `Type`
  |
note: there are multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in the dependency graph
 --> multiple-dep-versions.rs:4:32
  |
4 | use dependency::{do_something, Trait};
  |                                ^^^^^ `dependency` imported here doesn't correspond to the right crate version
  |
 ::: ~/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-1.rs:4:1
  |
4 | pub trait Trait {
  | --------------- this is the trait that was imported
  |
 ::: ~/rust/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/test/run-make/crate-loading/rmake_out/multiple-dep-versions-2.rs:4:1
  |
4 | pub trait Trait {
  | --------------- this is the trait that is needed
5 |     fn foo(&self);
  |        --- the method is available for `dep_2_reexport::Type` here
```

Fix #128569, fix #110926, fix #109161, fix #81659, fix #51458, fix #32611. Follow up to #124944.
2024-08-17 14:40:04 +00:00
Michael Goulet
d850f85055 Don't ICE on Fn trait error for foreign fn 2024-08-16 14:10:06 -04:00
Jubilee
4f46643698
Rollup merge of #129078 - lcnr:scrape_region_constraints-use-ocx, r=compiler-errors
`ParamEnvAnd::fully_perform`: we have an `ocx`, use it

cc #123669

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2024-08-15 18:44:18 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
f3df807207
Rollup merge of #129106 - compiler-errors:unused-type-ops, r=jieyouxu
Remove redundant type ops: `Eq`/`Subtype`

r? lcnr or anyone really
2024-08-15 19:32:37 +02:00
Michael Goulet
f264e5d011 Remove redundant type ops 2024-08-14 14:18:17 -04:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
59ad2aec49
Rollup merge of #128828 - lcnr:search-graph-11, r=compiler-errors
`-Znext-solver` caching

This PR has two major changes while also fixing multiple issues found via fuzzing.

The main optimization is the ability to not discard provisional cache entries when popping the highest cycle head the entry depends on. This fixes the hang in Fuchsia with `-Znext-solver=coherence`.

It also bails if the result of a fixpoint iteration is ambiguous, even without reaching a fixpoint. This is necessary to avoid exponential blowup if a coinductive cycle results in ambiguity, e.g. due to unknowable candidates in coherence.

Updating stack entries pretty much exclusively happens lazily now, so `fn check_invariants` ended up being mostly useless and I've removed it. See https://gist.github.com/lcnr/8de338fdb2685581e17727bbfab0622a for the invariants we would be able to assert with it.

For a general overview, see the in-process update of the relevant rustc-dev-guide chapter: https://hackmd.io/1ALkSjKlSCyQG-dVb_PUHw

r? ```@compiler-errors```
2024-08-14 21:43:07 +08:00
lcnr
3a02047d52 if we have an ocx, use it 2024-08-14 09:36:53 +02:00
bors
9859bf27fd Auto merge of #129076 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-rg8mi2x, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #128410 (Migrate `remap-path-prefix-dwarf` `run-make` test to rmake)
 - #128759 (alloc: add ToString specialization for `&&str`)
 - #128873 (Add windows-targets crate to std's sysroot)
 - #129001 (chore(lib): Enhance documentation for core::fmt::Formatter's write_fm…)
 - #129061 (Use `is_lang_item` more)
 - #129062 (Remove a no-longer-true assert)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-14 04:17:13 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
cd6852b9ea
Rollup merge of #129061 - compiler-errors:lang-item, r=Urgau
Use `is_lang_item` more

Few places that I missed since introducing `TyCtxt::is_lang_item`.
2024-08-14 05:05:52 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
85180cd365
Rollup merge of #128759 - notriddle:notriddle/spec-to-string, r=workingjubilee,compiler-errors
alloc: add ToString specialization for `&&str`

Fixes #128690
2024-08-14 05:05:51 +02:00
bors
e9c965df7b Auto merge of #128812 - nnethercote:shrink-TyKind-FnPtr, r=compiler-errors
Shrink `TyKind::FnPtr`.

By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and `FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms. This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-08-14 00:56:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
bac19686a5 Use is_lang_item more 2024-08-13 16:44:53 -04:00
Michael Howell
c6fb0f344e diagnostics: use DeepRejectCtxt for check
This makes more things match, particularly applicable blankets.
2024-08-13 10:01:13 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
85eb465a10
Rollup merge of #128912 - compiler-errors:do-not-recommend-impl, r=lcnr
Store `do_not_recommend`-ness in impl header

Alternative to #128674

It's less flexible, but also less invasive. Hopefully it's also performant. I'd recommend we think separately about the design for how to gate arbitrary diagnostic attributes moving forward.
2024-08-12 23:10:51 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
4c49418472
Rollup merge of #128712 - compiler-errors:normalize-borrowck, r=lcnr
Normalize struct tail properly for `dyn` ptr-to-ptr casting in new solver

Realized that the new solver didn't handle ptr-to-ptr casting correctly.

r? lcnr

Built on #128694
2024-08-12 23:10:50 +02:00
Esteban Küber
5c427b4600 reword message 2024-08-12 19:29:47 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
7c6dca9050
Rollup merge of #128978 - compiler-errors:assert-matches, r=jieyouxu
Use `assert_matches` around the compiler more

It's a useful assertion, especially since it actually prints out the LHS.
2024-08-12 17:09:19 +02:00
lcnr
7b86c98068 do not use the global solver cache for proof trees
doing so requires overwriting global cache entries and
generally adds significant complexity to the solver. This is
also only ever done for root goals, so it feels easier to wrap
the `evaluate_canonical_goal` in an ordinary query if
necessary.
2024-08-12 10:33:04 +02:00
Michael Goulet
f15997ffec Remove struct_tail_no_normalization 2024-08-11 19:40:03 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b5d2079fb9 Rename normalization functions to raw 2024-08-11 19:40:03 -04:00
Michael Goulet
c361c924a0 Use assert_matches around the compiler 2024-08-11 12:25:39 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
32e0fe129d
Rollup merge of #128762 - fmease:use-more-slice-pats, r=compiler-errors
Use more slice patterns inside the compiler

Nothing super noteworthy. Just replacing the common 'fragile' pattern of "length check followed by indexing or unwrap" with slice patterns for legibility and 'robustness'.

r? ghost
2024-08-11 07:51:51 +02:00
bors
48090b11b5 Auto merge of #128746 - compiler-errors:cache-super-outlives, r=lcnr
Cache supertrait outlives of impl header for soundness check

This caches the results of computing the transitive supertraits of an impl and filtering it to its outlives obligations. This is purely an optimization to improve https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124336.
2024-08-10 10:22:06 +00:00
Michael Goulet
ed7bdbb17b Store do_not_recommend-ness in impl header 2024-08-09 22:02:20 -04:00
Nicholas Nethercote
c4717cc9d1 Shrink TyKind::FnPtr.
By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and
`FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size
of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms.
This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It
also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't
translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI.
2024-08-09 14:33:25 +10:00
Matthias Krüger
bcf6f9fa76
Rollup merge of #128791 - compiler-errors:async-fn-unsafe, r=lcnr
Don't implement `AsyncFn` for `FnDef`/`FnPtr` that wouldnt implement `Fn`

Due to unsafety, ABI, or the presence of target features, some `FnDef`/`FnPtr` types don't implement `Fn*`. Do the same for `AsyncFn*`.

Noticed this due to #128764, but this isn't really related to that ICE, which is fixed in #128792.
2024-08-09 00:03:36 +02:00
Michael Goulet
ec1c424293 Don't implement AsyncFn for FnDef/FnPtr that wouldnt implement Fn 2024-08-08 14:07:31 -04:00
Esteban Küber
f6767f7a68 Detect * operator on !Sized expression
```
error[E0277]: the size for values of type `str` cannot be known at compilation time
  --> $DIR/unsized-str-in-return-expr-arg-and-local.rs:15:9
   |
LL |     let x = *"";
   |         ^ doesn't have a size known at compile-time
   |
   = help: the trait `Sized` is not implemented for `str`
   = note: all local variables must have a statically known size
   = help: unsized locals are gated as an unstable feature
help: references are always `Sized`, even if they point to unsized data; consider not dereferencing the expression
   |
LL -     let x = *"";
LL +     let x = "";
   |
```
2024-08-08 17:35:40 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
493233ce29
Rollup merge of #128527 - estebank:ambiguity-suggestion, r=Nadrieril
More information for fully-qualified suggestion when there are multiple impls

```
error[E0790]: cannot call associated function on trait without specifying the corresponding `impl` type
  --> $DIR/E0283.rs:30:21
   |
LL |     fn create() -> u32;
   |     ------------------- `Coroutine::create` defined here
...
LL |     let cont: u32 = Coroutine::create();
   |                     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ cannot call associated function of trait
   |
help: use a fully-qualified path to a specific available implementation
   |
LL |     let cont: u32 = <Impl as Coroutine>::create();
   |                     ++++++++          +
LL |     let cont: u32 = <AnotherImpl as Coroutine>::create();
   |                     +++++++++++++++          +
```
2024-08-07 15:59:36 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
c4c518d2d4
Use more slice patterns inside the compiler 2024-08-07 13:37:52 +02:00
Michael Howell
20c833c632 diagnostics: Box<dyn Trait> suggestion with multiple matching impl
The two altered expectation messages both seem like improvements:

- `coerce-expect-unsized-ascribed.stderr` says you can go
  `Box<char> -> Box<dyn Debug>`, which you can.
- `upcast_soundness_bug.stderr` used to say that you could go
  `Box<dyn Trait<u8, u8>> -> Box<dyn Trait>`, which you can't,
  because the type parameters are missing in the destination
  and the only ones that work aren't what's needed.
2024-08-06 18:24:17 -07:00
Esteban Küber
edd4162393 fix rebase 2024-08-06 17:54:39 +00:00
Esteban Küber
d8b07718f4 Add help about using cargo tree 2024-08-06 17:54:39 +00:00
Esteban Küber
4868680ee9 On trait bound mismatch, detect multiple crate versions in dep tree
When encountering an E0277, if the type and the trait both come from a crate with the same name but different crate number, we explain that there are multiple crate versions in the dependency tree.

If there's a type that fulfills the bound, and it has the same name as the passed in type and has the same crate name, we explain that the same type in two different versions of the same crate *are different*.

```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `Type: dependency::Trait` is not satisfied
 --> src/main.rs:4:18
  |
4 |     do_something(Type);
  |     ------------ ^^^^ the trait `dependency::Trait` is not implemented for `Type`
  |     |
  |     required by a bound introduced by this call
  |
help: you have multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in your dependency graph
 --> src/main.rs:1:5
  |
1 | use bar::do_something;
  |     ^^^ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a dependency of crate `bar`
2 | use dependency::Type;
  |     ^^^^^^^^^^ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
 --> /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz-2/src/lib.rs:1:1
  |
1 | pub struct Type;
  | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this type doesn't implement the required trait
  |
 ::: /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz/src/lib.rs:1:1
  |
1 | pub struct Type;
  | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this type implements the required trait
2 | pub trait Trait {}
  | --------------- this is the required trait
note: required by a bound in `bar::do_something`
 --> /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz/src/lib.rs:4:24
  |
4 | pub fn do_something<X: Trait>(_: X) {}
  |                        ^^^^^ required by this bound in `do_something`
```

Address #22750.
2024-08-06 17:54:39 +00:00
Michael Goulet
79228526bf Cache supertrait outlives of impl header for soundness check 2024-08-06 13:33:32 -04:00
bors
f7eefec4e0 Auto merge of #128689 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-ukyn8wq, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #128385 (rustdoc-json: discard non-local inherent impls for primitives)
 - #128559 (Don't re-elaborated already elaborated caller bounds in method probe)
 - #128631 (handle crates when they are not specified for std docs)
 - #128664 (Add `Debug` impls to API types in `rustc_codegen_ssa`)
 - #128686 (fix the invalid argument type)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-05 17:03:58 +00:00
Michael Goulet
34e087890c Don't re-elaborated already elaborated caller bounds in method probe 2024-08-05 10:48:20 -04:00
Michael Goulet
fa9ae7b9d3 Elaborate supertraits in dyn candidates 2024-08-05 10:03:17 -04:00
Michael Goulet
6a891ec4fe Enforce supertrait outlives obligations hold when confirming impl 2024-08-05 09:55:14 -04:00
Esteban Küber
2c83c99058 More information for fully-qualified suggestion when there are multiple impls
```
error[E0790]: cannot call associated function on trait without specifying the corresponding `impl` type
  --> $DIR/E0283.rs:30:21
   |
LL |     fn create() -> u32;
   |     ------------------- `Coroutine::create` defined here
...
LL |     let cont: u32 = Coroutine::create();
   |                     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ cannot call associated function of trait
   |
help: use a fully-qualified path to a specific available implementation
   |
LL |     let cont: u32 = <Impl as Coroutine>::create();
   |                     ++++++++          +
LL |     let cont: u32 = <AnotherImpl as Coroutine>::create();
   |                     +++++++++++++++          +
```
2024-08-02 03:22:56 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
b22c48ed6e
Rollup merge of #128438 - Bryanskiy:empty-array-dropck, r=lcnr
Add special-case for [T, 0] in dropck_outlives

implements/fixes #110288.

r? `@lcnr`
2024-07-31 23:20:12 +02:00
Bryanskiy
34fcf92ea0 Add special-case for [T, 0] in dropck 2024-07-31 16:15:05 +03:00
bors
f8060d282d Auto merge of #128083 - Mark-Simulacrum:bump-bootstrap, r=albertlarsan68
Bump bootstrap compiler to new beta

https://forge.rust-lang.org/release/process.html#master-bootstrap-update-t-2-day-tuesday
2024-07-30 17:49:08 +00:00
bohan
97469cc4bf only accept adt type during infer source visitor 2024-07-29 22:29:34 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
84ac80f192 Reformat use declarations.
The previous commit updated `rustfmt.toml` appropriately. This commit is
the outcome of running `x fmt --all` with the new formatting options.
2024-07-29 08:26:52 +10:00
Mark Rousskov
5eca36d27a step cfg(bootstrap) 2024-07-28 14:46:29 -04:00
Trevor Gross
bd18f88dab
Rollup merge of #128201 - compiler-errors:closure-clone, r=oli-obk
Implement `Copy`/`Clone` for async closures

We can do so in the same cases that regular closures do.

For the purposes of cloning, coroutine-closures are actually precisely the same as regular closures, specifically in the aspect that `Clone` impls care about which is the upvars. The only difference b/w coroutine-closures and regular closures is the type that they *return*, but this type has not been *created* yet, so we don't really have a problem.

IDK why I didn't add this impl initially -- I went back and forth a bit on the internal representation for coroutine-closures before settling on a design which largely models regular closures. Previous (not published) iterations of coroutine-closures used to be represented as a special (read: cursed) kind of coroutine, which would probably suffer from the pitfalls that coroutines have that oli mentioned below in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128201#issuecomment-2251230274.

r? oli-obk
2024-07-26 19:03:05 -04:00
bors
7c2012d0ec Auto merge of #121676 - Bryanskiy:polarity, r=petrochenkov
Support ?Trait bounds in supertraits and dyn Trait under a feature gate

This patch allows `maybe` polarity bounds under a feature gate. The only language change here is that corresponding hard errors are replaced by feature gates. Example:
```rust
#![feature(allow_maybe_polarity)]
...
trait Trait1 : ?Trait { ... } // ok
fn foo(_: Box<(dyn Trait2 + ?Trait)>) {} // ok
fn bar<T: ?Sized + ?Trait>(_: &T) {} // ok
```
Maybe bounds still don't do anything (except for `Sized` trait), however this patch will allow us to [experiment with default auto traits](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120706#issuecomment-1934006762).

This is a part of the [MCP: Low level components for async drop](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/727)
2024-07-26 20:14:16 +00:00
Michael Goulet
d5656059a1 Make coroutine-closures possible to be cloned 2024-07-26 12:53:53 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
a88354831b
Rollup merge of #126090 - compiler-errors:supertrait-assoc-ty-unsoundness, r=lcnr
Fix supertrait associated type unsoundness

### What?

Object safety allows us to name `Self::Assoc` associated types in certain positions if they come from our trait or one of our supertraits. When this check was implemented, I think it failed to consider that supertraits can have different args, and it was only checking def-id equality.

This is problematic, since we can sneak different implementations in by implementing `Supertrait<NotActuallyTheSupertraitSubsts>` for a `dyn` type. This can be used to implement an unsound transmute function. See the committed test.

### How do we fix it?

We consider the whole trait ref when checking for supertraits. Right now, this is implemented using equality *without* normalization. We erase regions since those don't affect trait selection.

This is a limitation that could theoretically affect code that should be accepted, but doesn't matter in practice -- there are 0 crater regression. We could make this check stronger, but I would be worried about cycle issues. I assume that most people are writing `Self::Assoc` so they don't really care about the trait ref being normalized.

---

### What is up w the stacked commit

This is built on top of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122804 though that's really not related, it's just easier to make this modification with the changes to the object safety code that I did in that PR. The only thing is that PR may make this unsoundness slightly easier to abuse, since there are more positions that allow self-associated-types -- I am happy to stall that change until this PR merges.

---

Fixes #126079

r? lcnr
2024-07-26 00:57:20 +02:00
Bryanskiy
2a73553513 Support ?Trait bounds in supertraits and dyn Trait under a feature gate 2024-07-25 20:53:33 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
1fda084290
Rollup merge of #128160 - compiler-errors:auto, r=jackh726
Don't ICE when auto trait has assoc ty in old solver

Kinda a pointless change to make, but it's observable w/o the feature gate, so let's just fix it. I reintroduced this ICE when I removed the "auto impl" kind from `ImplSource` in #112687.

Fixes #117829
Fixes #127746
2024-07-25 04:43:20 +02:00
Michael Goulet
0919d0714e Don't ICE when auto trait has assoc ty in old solver 2024-07-24 17:19:44 -04:00
Oli Scherer
8ea461da55 Do not assemble candidates for auto traits of opaque types in their defining scope 2024-07-24 16:00:48 +00:00
Oli Scherer
acba6449f8 Do not try to reveal hidden types when trying to prove Freeze in the defining scope 2024-07-24 16:00:48 +00:00
Oli Scherer
61b5e11c47 Don't use global caches if opaques can be defined 2024-07-24 10:45:21 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
004d1adc5d
Rollup merge of #128076 - compiler-errors:infer_ctxt_ext, r=lcnr
Get rid of `InferCtxtExt` from `error_reporting::traits`

One more cleanup.

r? lcnr
2024-07-23 13:06:56 +02:00
surechen
b4b991e66f Suggest adding Result return type for associated method in E0277.
For following:

```rust
struct A;
impl A {
    fn test4(&self) {
        let mut _file = File::create("foo.txt")?;
        //~^ ERROR the `?` operator can only be used in a method
    }
```
Suggest:

```rust
impl A {
    fn test4(&self) -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
        let mut _file = File::create("foo.txt")?;
        //~^ ERROR the `?` operator can only be used in a method

    Ok(())
    }
}
```

For #125997
2024-07-23 10:24:45 +08:00
Michael Goulet
6310e40578 Get rid of infer_ctxt_ext 2024-07-22 16:15:52 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7bca516b35 Get rid of can_eq_shallow 2024-07-22 13:54:48 -04:00
Michael Goulet
e9e9495f21 Fix tools 2024-07-21 22:34:37 -04:00
Michael Goulet
ce8a625092 Move all error reporting into rustc_trait_selection 2024-07-21 22:34:35 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f49738ba6c Move need_type_info too 2024-07-21 22:33:15 -04:00
bors
9629b90b3f Auto merge of #127722 - BoxyUwU:new_adt_const_params_limitations, r=compiler-errors
Forbid borrows and unsized types from being used as the type of a const generic under `adt_const_params`

Fixes #112219
Fixes #112124
Fixes #112125

### Motivation

Currently the `adt_const_params` feature allows writing `Foo<const N: [u8]>` this is entirely useless as it is not possible to write an expression which evaluates to a type that is not `Sized`. In order to actually use unsized types in const generics they are typically written as `const N: &[u8]` which *is* possible to provide a value of.

Unfortunately allowing the types of const parameters to contain references is non trivial (#120961) as it introduces a number of difficult questions about how equality of references in the type system should behave. References in the types of const generics is largely only useful for using unsized types in const generics.

This PR introduces a new feature gate `unsized_const_parameters` and moves support for `const N: [u8]` and `const N: &...` from `adt_const_params` into it. The goal here hopefully is to experiment with allowing `const N: [u8]` to work without references and then eventually completely forbid references in const generics.

Splitting this out into a new feature gate means that stabilization of `adt_const_params` does not have to resolve #120961 which is the only remaining "big" blocker for the feature. Remaining issues after this are a few ICEs and naming bikeshed for `ConstParamTy`.

### Implementation

The implementation is slightly subtle here as we would like to ensure that a stabilization of `adt_const_params` is forwards compatible with any outcome of `unsized_const_parameters`. This is inherently tricky as we do not support unstable trait implementations and we determine whether a type is valid as the type of a const parameter via a trait bound.

There are a few constraints here:
- We would like to *allow for the possibility* of adding a `Sized` supertrait to `ConstParamTy` in the event that we wind up opting to not support unsized types and instead requiring people to write the 'sized version', e.g. `const N: [u8; M]` instead of `const N: [u8]`.
- Crates should be able to enable `unsized_const_parameters` and write trait implementations of `ConstParamTy` for `!Sized` types without downstream crates that only enable `adt_const_params` being able to observe this (required for std to be able to `impl<T> ConstParamTy for [T]`

Ultimately the way this is accomplished is via having two traits (sad), `ConstParamTy` and `UnsizedConstParamTy`. Depending on whether `unsized_const_parameters` is enabled or not we change which trait is used to check whether a type is allowed to be a const parameter.

Long term (when stabilizing `UnsizedConstParamTy`) it should be possible to completely merge these traits (and derive macros), only having a single `trait ConstParamTy` and `macro ConstParamTy`.

Under `adt_const_params` it is now illegal to directly refer to `ConstParamTy` it is only used as an internal impl detail by `derive(ConstParamTy)` and checking const parameters are well formed. This is necessary in order to ensure forwards compatibility with all possible future directions for `feature(unsized_const_parameters)`.

Generally the intuition here should be that `ConstParamTy` is the stable trait that everything uses, and `UnsizedConstParamTy` is that plus unstable implementations (well, I suppose `ConstParamTy` isn't stable yet :P).
2024-07-21 05:36:21 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
89798e9064
Rollup merge of #127987 - estebank:impl-trait-sugg, r=cjgillot
More accurate suggestion for `-> Box<dyn Trait>` or `-> impl Trait`

When encountering `-> Trait`, suggest `-> Box<dyn Trait>` (instead of `-> Box<Trait>`.

If there's a single returned type within the `fn`, suggest `-> impl Trait`.
2024-07-20 07:13:46 +02:00
Esteban Küber
3ff758877f More accurate suggestion for -> Box<dyn Trait> or -> impl Trait
When encountering `-> Trait`, suggest `-> Box<dyn Trait>` (instead of `-> Box<Trait>`.

If there's a single returned type within the `fn`, suggest `-> impl Trait`.
2024-07-19 19:39:37 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9f8c618a90
Rollup merge of #127856 - RalfJung:interpret-cast-sanity, r=oli-obk
interpret: add sanity check in dyn upcast to double-check what codegen does

For dyn receiver calls, we already have two codepaths: look up the function to call by indexing into the vtable, or alternatively resolve the DefId given the dynamic type of the receiver. With debug assertions enabled, the interpreter does both and compares the results. (Without debug assertions we always use the vtable as it is simpler.)

This PR does the same for dyn trait upcasts. However, for casts *not* using the vtable is the easier thing to do, so now the vtable path is the debug-assertion-only path. In particular, there are cases where the vtable does not contain a pointer for upcasts but instead reuses the old pointer: when the supertrait vtable is a prefix of the larger vtable. We don't want to expose this optimization and detect UB if people do a transmute assuming this optimization, so we cannot in general use the vtable indexing path.

r? ``@oli-obk``
2024-07-19 17:06:50 +02:00
bors
8c3a94a1c7 Auto merge of #125915 - camelid:const-arg-refactor, r=BoxyUwU
Represent type-level consts with new-and-improved `hir::ConstArg`

### Summary

This is a step toward `min_generic_const_exprs`. We now represent all const
generic arguments using an enum that differentiates between const *paths*
(temporarily just bare const params) and arbitrary anon consts that may perform
computations. This will enable us to cleanly implement the `min_generic_const_args`
plan of allowing the use of generics in paths used as const args, while
disallowing their use in arbitrary anon consts. Here is a summary of the salient
aspects of this change:

- Add `current_def_id_parent` to `LoweringContext`

  This is needed to track anon const parents properly once we implement
  `ConstArgKind::Path` (which requires moving anon const def-creation
  outside of `DefCollector`).

- Create `hir::ConstArgKind` enum with `Path` and `Anon` variants. Use it in the
  existing `hir::ConstArg` struct, replacing the previous `hir::AnonConst` field.

- Use `ConstArg` for all instances of const args. Specifically, use it instead
  of `AnonConst` for assoc item constraints, array lengths, and const param
  defaults.

- Some `ast::AnonConst`s now have their `DefId`s created in
  rustc_ast_lowering rather than `DefCollector`. This is because in some
  cases they will end up becoming a `ConstArgKind::Path` instead, which
  has no `DefId`. We have to solve this in a hacky way where we guess
  whether the `AnonConst` could end up as a path const since we can't
  know for sure until after name resolution (`N` could refer to a free
  const or a nullary struct). If it has no chance as being a const
  param, then we create a `DefId` in `DefCollector` -- otherwise we
  decide during ast_lowering. This will have to be updated once all path
  consts use `ConstArgKind::Path`.

- We explicitly use `ConstArgHasType` for array lengths, rather than
  implicitly relying on anon const type feeding -- this is due to the
  addition of `ConstArgKind::Path`.

- Some tests have their outputs changed, but the changes are for the
  most part minor (including removing duplicate or almost-duplicate
  errors). One test now ICEs, but it is for an incomplete, unstable
  feature and is now tracked at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127009.

### Followup items post-merge

- Use `ConstArgKind::Path` for all const paths, not just const params.
- Fix (no github dont close this issue) #127009
- If a path in generic args doesn't resolve as a type, try to resolve as a const
  instead (do this in rustc_resolve). Then remove the special-casing from
  `rustc_ast_lowering`, so that all params will automatically be lowered as
  `ConstArgKind::Path`.
- (?) Consider making `const_evaluatable_unchecked` a hard error, or at least
  trying it in crater

r? `@BoxyUwU`
2024-07-19 08:44:51 +00:00
Michael Goulet
8dbb63a585 Remove tag field from relations 2024-07-18 14:34:05 -04:00
Ralf Jung
e613bc92a1 const_to_pat: cleanup leftovers from when we had to deal with non-structural constants 2024-07-18 11:58:16 +02:00
Ralf Jung
fa74a9e6aa valtree construction: keep track of which type was valtree-incompatible 2024-07-18 11:58:16 +02:00
Ralf Jung
a7b80819e9 interpret: add sanity check in dyn upcast to double-check what codegen does 2024-07-18 11:41:10 +02:00
Michael Goulet
0b5ce54bc2 Fix relations 2024-07-17 10:46:10 -04:00
Boxy
d0c11bf6e3 Split part of adt_const_params into unsized_const_params 2024-07-17 11:01:29 +01:00
Boxy
42cc42b942 Forbid !Sized types and references 2024-07-17 11:01:29 +01:00
Noah Lev
37ed7a4438 Add ConstArgKind::Path and make ConstArg its own HIR node
This is a very large commit since a lot needs to be changed in order to
make the tests pass. The salient changes are:

- `ConstArgKind` gets a new `Path` variant, and all const params are now
  represented using it. Non-param paths still use `ConstArgKind::Anon`
  to prevent this change from getting too large, but they will soon use
  the `Path` variant too.

- `ConstArg` gets a distinct `hir_id` field and its own variant in
  `hir::Node`. This affected many parts of the compiler that expected
  the parent of an `AnonConst` to be the containing context (e.g., an
  array repeat expression). They have been changed to check the
  "grandparent" where necessary.

- Some `ast::AnonConst`s now have their `DefId`s created in
  rustc_ast_lowering rather than `DefCollector`. This is because in some
  cases they will end up becoming a `ConstArgKind::Path` instead, which
  has no `DefId`. We have to solve this in a hacky way where we guess
  whether the `AnonConst` could end up as a path const since we can't
  know for sure until after name resolution (`N` could refer to a free
  const or a nullary struct). If it has no chance as being a const
  param, then we create a `DefId` in `DefCollector` -- otherwise we
  decide during ast_lowering. This will have to be updated once all path
  consts use `ConstArgKind::Path`.

- We explicitly use `ConstArgHasType` for array lengths, rather than
  implicitly relying on anon const type feeding -- this is due to the
  addition of `ConstArgKind::Path`.

- Some tests have their outputs changed, but the changes are for the
  most part minor (including removing duplicate or almost-duplicate
  errors). One test now ICEs, but it is for an incomplete, unstable
  feature and is now tracked at #127009.
2024-07-16 19:27:28 -07:00
Trevor Gross
059222ddc9
Rollup merge of #127501 - compiler-errors:invert-infer-error-mod-struture, r=lcnr
Invert infer `error_reporting` mod struture

Parallel change to #127493, which moves `rustc_infer::infer::error_reporting` to `rustc_infer::error_reporting::infer`. After this, we should just be able to merge this into `rustc_trait_selection::error_reporting::infer`, and pull down `TypeErrCtxt` into that crate. 👍

r? lcnr
2024-07-16 16:15:16 -05:00
yukang
48ddf5e323 Fix the issue of invalid suggestion for a reference of iterator 2024-07-16 22:01:55 +08:00
Michael Goulet
e86fbcfd70 Move rustc_infer::infer::error_reporting to rustc_infer::error_reporting::infer 2024-07-15 20:16:12 -04:00
Michael Goulet
841b30f63e Make sure trait def ids match before zipping args in note_function_argument_obligation 2024-07-15 17:53:22 -04:00
Michael Goulet
172cf9bef3 Fix unsoundness when associated types dont actually come from supertraits 2024-07-15 14:17:32 -04:00
Michael Goulet
8edf9b8084 Item bounds can reference self projections and still be object safe 2024-07-15 14:16:48 -04:00
Jubilee
4bfc10617a
Rollup merge of #127631 - compiler-errors:yeet-fully-norm, r=lcnr
Remove `fully_normalize`

Yeet this function and replace it w/ some `ObligationCtxt` instead. It wasn't called very often anyways.

r? lcnr
2024-07-12 13:47:09 -07:00
Michael Goulet
2c8bbeebf1 Remove fully_normalize 2024-07-11 19:15:04 -04:00
Georg Semmler
27d5db166e
Allows #[diagnostic::do_not_recommend] to supress trait impls in suggestions as well
This commit changes the error reporting mechanism for not implemented
traits to skip impl marked as `#[diagnostic::do_not_recommend]` in the
help part of the error message ("the following other types implement
trait `Foo`:"). The main use case here is to allow crate authors to skip
non-meaningful confusing suggestions. A common example for this are
fully generic impls on tuples.
2024-07-11 08:14:28 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
22df186d6f
Rollup merge of #127570 - lcnr:normalize-cool, r=compiler-errors
small normalization improvement

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-07-10 17:54:29 +02:00
lcnr
e00fd781c9 simplify and future-proof needs_normalization 2024-07-10 15:56:20 +02:00
lcnr
f77394fdf3 instantiate higher ranked goals in candidate selection
reverts #119820
2024-07-10 14:13:16 +02:00
Michael Goulet
bbbff80603 Split out fulfillment error reporting a bit more 2024-07-09 09:57:16 -04:00
Michael Goulet
cd68a28daa Move some stuff into the ambiguity and suggestion modules 2024-07-09 09:51:56 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7af825fea4 Split out overflow handling into its own module 2024-07-09 09:51:56 -04:00
Michael Goulet
fe4c995ccb Move trait selection error reporting to its own top-level module 2024-07-08 16:04:47 -04:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
ffb93361b4
Rollup merge of #127439 - compiler-errors:uplift-elaborate, r=lcnr
Uplift elaboration into `rustc_type_ir`

Allows us to deduplicate and consolidate elaboration (including these stupid elaboration duplicate fns i added for pretty printing like 3 years ago) so I'm pretty hyped about this change :3

r? lcnr
2024-07-08 13:04:33 +08:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
928d71f17b
Rollup merge of #127437 - compiler-errors:uplift-trait-ref-is-knowable, r=lcnr
Uplift trait ref is knowable into `rustc_next_trait_solver`

Self-explanatory. Eliminates one more delegate method.

r? lcnr cc ``@fmease``
2024-07-08 13:04:32 +08:00
bors
89aefb9c53 Auto merge of #127172 - compiler-errors:full-can_eq-everywhere, r=lcnr
Make `can_eq` process obligations (almost) everywhere

Move `can_eq` to an extension trait on `InferCtxt` in `rustc_trait_selection`, and change it so that it processes obligations. This should strengthen it to be more accurate in some cases, but is most important for the new trait solver which delays relating aliases to `AliasRelate` goals. Without this, we always basically just return true when passing aliases to `can_eq`, which can lead to weird errors, for example #127149.

I'm not actually certain if we should *have* `can_eq` be called on the good path. In cases where we need `can_eq`, we probably should just be using a regular probe.

Fixes #127149

r? lcnr
2024-07-07 23:03:48 +00:00
Michael Goulet
15d16f1cd6 Finish uplifting supertraits 2024-07-07 11:28:01 -04:00
Michael Goulet
ab27c2fa77 Get rid of trait_ref_is_knowable from delegate 2024-07-07 11:10:48 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a982471e07 Uplift trait_ref_is_knowable and friends 2024-07-07 11:10:32 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b2e30bdec4 Add fundamental to trait def 2024-07-07 11:10:32 -04:00
Michael Goulet
58aad3c72c iter_identity is a better name 2024-07-07 00:12:35 -04:00
bors
9e27377bec Auto merge of #127404 - compiler-errors:rpitit-entailment-false-positive, r=oli-obk
Don't try to label `ObligationCauseCode::CompareImplItem` for an RPITIT, since it has no name

The old (current) trait solver has a limitation that when a where clause in param-env must be normalized using the same where clause, then we get spurious errors in `normalize_param_env_or_error`. I don't think there's an issue tracking it, but it's the root cause for many of the "fixed-by-next-solver" labeled issues.

Specifically, these errors may occur when checking predicate entailment of the GAT that comes out of desugaring RPITITs. Since we use `ObligationCauseCode::CompareImplItem` for these predicates, we try calling `item_name` on an RPITIT which fails, since the RPITIT has no name.

We simply suppress this logic when we're reporting a predicate entailment error for an RPITIT. RPITITs should never have predicate entailment errors, *by construction*, but they may due to this bug in the old solver.

Addresses the ICE in #127331, though doesn't fix the underlying issue (which is fundamental to the old solver).

r? types
2024-07-07 03:22:12 +00:00
Michael Goulet
d6276b37ea Don't try to label ObligationCauseCode::CompareImplItem for an RPITIT, since it has no name 2024-07-06 15:20:37 -04:00
Michael Goulet
cc6c5de39d Import via rustc_type_ir::outlives
We could use rustc_middle::ty::outlives I guess?
2024-07-06 10:47:46 -04:00
Michael Goulet
23c6f23b21 Uplift push_outlives_components 2024-07-06 10:47:46 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a3535b963b
Rollup merge of #127366 - oli-obk:falliblevisitor, r=compiler-errors
Use `ControlFlow` results for visitors that are only looking for a single value

These visitors all had a `Option<Value>` or `bool` field, that, once set, was never unset or modified again. They have been refactored by removing the field and returning `ControlFlow` directly from the visitor
2024-07-05 20:49:34 -04:00
Michael Goulet
27588d1de3 Split SolverDelegate back out from InferCtxtLike 2024-07-05 16:39:39 -04:00
Michael Goulet
fb8d5f1e13 Actually just make can_eq process obligations (almost) everywhere 2024-07-05 11:59:54 -04:00
Oli Scherer
7dca61b68b Use ControlFlow results for visitors that are only looking for a single value 2024-07-05 15:00:40 +00:00
bors
c872a1418a Auto merge of #125507 - compiler-errors:type-length-limit, r=lcnr
Re-implement a type-size based limit

r? lcnr

This PR reintroduces the type length limit added in #37789, which was accidentally made practically useless by the caching changes to `Ty::walk` in #72412, which caused the `walk` function to no longer walk over identical elements.

Hitting this length limit is not fatal unless we are in codegen -- so it shouldn't affect passes like the mir inliner which creates potentially very large types (which we observed, for example, when the new trait solver compiles `itertools` in `--release` mode).

This also increases the type length limit from `1048576 == 2 ** 20` to `2 ** 24`, which covers all of the code that can be reached with craterbot-check. Individual crates can increase the length limit further if desired.

Perf regression is mild and I think we should accept it -- reinstating this limit is important for the new trait solver and to make sure we don't accidentally hit more type-size related regressions in the future.

Fixes #125460
2024-07-03 11:56:36 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
b1b9804f5a
Rollup merge of #126403 - compiler-errors:better-type-errors, r=lcnr
Actually report normalization-based type errors correctly for alias-relate obligations in new solver

We have some special casing to report type mismatch errors that come from projection predicates, but we don't do that for alias-relate obligations. This PR implements that. There's a bit of code duplication, but 🤷

Best reviewed without whitespace.

r? lcnr
2024-07-03 03:03:14 -04:00
bors
d163e5e515 Auto merge of #123737 - compiler-errors:alias-wf, r=lcnr
Check alias args for WF even if they have escaping bound vars

#### What

This PR stops skipping arguments of aliases if they have escaping bound vars, instead recursing into them and only discarding the resulting obligations referencing bounds vars.

#### An example:

From the test:
```
trait Trait {
    type Gat<U: ?Sized>;
}

fn test<T>(f: for<'a> fn(<&'a T as Trait>::Gat<&'a [str]>)) where for<'a> &'a T: Trait {}
//~^ ERROR the size for values of type `[()]` cannot be known at compilation time

fn main() {}
```

We now prove that `str: Sized` in order for `&'a [str]` to be well-formed. We were previously unconditionally skipping over `&'a [str]` as it referenced a buond variable. We now recurse into it and instead only discard the `[str]: 'a` obligation because of the escaping bound vars.

#### Why?

This is a change that improves consistency about proving well-formedness earlier in the pipeline, which is necessary for future work on where-bounds in binders and correctly handling higher-ranked implied bounds. I don't expect this to fix any unsoundness.

#### What doesn't it fix?

Specifically, this doesn't check projection predicates' components are well-formed, because there are too many regressions: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123737#issuecomment-2052198478
2024-07-03 03:48:06 +00:00
Michael Goulet
ecdaff240d Actually report normalization-based type errors correctly for alias-relate obligations in new solver 2024-07-02 16:39:57 -04:00
Michael Goulet
3273ccea4b Fix spans 2024-07-02 15:48:48 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d3a742bde9 Miscellaneous renaming 2024-07-02 15:48:48 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
a10c231118
Rollup merge of #127230 - hattizai:patch01, r=saethlin
chore: remove duplicate words

remove duplicate words in comments to improve readability.
2024-07-02 17:47:50 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
36da46ab98
Rollup merge of #127146 - compiler-errors:fast-reject, r=lcnr
Uplift fast rejection to new solver

Self explanatory.

r? lcnr
2024-07-02 17:47:47 +02:00
hattizai
ada9fda7c3 chore: remove duplicate words 2024-07-02 11:25:31 +08:00
bors
7b21c18fe4 Auto merge of #126996 - oli-obk:do_not_count_errors, r=nnethercote
Automatically taint InferCtxt when errors are emitted

r? `@nnethercote`

Basically `InferCtxt::dcx` now returns a `DiagCtxt` that refers back to the `Cell<Option<ErrorGuaranteed>>` of the `InferCtxt` and thus when invoking `Diag::emit`, and the diagnostic is an error, we taint the `InferCtxt` directly.

That change on its own has no effect at all, because `InferCtxt` already tracks whether errors have been emitted by recording the global error count when it gets opened, and checking at the end whether the count changed. So I removed that error count check, which had a bit of fallout that I immediately fixed by invoking `InferCtxt::dcx` instead of `TyCtxt::dcx` in a bunch of places.

The remaining new errors are because an error was reported in another query, and never bubbled up. I think they are minor enough for this to be ok, and sometimes it actually improves diagnostics, by not silencing useful diagnostics anymore.

fixes #126485 (cc `@olafes)`

There are more improvements we can do (like tainting in hir ty lowering), but I would rather do that in follow up PRs, because it requires some refactorings.
2024-07-01 06:35:58 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
515d17cd15
Rollup merge of #127131 - Kobzol:remove-unused-deps, r=compiler-errors
Remove unused `rustc_trait_selection` dependencies

Found using `cargo-machete`. The `bitflags` and `derivative` crates were added for the new trait solver, but weren't removed when the next trait solver code was uplifted to a separate crate.
2024-06-30 10:39:48 +02:00
Michael Goulet
53db64168f Uplift fast rejection to new solver 2024-06-30 00:27:35 -04:00
Jakub Beránek
e52d95bc82 Remove unused compiler dependencies 2024-06-29 22:09:58 +02:00
bors
ba1d7f4a08 Auto merge of #120639 - fee1-dead-contrib:new-effects-desugaring, r=oli-obk
Implement new effects desugaring

cc `@rust-lang/project-const-traits.` Will write down notes once I have finished.

* [x] See if we want `T: Tr` to desugar into `T: Tr, T::Effects: Compat<true>`
* [x] Fix ICEs on `type Assoc: ~const Tr` and `type Assoc<T: ~const Tr>`
* [ ] add types and traits to minicore test
* [ ] update rustc-dev-guide

Fixes #119717
Fixes #123664
Fixes #124857
Fixes #126148
2024-06-29 20:08:10 +00:00
Deadbeef
72e8244e64 implement new effects desugaring 2024-06-28 10:57:35 +00:00
Michael Goulet
81c2c57519 Make queries more explicit 2024-06-27 12:03:57 -04:00
Oli Scherer
86c8eae774 Automatically taint InferCtxt when errors are emitted 2024-06-26 16:01:45 +00:00
Oli Scherer
5988078aa2 Restrict diagnostic context lifetime of InferCtxt to itself instead of TyCtxt 2024-06-26 16:01:44 +00:00
Oli Scherer
79ac8982ca Restrict diagnostic context lifetime of TypeErrCtxt to InferCtxt instead of TyCtxt 2024-06-26 16:01:44 +00:00
bors
164e1297e1 Auto merge of #125610 - oli-obk:define_opaque_types14, r=compiler-errors
Allow constraining opaque types during various unsizing casts

allows unsizing of tuples, arrays and Adts to constraint opaque types in their generic parameters to concrete types on either side of the unsizing cast.

Also allows constraining opaque types during trait object casts that only differ in auto traits or lifetimes.

cc #116652
2024-06-25 05:09:30 +00:00
bors
5b270e1198 Auto merge of #126813 - compiler-errors:SliceLike, r=lcnr
Add `SliceLike` to `rustc_type_ir`, use it in the generic solver code (+ some other changes)

First, we split out `TraitRef::new_from_args` which takes *just* `ty::GenericArgsRef` from `TraitRef::new` which takes `impl IntoIterator<Item: Into<GenericArg>>`. I will explain in a minute why.

Second, we introduce `SliceLike`, which allows us to be generic over `List<T>` and `[T]`. This trait has an `as_slice()` and `into_iter()` method, and some other convenience functions. However, importantly, since types like `I::GenericArgs` now implement `SliceLike` rather than `IntoIter<Item = I::GenericArg>`, we can't use `TraitRef::new` on this directly. That's where `new_from_args` comes in.

Finally, we adjust all the code to use these slice operators. Some things get simpler, some things get a bit more annoying since we need to use `as_slice()` in a few places. 🤷

r? lcnr
2024-06-25 00:33:49 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f26cc349d9 Split out IntoIterator and non-Iterator constructors for AliasTy/AliasTerm/TraitRef/projection 2024-06-24 11:28:21 -04:00
Pavel Grigorenko
ba5ec1fc5c Suggest inline const blocks for array initialization 2024-06-24 15:30:24 +03:00
Michael Goulet
db638ab968 Rename a bunch of things 2024-06-21 12:32:05 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
ef2e8bfcbf
Rollup merge of #126717 - nnethercote:rustfmt-use-pre-cleanups, r=jieyouxu
Clean up some comments near `use` declarations

#125443 will reformat all `use` declarations in the repository. There are a few edge cases involving comments on `use` declarations that require care. This PR cleans up some clumsy comment cases, taking us a step closer to #125443 being able to merge.

r? ``@lqd``
2024-06-20 14:07:04 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
e7be3562b7
Rollup merge of #126620 - oli-obk:taint_errors, r=fee1-dead
Actually taint InferCtxt when a fulfillment error is emitted

And avoid checking the global error counter

fixes #122044
fixes #123255
fixes #123276
fixes #125799
2024-06-20 07:52:43 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote
665821cb60 Add blank lines after module-level //! comments.
Most modules have such a blank line, but some don't. Inserting the blank
line makes it clearer that the `//!` comments are describing the entire
module, rather than the `use` declaration(s) that immediately follows.
2024-06-20 09:23:20 +10:00
Oli Scherer
e4c9a8cf9b Const generic parameters aren't bounds, even if we end up erroring because of the bound that binds the parameter's type 2024-06-19 14:58:29 +00:00
Oli Scherer
4a86ef6f4c Allow constraining opaque types during auto trait casting 2024-06-19 08:28:31 +00:00
Oli Scherer
4dcb70b8cf Allow constraining opaque types during unsizing 2024-06-19 08:28:31 +00:00
Oli Scherer
3594a19f2a Taint infcx when reporting errors 2024-06-19 04:41:56 +00:00
bors
8fcd4dd08e Auto merge of #126614 - compiler-errors:uplift-next-trait-solver, r=lcnr
Uplift next trait solver to `rustc_next_trait_solver`

🎉

There's so many FIXMEs! Sorry! Ideally this merges with the FIXMEs and we track and squash them over the near future.

Also, this still doesn't build on anything other than rustc. I still need to fix `feature = "nightly"` in `rustc_type_ir`, and remove and fix all the nightly feature usage in the new trait solver (notably: let-chains).

Also, sorry `@lcnr` I know you asked for me to separate the commit where we `mv rustc_trait_selection/solve/... rustc_next_trait_solver/solve/...`, but I had already done all the work by that point. Luckily, `git` understands the file moves so it should still be relatively reviewable.

If this is still very difficult to review, then I can do some rebasing magic to try to separate this out. Please let me know!

r? lcnr
2024-06-18 19:41:33 +00:00
Oli Scherer
3f34196839 Remove redundant argument from subdiagnostic method 2024-06-18 15:42:11 +00:00
Oli Scherer
7ba82d61eb Use a dedicated type instead of a reference for the diagnostic context
This paves the way for tracking more state (e.g. error tainting) in the diagnostic context handle
2024-06-18 15:42:11 +00:00
Michael Goulet
6609501ca7 Fix transmute goal 2024-06-18 11:04:01 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7d2be888b6 Fix impl for SolverDelegate 2024-06-18 11:04:01 -04:00
Michael Goulet
532149eb88 Uplift the new trait solver 2024-06-18 10:55:34 -04:00
Michael Goulet
baf94bddf0 SolverDelegate 2024-06-18 10:40:30 -04:00
Michael Goulet
dba4147633 Make SearchGraph fully generic 2024-06-18 10:40:30 -04:00
Michael Goulet
ff154c7122 Uplift OpaqueTypeKey too, use it in response 2024-06-16 11:28:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
9d207cfbc8 Uplift ExternalConstraintData 2024-06-16 11:28:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f93ee19fd7 Make ExternalConstraints just carry outlives 2024-06-16 11:28:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a333943890 Stop using AssocKind in new solver 2024-06-16 11:28:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b65d735f1c Move InferCtxtSelectExt out of eval_ctxt module 2024-06-16 11:28:47 -04:00
bors
12b33d36f3 Auto merge of #126540 - jhpratt:rollup-fzzz8j3, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #125112 (Document behavior of `create_dir_all` wrt. empty path)
 - #126127 (Spell out other trait diagnostic)
 - #126309 (unify git command preperation)
 - #126539 (Update `Arc::try_unwrap()` docs)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-06-16 07:44:33 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
936d76009b
Rollup merge of #126127 - Alexendoo:other-trait-diag, r=pnkfelix
Spell out other trait diagnostic

I recently saw somebody confused about the diagnostic thinking it was suggesting to add an `as` cast. This change is longer but I think it's clearer
2024-06-16 03:41:57 -04:00
bors
5639c21fb3 Auto merge of #126505 - compiler-errors:no-vtable, r=lcnr
Only compute vtable information during codegen

This PR removes vtable information from the `Object` and `TraitUpcasting` candidate sources in the trait solvers, and defers the computation of relevant information to `Instance::resolve`. This is because vtables really aren't a thing in the trait world -- they're an implementation detail in codegen.

Previously it was just easiest to tangle this information together since we were already doing the work of looking at all the supertraits in the trait solver, and specifically because we use traits to represent when it's possible to call a method via a vtable (`Object` candidate) and do upcasting (`Unsize` candidate). but I am somewhat suspicious we're doing a *lot* of extra work, especially in polymorphic contexts, so let's see what perf says.
2024-06-16 05:33:49 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
b6311b3a33
Rollup merge of #126525 - jieyouxu:traitsel-docs, r=compiler-errors
trait_selection: remove extra words

Tiny doc cleanup.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88231.
2024-06-15 19:51:38 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
aa6fb1cfcb
Rollup merge of #126496 - compiler-errors:more-generics, r=lcnr
Make proof tree probing and `Candidate`/`CandidateSource` generic over interner

`<TyCtxt<'tcx>>` is ugly, but will become `<I>` when things actually become generic.

r? lcnr
2024-06-15 19:51:36 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
709d862308
Rollup merge of #126404 - compiler-errors:alias-relate-terms, r=lcnr
Check that alias-relate terms are WF if reporting an error in alias-relate

Check that each of the left/right term is WF when deriving a best error obligation for an alias-relate goal. This will make sure that given `<i32 as NotImplemented>::Assoc = ()` will drill down into `i32: NotImplemented` since we currently treat the projection as rigid.

r? lcnr
2024-06-15 19:51:35 +02:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
ea2ac347f0 trait_selection: remove extra words 2024-06-15 15:50:00 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
6f21da3bb4
Rollup merge of #126471 - oli-obk:filter_loop, r=compiler-errors
Use a consistent way to filter out bounds instead of splitting it into three places

just a small cleanup, no logic change.

Initially the code had me looking for why anything was special here, only to realize there's nothing interesting going on
2024-06-15 10:56:42 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
335e320baa
Rollup merge of #126354 - compiler-errors:variance, r=lcnr
Use `Variance` glob imported variants everywhere

Fully commit to using the globbed variance. Could be convinced the other way, and change this PR to not use the globbed variants anywhere, but I'd rather we do one or the other.

r? lcnr
2024-06-15 10:56:40 +02:00
Michael Goulet
3b9adbec32 Only compute vtable information during codegen 2024-06-14 20:35:45 -04:00
Michael Goulet
0562064959 Correctly consider depth when visiting WF goals 2024-06-14 17:19:58 -04:00
Michael Goulet
93ff86ed7c Use is_lang_item more aggressively 2024-06-14 16:54:29 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d5c48ebc71 Add TyCtxt::is_lang_item 2024-06-14 16:50:07 -04:00
Michael Goulet
c2e416c471 Make proof tree probing generic 2024-06-14 16:04:45 -04:00
Michael Goulet
8a8bbc0c17 Make Candidate generic over interner 2024-06-14 15:59:47 -04:00
Oli Scherer
5c8bb678d0 Use a consistent way to filter out bounds instead of splitting it into three places 2024-06-14 09:40:44 +00:00
Michael Goulet
c8e42065f0 Address nits
- Remove the ValuePairs glob import
- Make DummyPairs -> ValuePairs::Dummy and make it bug more
- Fix WC
- Make interner return `impl IntoIterator`s
2024-06-13 09:47:45 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a2fb2ebc17 Fix some TODOs 2024-06-13 09:34:29 -04:00
Michael Goulet
e82db89b4d Finish uplifting all of structural_traits 2024-06-13 09:34:29 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b79360ad16 Rework most of structural_traits to be Interner-agnostic 2024-06-13 09:34:28 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d3812ac95f LangItem-ify Coroutine trait in solvers 2024-06-13 09:34:28 -04:00
Michael Goulet
93ee07c756 Check that alias-relate terms are WF if reporting an error in alias-relate 2024-06-13 08:52:35 -04:00
Jubilee
f6cc226f09
Rollup merge of #126353 - compiler-errors:move-match, r=lcnr
Move `MatchAgainstFreshVars` to old solver

Small change I noticed when trying to uplift the relations to the new trait solver.
2024-06-12 20:03:21 -07:00
Jubilee
25c55c51cb
Rollup merge of #126142 - compiler-errors:trait-ref-split, r=jackh726
Harmonize using root or leaf obligation in trait error reporting

When #121826 changed the error reporting to use root obligation and not the leafmost obligation, it didn't actually make sure that all the other diagnostics helper functions used the right obligation.

Specifically, when reporting similar impl candidates we are looking for impls of the root obligation, but trying to match them against the trait ref of the leaf obligation.

This does a few other miscellaneous changes. There's a lot more clean-up that could be done here, but working with this code is really grief-inducing due to how messy it has become over the years. Someone really needs to show it love. 😓

r? ``@estebank``

Fixes #126129
2024-06-12 20:03:19 -07:00
Michael Goulet
ae24ebe710 Rebase fallout 2024-06-12 21:17:33 -04:00
Michael Goulet
2c0348a0d8 Stop passing traitref/traitpredicate by ref 2024-06-12 20:57:24 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f8d12d9189 Stop passing both trait pred and trait ref 2024-06-12 20:57:23 -04:00
Michael Goulet
c453c82de4 Harmonize use of leaf and root obligation in trait error reporting 2024-06-12 20:57:23 -04:00
Michael Goulet
44040a0670 Also passthrough for projection clauses 2024-06-12 19:10:02 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b0c1474381 better error message for normalizes-to ambiguities 2024-06-12 19:03:37 -04:00
Michael Goulet
52b2c88bdf Walk into alias-eq nested goals even if normalization fails 2024-06-12 19:03:37 -04:00
Michael Goulet
54fa4b0b74 Use Variance glob import everywhere 2024-06-12 16:25:45 -04:00
Michael Goulet
4b809b9438 Move MatchAgainstFreshVars to old solver 2024-06-12 16:24:05 -04:00
Alex Macleod
d0112c6849 Spell out other trait diagnostic 2024-06-12 12:34:47 +00:00
Jubilee
36e828fab5
Rollup merge of #126301 - nnethercote:sort-crate-attributes, r=davidtwco
Use `tidy` to sort crate attributes for all compiler crates.

We already do this for a number of crates, e.g. `rustc_middle`, `rustc_span`, `rustc_metadata`, `rustc_span`, `rustc_errors`.

For the ones we don't, in many cases the attributes are a mess.
- There is no consistency about order of attribute kinds (e.g. `allow`/`deny`/`feature`).
- Within attribute kind groups (e.g. the `feature` attributes), sometimes the order is alphabetical, and sometimes there is no particular order.
- Sometimes the attributes of a particular kind aren't even grouped all together, e.g. there might be a `feature`, then an `allow`, then another `feature`.

This commit extends the existing sorting to all compiler crates, increasing consistency. If any new attribute line is added there is now only one place it can go -- no need for arbitrary decisions.

Exceptions:
- `rustc_log`, `rustc_next_trait_solver` and `rustc_type_ir_macros`, because they have no crate attributes.
- `rustc_codegen_gcc`, because it's quasi-external to rustc (e.g. it's ignored in `rustfmt.toml`).

r? `@davidtwco`
2024-06-12 03:57:24 -07:00
Jubilee
519a322392
Rollup merge of #126187 - surechen:fix_125997, r=oli-obk
For E0277 suggest adding `Result` return type for function when using QuestionMark `?` in the body.

Adding suggestions for following function in E0277.

```rust
fn main() {
    let mut _file = File::create("foo.txt")?;
}
```

to

```rust
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
    let mut _file = File::create("foo.txt")?;

    return Ok(());
}
```

According to the issue #125997, only the code examples in the issue are targeted, but the issue covers a wider range of situations.

<!--
If this PR is related to an unstable feature or an otherwise tracked effort,
please link to the relevant tracking issue here. If you don't know of a related
tracking issue or there are none, feel free to ignore this.

This PR will get automatically assigned to a reviewer. In case you would like
a specific user to review your work, you can assign it to them by using

    r​? <reviewer name>
-->
2024-06-12 03:57:20 -07:00
Nicholas Nethercote
75b164d836 Use tidy to sort crate attributes for all compiler crates.
We already do this for a number of crates, e.g. `rustc_middle`,
`rustc_span`, `rustc_metadata`, `rustc_span`, `rustc_errors`.

For the ones we don't, in many cases the attributes are a mess.
- There is no consistency about order of attribute kinds (e.g.
  `allow`/`deny`/`feature`).
- Within attribute kind groups (e.g. the `feature` attributes),
  sometimes the order is alphabetical, and sometimes there is no
  particular order.
- Sometimes the attributes of a particular kind aren't even grouped
  all together, e.g. there might be a `feature`, then an `allow`, then
  another `feature`.

This commit extends the existing sorting to all compiler crates,
increasing consistency. If any new attribute line is added there is now
only one place it can go -- no need for arbitrary decisions.

Exceptions:
- `rustc_log`, `rustc_next_trait_solver` and `rustc_type_ir_macros`,
  because they have no crate attributes.
- `rustc_codegen_gcc`, because it's quasi-external to rustc (e.g. it's
  ignored in `rustfmt.toml`).
2024-06-12 15:49:10 +10:00
bors
76c73827dc Auto merge of #126130 - compiler-errors:goal-relations, r=lcnr
Make `ObligationEmittingRelation`s emit `Goal` rather than `Obligation`

Helps avoid needing to uplift `Obligation` into the solver. We still can't get rid of `ObligationCause`, but we can keep it as an associated type for `InferCtxtLike` and just give it a `dummy` function.

There's some shuttling between `Goal` and `Obligation` that may be perf-sensitive... Let's see what rust-timer says.

r? lcnr
2024-06-12 03:35:31 +00:00
surechen
0b3fec9388 For E0277 suggest adding Result return type for function which using QuesionMark ? in the body. 2024-06-12 11:33:22 +08:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
12358a7363
Rollup merge of #126055 - lengrongfu:master, r=pnkfelix
Expand list of trait implementers in E0277 when calling rustc with --verbose

Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125984

- Build `rustc` use `./x build`.
- Test result
<img width="634" alt="image" src="https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/15009201/89377059-2316-492b-a38a-fa33adfc9793">

- vim test.rs
```rust
trait Reconcile {
    fn reconcile(&self);
}

// Implementing the trait for some types
impl Reconcile for bool {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling bool");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for i8 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling i8");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for i16 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling i16");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for i32 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling i32");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for i64 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling i64");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for u8 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling u8");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for u16 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling u16");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for u32 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling u32");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for i128 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling u32");
    }
}

impl Reconcile for u128 {
    fn reconcile(&self) {
        println!("Reconciling u32");
    }
}

fn process<T: Reconcile>(item: T) {
    item.reconcile();
}

fn main() {
    let value = String::from("This will cause an error");
    process(value); // This line will cause a compilation error
}
```
2024-06-11 21:27:47 +01:00
Michael Goulet
e4be97cfe7 Try not to make obligations in handle_opaque_type 2024-06-11 14:10:11 -04:00
Michael Goulet
4038010436 Get rid of PredicateObligations 2024-06-11 13:52:51 -04:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
2a94a5bc21
Rollup merge of #126258 - oli-obk:recursive_rpit, r=lcnr
Do not define opaque types when selecting impls

fixes #126117

r? `@lcnr` for inconsistency with next solver
2024-06-11 14:16:47 +01:00
Oli Scherer
6cca6da126 Revert "When checking whether an impl applies, constrain hidden types of opaque types."
This reverts commit 29a630eb72.
2024-06-11 08:08:25 +00:00
bors
336e6ab3b3 Auto merge of #126139 - compiler-errors:specializes, r=lcnr
Only compute `specializes` query if (min)specialization is enabled in the crate of the specializing impl

Fixes (after backport) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125197

### What

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122791 makes it so that inductive cycles are no longer hard errors. That means that when we are testing, for example, whether these impls overlap:

```rust
impl PartialEq<Self> for AnyId {
    fn eq(&self, _: &Self) -> bool {
        todo!()
    }
}

impl<T: Identifier> PartialEq<T> for AnyId {
    fn eq(&self, _: &T) -> bool {
        todo!()
    }
}
```

...given...

```rust
pub trait Identifier: Display + 'static {}

impl<T> Identifier for T where T: PartialEq + Display + 'static {}
```

Then we try to see if the second impl holds given `T = AnyId`. That requires `AnyId: Identifier`, which requires that `AnyId: PartialEq`, which is satisfied by these two impl candidates... The `PartialEq<T>` impl is a cycle, and we used to winnow it when we used to treat inductive cycles as errors.

However, now that we don't winnow it, this means that we *now* try calling `candidate_should_be_dropped_in_favor_of`, which tries to check whether one of the impls specializes the other: the `specializes` query. In that query, we currently bail early if the impl is local.

However, in a foreign crate, we try to compute if the two impls specialize each other by doing trait solving. This may itself lead to the same situation where we call `specializes`, which will lead to a query cycle.

### How does this fix the problem

We now record whether specialization is enabled in foreign crates, and extend this early-return behavior to foreign impls too. This means that we can only encounter these cycles if we truly have a specializing impl from a crate with specialization enabled.

-----

r? `@oli-obk` or `@lcnr`
2024-06-11 07:01:18 +00:00
Michael Goulet
4b188d9d66 Only compute specializes query if specialization is enabled in the crate of the specialized impl 2024-06-07 15:58:50 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
ccbd6c29b4
Rollup merge of #126089 - wutchzone:option_take_if, r=scottmcm
Stabilize Option::take_if

Closes #98934

ed: FCP complete in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98934#issuecomment-2104627082
2024-06-07 20:14:31 +02:00
Daniel Sedlak
26dc8bd5b0 Stabilize Option::take_if 2024-06-06 20:01:59 +02:00
Michael Goulet
91274c84b9 Uplift TypeRelation and Relate 2024-06-06 07:50:19 -04:00
Michael Goulet
82ef3ad980 Uplift TypeError 2024-06-06 07:49:47 -04:00
bors
003a902792 Auto merge of #125958 - BoxyUwU:remove_const_ty, r=lcnr
Remove the `ty` field from type system `Const`s

Fixes #125556
Fixes #122908

Part of the work on `adt_const_params`/`generic_const_param_types`/`min_generic_const_exprs`/generally making the compiler nicer. cc rust-lang/project-const-generics#44

Please review commit-by-commit otherwise I wasted a lot of time not just squashing this into a giant mess (and also it'll be SO much nicer because theres a lot of fluff changes mixed in with other more careful changes if looking via File Changes

---

Why do this?
- The `ty` field keeps causing ICEs and weird behaviour due to it either being treated as "part of the const" or it being forgotten about leading to ICEs.
- As we move forward with `adt_const_params` and a potential `min_generic_const_exprs` it's going to become more complex to actually lower the correct `Ty<'tcx>`
- It muddles the idea behind how we check `Const` arguments have the correct type. By having the `ty` field it may seem like we ought to be relating it when we relate two types, or that its generally important information about the `Const`.
- Brings the compiler more in line with `a-mir-formality` as that also tracks the type of type system `Const`s via `ConstArgHasType` bounds in the env instead of on the `Const` itself.
- A lot of stuff is a lot nicer when you dont have to pass around the type of a const lol. Everywhere we construct `Const` is now significantly nicer 😅

See #125671's description for some more information about the `ty` field

---

General summary of changes in this PR:

- Add `Ty` to `ConstKind::Value` as otherwise there is no way to implement `ConstArgHasType` to ensure that const arguments are correctly typed for the parameter when we stop creating anon consts for all const args. It's also just incredibly difficult/annoying to thread the correct `Ty` around to a bunch of ctfe functions otherwise.
-  Fully implement `ConstArgHasType` in both the old and new solver. Since it now has no reliance on the `ty` field it serves its originally intended purpose of being able to act as a double check that trait vs impls have correctly typed const parameters. It also will now be able to be responsible for checking types of const arguments to parameters under `min_generic_const_exprs`.
- Add `Ty` to `mir::Const::Ty`. I dont have a great understanding of why mir constants are setup like this to be honest. Regardless they need to be able to determine the type of the const and the easiest way to make this happen was to simply store the `Ty` along side the `ty::Const`. Maybe we can do better here in the future but I'd have to spend way more time looking at everywhere we use `mir::Const`.
- rustdoc has its own `Const` which also has a `ty` field. It was relatively easy to remove this.

---

r? `@lcnr` `@compiler-errors`
2024-06-06 03:41:23 +00:00
rongfu.leng
69769fc797 Expand list of trait implementers in E0277 when calling rustc with --verbose
Signed-off-by: rongfu.leng <lenronfu@gmail.com>
2024-06-06 09:38:09 +08:00
Boxy
8d6705cdb8 Fully implement ConstArgHasType 2024-06-05 22:25:41 +01:00
Boxy
a9702a6668 Add Ty to ConstKind::Value 2024-06-05 22:25:41 +01:00
Boxy
58feec9b85 Basic removal of Ty from places (boring) 2024-06-05 22:25:38 +01:00
bors
72fdf913c5 Auto merge of #126038 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-h4rm3x2, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #124840 (resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings)
 - #125622 (Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply)
 - #125648 (Remove unused(?) `~/rustsrc` folder from docker script)
 - #125672 (Add more ABI test cases to miri (RFC 3391))
 - #125800 (Fix `mut` static task queue in SGX target)
 - #125871 (Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters)
 - #125893 (Handle all GVN binops in a single place.)
 - #126008 (Port `tests/run-make-fulldeps/issue-19371` to ui-fulldeps)
 - #126032 (Update description of the `IsTerminal` example)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-06-05 20:53:32 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9c8e46d08a
Rollup merge of #125871 - fmease:fix-orphanck-opaques, r=lcnr
Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters

This fixes an oversight of mine in #117164. The change itself has already been FCP'ed.

This only affects the old solver, the next solver already correctly rejects the added test since #117164.

r? ``@lcnr``
2024-06-05 18:21:14 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
e1745122ae
Rollup merge of #125792 - compiler-errors:dont-drop-upcast-cand, r=lcnr
Don't drop `Unsize` candidate in intercrate mode

Fixes #125767
2024-06-05 18:21:09 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
874670399c
Orphanck: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters 2024-06-04 18:57:19 +02:00
Michael Goulet
46a033958a
Rollup merge of #125717 - weiznich:move/do_not_recommend_to_diganostic_namespace, r=compiler-errors
Refactor `#[diagnostic::do_not_recommend]` support

This commit refactors the `#[do_not_recommend]` support in the old parser to also apply to projection errors and not only to selection errors. This allows the attribute to be used more widely.

Part of #51992

r? `@compiler-errors`

<!--
If this PR is related to an unstable feature or an otherwise tracked effort,
please link to the relevant tracking issue here. If you don't know of a related
tracking issue or there are none, feel free to ignore this.

This PR will get automatically assigned to a reviewer. In case you would like
a specific user to review your work, you can assign it to them by using

    r​? <reviewer name>
-->
2024-06-04 08:52:12 -04:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
b477f89041
Rollup merge of #125750 - compiler-errors:expect, r=lcnr
Align `Term` methods with `GenericArg` methods, add `Term::expect_*`

* `Term::ty` -> `Term::as_type`.
* `Term::ct` -> `Term::as_const`.
* Adds `Term::expect_type` and `Term::expect_const`, and uses them in favor of `.ty().unwrap()`, etc.

I could also shorten these to `as_ty` and then do `GenericArg::as_ty` as well, but I do think the `as_` is important to signal that this is a conversion method, and not a getter, like `Const::ty` is.

r? types
2024-06-04 08:25:48 +01:00
bors
90d6255d82 Auto merge of #125380 - compiler-errors:wc-obj-safety, r=oli-obk
Make `WHERE_CLAUSES_OBJECT_SAFETY` a regular object safety violation

#### The issue

In #50781, we have known about unsound `where` clauses in function arguments:

```rust
trait Impossible {}

trait Foo {
    fn impossible(&self)
    where
        Self: Impossible;
}

impl Foo for &() {
    fn impossible(&self)
    where
        Self: Impossible,
    {}
}

// `where` clause satisfied for the object, meaning that the function now *looks* callable.
impl Impossible for dyn Foo {}

fn main() {
    let x: &dyn Foo = &&();
    x.impossible();
}
```

... which currently segfaults at runtime because we try to call a method in the vtable that doesn't exist. :(

#### What did u change

This PR removes the `WHERE_CLAUSES_OBJECT_SAFETY` lint and instead makes it a regular object safety violation. I choose to make this into a hard error immediately rather than a `deny` because of the time that has passed since this lint was authored, and the single (1) regression (see below).

That means that it's OK to mention `where Self: Trait` where clauses in your trait, but making such a trait into a `dyn Trait` object will report an object safety violation just like `where Self: Sized`, etc.

```rust
trait Impossible {}

trait Foo {
    fn impossible(&self)
    where
        Self: Impossible; // <~ This definition is valid, just not object-safe.
}

impl Foo for &() {
    fn impossible(&self)
    where
        Self: Impossible,
    {}
}

fn main() {
    let x: &dyn Foo = &&(); // <~ THIS is where we emit an error.
}
```

#### Regressions

From a recent crater run, there's only one crate that relies on this behavior: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124305#issuecomment-2122381740. The crate looks unmaintained and there seems to be no dependents.

#### Further

We may later choose to relax this (e.g. when the where clause is implied by the supertraits of the trait or something), but this is not something I propose to do in this FCP.

For example, given:

```
trait Tr {
  fn f(&self) where Self: Blanket;
}

impl<T: ?Sized> Blanket for T {}
```

Proving that some placeholder `S` implements `S: Blanket` would be sufficient to prove that the same (blanket) impl applies for both `Concerete: Blanket` and `dyn Trait: Blanket`.

Repeating here that I don't think we need to implement this behavior right now.

----

r? lcnr
2024-06-04 02:34:20 +00:00
Michael Goulet
273b990554 Align Term methods with GenericArg methods 2024-06-03 20:36:27 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a41c44f21c Nits and formatting 2024-06-03 10:02:08 -04:00
Michael Goulet
511f1cf7c8 check_is_object_safe -> is_object_safe 2024-06-03 09:49:30 -04:00
Michael Goulet
de6b219803 Make WHERE_CLAUSES_OBJECT_SAFETY a regular object safety violation 2024-06-03 09:49:04 -04:00
Michael Goulet
1e72c7f536 Add cycle errors to ScrubbedTraitError to remove a couple more calls to new_with_diagnostics 2024-06-03 09:27:52 -04:00
Michael Goulet
27f5eccd1f Move FulfillmentErrorCode to rustc_trait_selection too 2024-06-03 09:27:52 -04:00
Michael Goulet
94a524ed11 Use ScrubbedTraitError in more places 2024-06-03 09:27:52 -04:00
Michael Goulet
eb0a70a557 Opt-in diagnostics reporting to avoid doing extra work in the new solver 2024-06-03 09:27:52 -04:00
Michael Goulet
54b2b7d460 Make TraitEngines generic over error 2024-06-03 09:27:52 -04:00
Michael Goulet
084ccd2390 Remove unnecessary extension trait 2024-06-03 09:27:52 -04:00
bors
1d52972dd8 Auto merge of #125778 - estebank:issue-67100, r=compiler-errors
Use parenthetical notation for `Fn` traits

Always use the `Fn(T) -> R` format when printing closure traits instead of `Fn<(T,), Output = R>`.

Address #67100:

```
error[E0277]: expected a `Fn()` closure, found `F`
 --> file.rs:6:13
  |
6 |     call_fn(f)
  |     ------- ^ expected an `Fn()` closure, found `F`
  |     |
  |     required by a bound introduced by this call
  |
  = note: wrap the `F` in a closure with no arguments: `|| { /* code */ }`
note: required by a bound in `call_fn`
 --> file.rs:1:15
  |
1 | fn call_fn<F: Fn() -> ()>(f: &F) {
  |               ^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `call_fn`
help: consider further restricting this bound
  |
5 | fn call_any<F: std::any::Any + Fn()>(f: &F) {
  |                              ++++++
```
2024-06-03 08:14:03 +00:00
bors
0038c02103 Auto merge of #125775 - compiler-errors:uplift-closure-args, r=lcnr
Uplift `{Closure,Coroutine,CoroutineClosure}Args` and friends to `rustc_type_ir`

Part of converting the new solver's `structural_traits.rs` to be interner-agnostic.

I decided against aliasing `ClosureArgs<TyCtxt<'tcx>>` to `ClosureArgs<'tcx>` because it seemed so rare. I could do so if desired, though.

r? lcnr
2024-06-01 19:07:03 +00:00
Michael Goulet
333458c2cb Uplift TypeRelation and Relate 2024-06-01 12:50:58 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
95e073234f Deduplicate supertrait_def_ids code 2024-06-01 07:50:32 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
dd9c8cc467 Increase vtable layout size
This improves LLVM's codegen by allowing vtable loads to be hoisted out
of loops (as just one example).
2024-06-01 07:42:05 -04:00
Michael Goulet
20699fe6b2 Stop using translate_args in the new solver 2024-05-31 09:42:30 -04:00
bors
99cb42c296 Auto merge of #124662 - zetanumbers:needs_async_drop, r=oli-obk
Implement `needs_async_drop` in rustc and optimize async drop glue

This PR expands on #121801 and implements `Ty::needs_async_drop` which works almost exactly the same as `Ty::needs_drop`, which is needed for #123948.

Also made compiler's async drop code to look more like compiler's regular drop code, which enabled me to write an optimization where types which do not use `AsyncDrop` can simply forward async drop glue to `drop_in_place`. This made size of the async block from the [async_drop test](67980dd6fb/tests/ui/async-await/async-drop.rs) to decrease by 12%.
2024-05-31 10:12:24 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
379233242b
Rollup merge of #125635 - fmease:mv-type-binding-assoc-item-constraint, r=compiler-errors
Rename HIR `TypeBinding` to `AssocItemConstraint` and related cleanup

Rename `hir::TypeBinding` and `ast::AssocConstraint` to `AssocItemConstraint` and update all items and locals using the old terminology.

Motivation: The terminology *type binding* is extremely outdated. "Type bindings" not only include constraints on associated *types* but also on associated *constants* (feature `associated_const_equality`) and on RPITITs of associated *functions* (feature `return_type_notation`). Hence the word *item* in the new name. Furthermore, the word *binding* commonly refers to a mapping from a binder/identifier to a "value" for some definition of "value". Its use in "type binding" made sense when equality constraints (e.g., `AssocTy = Ty`) were the only kind of associated item constraint. Nowadays however, we also have *associated type bounds* (e.g., `AssocTy: Bound`) for which the term *binding* doesn't make sense.

---

Old terminology (HIR, rustdoc):

```
`TypeBinding`: (associated) type binding
├── `Constraint`: associated type bound
└── `Equality`: (associated) equality constraint (?)
    ├── `Ty`: (associated) type binding
    └── `Const`: associated const equality (constraint)
```

Old terminology (AST, abbrev.):

```
`AssocConstraint`
├── `Bound`
└── `Equality`
    ├── `Ty`
    └── `Const`
```

New terminology (AST, HIR, rustdoc):

```
`AssocItemConstraint`: associated item constraint
├── `Bound`: associated type bound
└── `Equality`: associated item equality constraint OR associated item binding (for short)
    ├── `Ty`: associated type equality constraint OR associated type binding (for short)
    └── `Const`: associated const equality constraint OR associated const binding (for short)
```

r? compiler-errors
2024-05-31 08:50:22 +02:00
Michael Goulet
e485b193d0 Don't drop Upcast candidate in intercrate mode 2024-05-30 19:45:59 -04:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
34c56c45cf
Rename HIR TypeBinding to AssocItemConstraint and related cleanup 2024-05-30 22:52:33 +02:00
lcnr
86cbabbb9d add logging to search graph 2024-05-30 15:26:48 +02:00
bors
d43930dab3 Auto merge of #125711 - oli-obk:const_block_ice2, r=Nadrieril
Make `body_owned_by` return the `Body` instead of just the `BodyId`

fixes #125677

Almost all `body_owned_by` callers immediately called `body`, too, so just return `Body` directly.

This makes the inline-const query feeding more robust, as all calls to `body_owned_by` will now yield a body for inline consts, too.

I have not yet figured out a good way to make `tcx.hir().body()` return an inline-const body, but that can be done as a follow-up
2024-05-30 08:00:11 +00:00
bors
32a3ed229c Auto merge of #125671 - BoxyUwU:remove_const_ty_eq, r=compiler-errors
Do not equate `Const`'s ty in `super_combine_const`

Fixes #114456

In #125451 we started relating the `Const`'s tys outside of a probe so it was no longer simply an assertion to catch bugs.

This was done so that when we _do_ provide a wrongly typed const argument to an item if we wind up relating it with some other instantiation we'll have a `TypeError` we can bubble up and taint the resulting mir allowing const eval to skip evaluation.

In this PR I instead change `ConstArgHasType` to correctly handle checking the types of const inference variables. Previously if we had something like `impl<const N: u32> Trait for [(); N]`, when using the impl we would instantiate it with infer vars and then check that `?x: u32` is of type `u32` and succeed. Then later we would infer `?x` to some `Const` of type `usize`.

We now stall on `?x` in `ConstArgHasType` until it has a concrete value that we can determine the type of. This allows us to fail using the erroneous implementation of `Trait` which allows us to taint the mir.

Long term we intend to remove the `ty` field on `Const` so we would have no way of accessing the `ty` of a const inference variable anyway and would have to do this. I did not fully update `ConstArgHasType` to avoid using the `ty` field as it's not entirely possible right now- we would need to lookup `ConstArgHasType` candidates in the env.

---

As for _why_ I think we should do this, relating the types of const's is not necessary for soundness of the type system. Originally this check started off as a plain `==` in `super_relate_consts` and gradually has been growing in complexity as we support more complicated types. It was never actually required to ensure that const arguments are correctly typed for their parameters however.

The way we currently check that a const argument has the correct type is a little convoluted and confusing (and will hopefully be less weird as time goes on). Every const argument has an anon const with its return type set to type of the const parameter it is an argument to. When type checking the anon const regular type checking rules require that the expression is the same type as the return type. This effectively ensure that no matter what every const argument _always_ has the correct type.

An extra bit of complexity is that during `hir_ty_lowering` we do not represent everything as a `ConstKind::Unevaluated` corresponding to the anon const. For generic parameters i.e. `[(); N]` we simply represent them as `ConstKind::Param` as we do not want `ConstKind::Unevaluated` with generic substs on stable under min const generics. The anon const still gets type checked resulting in errors about type mismatches.

Eventually we intend to not create anon consts for all const arguments (for example for `ConstKind::Param`) and instead check that the argument type is correct via `ConstArgHasType` obligations (these effectively also act as a check that the anon consts have the correctly set return type).

What this all means is that the the only time we should ever have mismatched types when relating two `Const`s is if we have messed up our logic for ensuring that const arguments are of the correct type. Having this not be an assert is:
- Confusing as it may incorrectly lead people to believe this is an important check that is actually required
- Opens the possibility for bugs or behaviour reliant on this (unnecessary) check existing

---

This PR makes two tests go from pass->ICE (`generic_const_exprs/ice-125520-layout-mismatch-mulwithoverflow.rs` and `tests/crashes/121858.rs`). This is caused by the fact that we evaluate anon consts even if their where clauses do not hold and is a pre-existing issue and only affects `generic_const_exprs`. I am comfortable exposing the brokenness of `generic_const_exprs` more with this PR

This PR makes a test go from ICE->pass (`const-generics/issues/issue-105821.rs`). I have no idea why this PR affects that but I believe that ICE is an unrelated issue to do with the fact that under `generic_const_exprs`/`adt_const_params` we do not handle lifetimes in const parameter types correctly. This PR is likely just masking this bug.

Note: this PR doesn't re-introduce the assertion that the two consts' tys are equal. I'm not really sure how I feel about this but tbh it has caused more ICEs than its found lately so 🤷‍♀️

r? `@oli-obk` `@compiler-errors`
2024-05-30 05:50:44 +00:00
Esteban Küber
e6bd6c2044 Use parenthetical notation for Fn traits
Always use the `Fn(T) -> R` format when printing closure traits instead of `Fn<(T,), Output = R>`.

Fix #67100:

```
error[E0277]: expected a `Fn()` closure, found `F`
 --> file.rs:6:13
  |
6 |     call_fn(f)
  |     ------- ^ expected an `Fn()` closure, found `F`
  |     |
  |     required by a bound introduced by this call
  |
  = note: wrap the `F` in a closure with no arguments: `|| { /* code */ }`
note: required by a bound in `call_fn`
 --> file.rs:1:15
  |
1 | fn call_fn<F: Fn() -> ()>(f: &F) {
  |               ^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `call_fn`
help: consider further restricting this bound
  |
5 | fn call_any<F: std::any::Any + Fn()>(f: &F) {
  |                              ++++++
```
2024-05-29 22:26:54 +00:00
Georg Semmler
f9adc1ee9d
Refactor #[diagnostic::do_not_recommend] support
This commit refactors the `#[do_not_recommend]` support in the old
parser to also apply to projection errors and not only to selection
errors. This allows the attribute to be used more widely.
2024-05-29 22:59:53 +02:00
Michael Goulet
a03ba7fd2d Add lang item for AsyncFnKindHelper::Upvars 2024-05-29 14:28:53 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a9c7e024c0 Add lang item for Future::Output 2024-05-29 14:22:56 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7f11d6f4bf Add lang items for AsyncFn's associated types 2024-05-29 14:09:19 -04:00
Boxy
d5bd4e233d Partially implement ConstArgHasType 2024-05-29 17:06:54 +01:00
Oli Scherer
a34c26e7ec Make body_owned_by return the body directly.
Almost all callers want this anyway, and now we can use it to also return fed bodies
2024-05-29 10:04:08 +00:00
Oli Scherer
ceb45d5519 Don't require visit_body to take a lifetime that must outlive the function call 2024-05-29 10:04:08 +00:00
Daria Sukhonina
7cdd95e1a6 Optimize async drop glue for some old types 2024-05-29 12:56:59 +03:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
4c1228276b
Rollup merge of #125664 - compiler-errors:trace-tweaks, r=lcnr
Tweak relations to no longer rely on `TypeTrace`

Remove `At::trace`, and inline all of the `Trace::equate`,etc methods into `At`.

The only nontrivial change is that we use `AliasTerm` to relate two unevaluated consts in the old-solver impl of `ConstEquate`, since `AliasTerm` does implement `ToTrace` and will relate the args structurally (shallowly).

r? lcnr
2024-05-29 03:25:11 +01:00
Michael Goulet
89f3651402 Get rid of manual Trace calls 2024-05-28 11:38:58 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f494036530 Make ProofTreeBuilder actually generic over interner 2024-05-28 11:10:11 -04:00
Michael Goulet
50a5da16b8 EvalCtxt::tcx() -> EvalCtxt::interner() 2024-05-28 10:45:51 -04:00
lcnr
98bfd54b0a eagerly normalize when adding goals 2024-05-28 04:54:05 +00:00
lcnr
13ce229042 refactor analyse visitor to instantiate states in order 2024-05-28 04:54:01 +00:00
lcnr
87599ddd86 add debug_assert to alias-relate 2024-05-28 04:44:45 +00:00
bors
b0f8618938 Auto merge of #125413 - lcnr:ambig-drop-region-constraints, r=compiler-errors
drop region constraints for ambiguous goals

See the comment in `compute_external_query_constraints`. While the underlying issue is preexisting, this fixes a bug introduced by #125343.

It slightly weakens the leak chec, even if we didn't have any test which was affected. I want to write such a test before merging this PR.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-05-27 15:28:51 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
a9c125f864
Rollup merge of #125597 - compiler-errors:early-binder, r=jackh726
Uplift `EarlyBinder` into `rustc_type_ir`

We also need to give `EarlyBinder` a `'tcx` param, so that we can carry the `Interner` in the `EarlyBinder` too. This is necessary because otherwise we have an unconstrained `I: Interner` parameter in many of the `EarlyBinder`'s inherent impls.

I also generally think that this is desirable to have, in case we later want to track some state in the `EarlyBinder`.

r? lcnr
2024-05-27 13:10:36 +02:00
bors
b582f807fa Auto merge of #125410 - fmease:adj-lint-diag-api, r=nnethercote
[perf] Delay the construction of early lint diag structs

Attacks some of the perf regressions from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124417#issuecomment-2123700666.

See individual commits for details. The first three commits are not strictly necessary.
However, the 2nd one (06bc4fc671, *Remove `LintDiagnostic::msg`*) makes the main change way nicer to implement.
It's also pretty sweet on its own if I may say so myself.
2024-05-27 08:44:12 +00:00
bors
fec98b3bbc Auto merge of #125468 - BoxyUwU:remove_defid_from_regionparam, r=compiler-errors
Remove `DefId` from `EarlyParamRegion`

Currently we represent usages of `Region` parameters via the `ReEarlyParam` or `ReLateParam` variants. The `ReEarlyParam` is effectively equivalent to `TyKind::Param` and `ConstKind::Param` (i.e. it stores a `Symbol` and a `u32` index) however it also stores a `DefId` for the definition of the lifetime parameter.

This was used in roughly two places:
- Borrowck diagnostics instead of threading the appropriate `body_id` down to relevant locations. Interestingly there were already some places that had to pass down a `DefId` manually.
- Some opaque type checking logic was using the `DefId` field to track captured lifetimes

I've split this PR up into a commit for generate rote changes to diagnostics code to pass around a `DefId` manually everywhere, and another commit for the opaque type related changes which likely require more careful review as they might change the semantics of lints/errors.

Instead of manually passing the `DefId` around everywhere I previously tried to bundle it in with `TypeErrCtxt` but ran into issues with some call sites of `infcx.err_ctxt` being unable to provide a `DefId`, particularly places involved with trait solving and normalization. It might be worth investigating adding some new wrapper type to pass this around everywhere but I think this might be acceptable for now.

This pr also has the effect of reducing the size of `EarlyParamRegion` from 16 bytes -> 8 bytes. I wouldn't expect this to have any direct performance improvement however, other variants of `RegionKind` over `8` bytes are all because they contain a `BoundRegionKind` which is, as far as I know, mostly there for diagnostics. If we're ever able to remove this it would shrink the `RegionKind` type from `24` bytes to `12` (and with clever bit packing we might be able to get it to `8` bytes). I am curious what the performance impact would be of removing interning of `Region`'s if we ever manage to shrink `RegionKind` that much.

Sidenote: by removing the `DefId` the `Debug` output for `Region` has gotten significantly nicer. As an example see this opaque type debug print before vs after this PR:
`Opaque(DefId(0:13 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::{opaque#0}), [DefId(0:9 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::'a)_'a/#0, T, DefId(0:9 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::'a)_'a/#0])`
`Opaque(DefId(0:13 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::{opaque#0}), ['a/#0, T, 'a/#0])`

r? `@compiler-errors` (I would like someone who understands the opaque type setup to atleast review the type system commit, but the rest is likely reviewable by anyone)
2024-05-27 06:36:57 +00:00
Michael Goulet
bbcdb4fd3e Give EarlyBinder a tcx parameter
We are gonna need it to uplift EarlyBinder
2024-05-26 20:04:05 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
1e841638e3
Rollup merge of #124080 - oli-obk:define_opaque_types10, r=compiler-errors
Some unstable changes to where opaque types get defined

None of these can be reached from stable afaict.

r? ``@compiler-errors``

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116652
2024-05-25 22:15:17 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
00c51bda3f
Rollup merge of #125510 - lcnr:change-proof-trees-to-be-shallow, r=compiler-errors
remove proof tree formatting, make em shallow

Debugging via tracing `RUSTC_LOG=rustc_trait_selection::solve=debug` is now imo slightly more readable then the actual proof tree formatter. Removing everything that's not needed for the `analyse` visitor allows us to remove a bunch of code.

I personally believe that we should continue to use tracing over proof trees for debugging:
- it eagerly prints, allowing us to debug ICEs
- the proof tree builder ends up going out of sync with the actual runtime behavior, which is confusing
- using shallow proof trees is a lot more performant as we frequently do not recurse into all nested goals when using an analyse visitor
- this allows us to clean up the implementation and remove some code

r? ```@compiler-errors```
2024-05-25 12:54:36 +02:00
lcnr
24b5466892 drop region constraints for ambiguous goals 2024-05-24 20:32:35 +00:00
lcnr
ebd9f355e2 remove proof tree formatter, make em shallow 2024-05-24 18:41:31 +00:00
Boxy
fe2d7794ca Remove DefId from EarlyParamRegion (tedium/diagnostics) 2024-05-24 18:06:53 +01:00
Oli Scherer
d5eb7a71b3 Use regular type equating instead of a custom query 2024-05-24 09:15:43 +00:00
Oli Scherer
4387eea7f7 Support constraining opaque types while trait upcasting with binders 2024-05-23 16:02:24 +00:00
Oli Scherer
7f292f41a0 Allow defining opaque types during trait object upcasting.
No stable code is affected, as this requires the `trait_upcasting` feature gate.
2024-05-23 16:02:20 +00:00
Oli Scherer
29a630eb72 When checking whether an impl applies, constrain hidden types of opaque types.
We already handle this case this way on the coherence side, and it matches the new solver's behaviour. While there is some breakage around type-alias-impl-trait (see new "type annotations needed" in tests/ui/type-alias-impl-trait/issue-84660-unsoundness.rs), no stable code breaks, and no new stable code is accepted.
2024-05-23 15:52:10 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
06bc4fc671
Remove LintDiagnostic::msg
* instead simply set the primary message inside the lint decorator functions
* it used to be this way before [#]101986 which introduced `msg` to prevent
  good path delayed bugs (which no longer exist) from firing under certain
  circumstances when lints were suppressed / silenced
* this is no longer necessary for various reasons I presume
* it shaves off complexity and makes further changes easier to implement
2024-05-23 04:08:35 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
44c7a2dbff
Rollup merge of #125259 - compiler-errors:fn-mut-as-a-treat, r=oli-obk
An async closure may implement `FnMut`/`Fn` if it has no self-borrows

There's no reason that async closures may not implement `FnMut` or `Fn` if they don't actually borrow anything with the closure's env lifetime. Specifically, #123660 made it so that we don't always need to borrow captures from the closure's env.

See the doc comment on `should_reborrow_from_env_of_parent_coroutine_closure`:

c00957a3e2/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/upvar.rs (L1777-L1823)

If there are no such borrows, then we are free to implement `FnMut` and `Fn` as permitted by our closure's inferred `ClosureKind`.

As far as I can tell, this change makes `async || {}` work in precisely the set of places they used to work before #120361.
Fixes #125247.

r? oli-obk
2024-05-22 19:04:45 +02:00
bors
bec10295d4 Auto merge of #125335 - compiler-errors:binder, r=lcnr
Uplift `Binder`, `OutlivesPredicate` into `rustc_type_ir`

Almost done with all the types 🙏

r? lcnr
2024-05-22 08:33:34 +00:00
bors
b54dd08a84 Auto merge of #125326 - weiznich:move/do_not_recommend_to_diganostic_namespace, r=compiler-errors
Move `#[do_not_recommend]` to the `#[diagnostic]` namespace

This commit moves the `#[do_not_recommend]` attribute to the `#[diagnostic]` namespace. It still requires
`#![feature(do_not_recommend)]` to work.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-05-22 04:14:08 +00:00
Michael Goulet
1c8230ea3c Uplift OutlivesPredicate, remove a bunch of unnecessary associated types from Interner 2024-05-21 17:00:45 -04:00
Michael Goulet
28ce588321 Uplift binder 2024-05-21 17:00:45 -04:00
Michael Goulet
994b58fee7 Okay actually check only alias TYPES 2024-05-21 15:56:10 -04:00
Georg Semmler
2cff3e90bc
Move #[do_not_recommend] to the #[diagnostic] namespace
This commit moves the `#[do_not_recommend]` attribute to the
`#[diagnostic]` namespace. It still requires
`#![feature(do_not_recommend)]` to work.
2024-05-21 13:14:41 +02:00
bors
9cb6bb8599 Auto merge of #125284 - compiler-errors:uplift-misc, r=lcnr
Uplift `RegionVid`, `TermKind` to `rustc_type_ir`, and `EagerResolver` to `rustc_next_trait_solver`

- Uplift `RegionVid`. This was complicated due to the fact that we implement `polonius_engine::Atom` for `RegionVid` -- but I just separated that into `PoloniusRegionVid`, and added `From`/`Into` impls so it can be defined in `rustc_borrowck` separately. Coherence 😵
- Change `InferCtxtLike` to expose `opportunistically_resolve_{ty,ct,lt,int,float}_var` so that we can uplift `EagerResolver` for use in the canonicalization methods.
- Uplift `TermKind` much like `GenericArgKind`

All of this is miscellaneous dependencies for making more `EvalCtxt` methods generic.
2024-05-21 02:51:38 +00:00
lcnr
f99c9ffd88 track cycle participants per entry 2024-05-20 20:57:14 +00:00
lcnr
ee0f20bb97 move global cache lookup into fn 2024-05-20 20:40:02 +00:00
lcnr
82df0c3540 move fixpoint step into subfunction 2024-05-20 20:40:02 +00:00
Michael Goulet
b0f1afd1fc Rework var resolution in InferCtxtLike, uplift EagerResolver 2024-05-20 13:57:58 -04:00
Michael Goulet
9dc073aa4b Make EvalCtxt generic over interner 2024-05-19 19:38:28 -04:00
Michael Goulet
91685c0ef4 Make search graph generic over interner 2024-05-19 19:38:28 -04:00
bors
1d1283ed09 Auto merge of #125006 - spastorino:generics-is-empty, r=compiler-errors
Add and use generics.is_empty() and generics.is_own_empty, rather than using generics' attributes

r? `@compiler-errors`

Related to #123929
2024-05-19 19:22:57 +00:00
Santiago Pastorino
4501ae89f1
Add and use generics.is_empty() and generics.is_own_empty, rather than using generics' attributes 2024-05-19 11:10:56 -03:00
Georg Semmler
9b45cfdbdd
Actually use the #[do_not_recommend] attribute if present
This change tweaks the error message generation to actually use the
`#[do_not_recommend]` attribute if present by just skipping the marked
trait impl in favour of the parent impl. It also adds a compile test for
this behaviour. Without this change the test would output the following
error:

```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `&str: Expression` is not satisfied
  --> /home/weiznich/Documents/rust/rust/tests/ui/diagnostic_namespace/do_not_recommend.rs:53:15
   |
LL |     SelectInt.check("bar");
   |               ^^^^^ the trait `Expression` is not implemented for `&str`, which is required by `&str: AsExpression<Integer>`
   |
   = help: the following other types implement trait `Expression`:
             Bound<T>
             SelectInt
note: required for `&str` to implement `AsExpression<Integer>`
  --> /home/weiznich/Documents/rust/rust/tests/ui/diagnostic_namespace/do_not_recommend.rs:26:13
   |
LL | impl<T, ST> AsExpression<ST> for T
   |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^     ^
LL | where
LL |     T: Expression<SqlType = ST>,
   |        ------------------------ unsatisfied trait bound introduced here
```

Note how that mentions `&str: Expression` before and now mentions `&str:
AsExpression<Integer>` instead which is much more helpful for users.

Open points for further changes before stabilization:

* We likely want to move the attribute to the `#[diagnostic]` namespace
to relax the guarantees given?
* How does it interact with the new trait solver?
2024-05-19 08:29:27 +02:00
bors
7690f29bdb Auto merge of #125230 - compiler-errors:uplift-query-stuff, r=lcnr
Uplift more query stuff

- Uplift various query input/response internals
- Uplift the `ProofTree` structures and make the `ProofTreeBuilder` stuff (mostly) generic over `Interner`
- Stop using `TyCtxt::def_kind` in favor of `AliasTerm::kind`

r? lcnr
2024-05-19 00:03:48 +00:00
bors
b1ec1bd65f Auto merge of #125257 - jieyouxu:rollup-11evnm9, r=jieyouxu
Rollup of 3 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #125214 (Only make GAT ambiguous in `match_projection_projections` considering shallow resolvability)
 - #125236 (Add tests for `-Zunpretty=expanded` ported from stringify's tests)
 - #125251 (Clarify how String::leak and into_boxed_str differ )

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-05-18 21:45:06 +00:00
Michael Goulet
8e1dba4617 Move NormalizesTo back down
I tried to rebase this down into the first commit but it is WAY too
annoying x
2024-05-18 16:21:43 -04:00
Michael Goulet
2ed1bdb479 Stop using def_kind() in solver 2024-05-18 16:21:43 -04:00
Michael Goulet
6ee22e184f Make proof tree building generic 2024-05-18 16:21:43 -04:00
Michael Goulet
0f528a4c08 Uplift inspect into rustc_type_ir 2024-05-18 16:21:43 -04:00
Michael Goulet
05e0f8740a Uplift GenericArgKind, CanonicalVarValues, QueryInput
and make NestedGoals generic
2024-05-18 16:21:43 -04:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
f08746a95d
Rollup merge of #125214 - compiler-errors:gat-guide, r=lcnr
Only make GAT ambiguous in `match_projection_projections` considering shallow resolvability

In #123537, I tweaked the hack from #93892 to use `resolve_vars_if_possible` instead of `shallow_resolve`. This considers more inference guidance ambiguous. This resulted in crater regressions in #125196.

I've effectively reverted the change to the old behavior. That being said, I don't *like* this behavior, but I'd rather keep it for now since #123537 was not meant to make any behavioral changes. See the attached example.

This also affects the new solver, for the record, which doesn't have any rules about not guiding inference from param-env candidates which may constrain GAT args as a side-effect.

r? `@lcnr` or `@jackh726`
2024-05-18 20:38:04 +01:00
bors
eb1a5c9bb3 Auto merge of #125077 - spastorino:add-new-fnsafety-enum2, r=jackh726
Rename Unsafe to Safety

Alternative to #124455, which is to just have one Safety enum to use everywhere, this opens the posibility of adding `ast::Safety::Safe` that's useful for unsafe extern blocks.

This leaves us today with:

```rust
enum ast::Safety {
    Unsafe(Span),
    Default,
    // Safe (going to be added for unsafe extern blocks)
}

enum hir::Safety {
    Unsafe,
    Safe,
}
```

We would convert from `ast::Safety::Default` into the right Safety level according the context.
2024-05-18 19:35:24 +00:00
Michael Goulet
2e97dae8d4 An async closure may implement FnMut/Fn if it has no self-borrows 2024-05-18 12:47:59 -04:00
Santiago Pastorino
6b46a919e1
Rename Unsafe to Safety 2024-05-17 18:33:37 -03:00
Michael Goulet
2025e44ef8 to_opt_poly_X_pred -> as_X_clause 2024-05-17 12:58:33 -04:00
Michael Goulet
fa829feb2f Only make GAT ambiguous in match_projection_projections considering shallow resolvability 2024-05-17 12:51:21 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
3695449a89
Rollup merge of #125191 - compiler-errors:wf, r=lcnr
Report better WF obligation leaf obligations in new solver

r? lcnr
2024-05-17 07:20:59 +02:00
Michael Goulet
119c7bbef7 Report better WF obligation leaf obligations in new solver 2024-05-16 21:08:42 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7b3d6dad20 Remove trivial Binder::dummy calls 2024-05-16 14:24:23 -04:00
Michael Goulet
138881b315 Uplift Goal to rustc_type_ir 2024-05-16 14:24:22 -04:00
Michael Goulet
2684655602 Make impls UpcastFrom, implement Upcast for UpcastFrom 2024-05-16 14:23:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
412dc28d6a Make P parameter explicit 2024-05-16 14:23:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
11ec3eca74 Rename ToPredicate for Upcast 2024-05-16 14:23:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d3e510eb9d Don't ICE because recomputing overflow goals during find_best_leaf_obligation causes inference side-effects 2024-05-16 10:00:11 -04:00
Michael Goulet
dbd2ca6478 Use a proper probe for shadowing impl 2024-05-13 23:58:33 -04:00
bors
34582118af Auto merge of #125076 - compiler-errors:alias-term, r=lcnr
Split out `ty::AliasTerm` from `ty::AliasTy`

Splitting out `AliasTerm` (for use in project and normalizes goals) and `AliasTy` (for use in `ty::Alias`)

r? lcnr
2024-05-13 22:20:43 +00:00
Michael Goulet
fa84018c2e Apply nits 2024-05-13 16:55:58 -04:00
Michael Goulet
3bcdf3058e split out AliasTy -> AliasTerm 2024-05-13 11:59:42 -04:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4bf20b2b55 Remove extern crate rustc_middle from rustc_trait_selection. 2024-05-13 08:20:18 +10:00
Guillaume Gomez
d3625fc8df
Rollup merge of #125036 - lcnr:new-solver-trace, r=compiler-errors
solve: all "non-structural" logging to trace

This enables us to start with `RUSTC_LOG=rustc_trait_selection::solve=debug` to figure out *where* something went wrong, to then separately use `trace` to get to the details.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2024-05-12 13:41:58 +02:00
lcnr
c66328f9ad structurally important functions to debug 2024-05-12 03:46:24 +00:00
lcnr
41ebd16266 solve: replace all debug with trace 2024-05-12 03:29:50 +00:00
Michael Goulet
905f565824 Apply nits, uplift ExistentialPredicate too 2024-05-11 18:20:00 -04:00
Michael Goulet
204cde4564 Uplift TraitPredicate 2024-05-11 18:20:00 -04:00
Michael Goulet
e444017b49 Consolidate obligation cause codes for where clauses 2024-05-11 02:10:45 -04:00
bors
19dacee0d8 Auto merge of #124982 - compiler-errors:uplift-trait-ref, r=lcnr
Uplift `TraitRef` into `rustc_type_ir`

Emotional rollercoaster

r? lcnr
2024-05-10 22:24:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
1e5ec0a12c Lift TraitRef into rustc_type_ir 2024-05-10 15:44:03 -04:00
Michael Goulet
5e606c0bde Lift Lift 2024-05-10 15:44:03 -04:00
Michael Goulet
6f77bfe8b6 Name tweaks 2024-05-10 10:42:57 -04:00
Michael Goulet
9108294a6c More rename fallout 2024-05-10 10:42:57 -04:00
Michael Goulet
534e267d48 Rename some ObligationCauseCode variants 2024-05-10 10:42:57 -04:00
Michael Goulet
4bde8a8f4b Remove glob imports for ObligationCauseCode 2024-05-10 10:42:56 -04:00
Michael Goulet
04c049498d rename some variants in FulfillmentErrorCode 2024-05-10 10:42:14 -04:00
bors
f7b1501ce7 Auto merge of #124961 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-1jj65p6, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #124551 (Add benchmarks for `impl Debug for str`)
 - #124915 (`rustc_target` cleanups)
 - #124918 (Eliminate some `FIXME(lcnr)` comments)
 - #124927 (opt-dist: use xz2 instead of xz crate)
 - #124936 (analyse visitor: build proof tree in probe)
 - #124943 (always use `GenericArgsRef`)
 - #124955 (Use fewer origins when creating type variables.)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-05-10 06:50:46 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
0ee258009c
Rollup merge of #124955 - nnethercote:next_ty_var, r=lcnr
Use fewer origins when creating type variables.

To reduce lots of repetitive boilerplate code. Details in the individual commit messages.

r? ``@lcnr``
2024-05-10 07:30:22 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
30bd6cb726
Rollup merge of #124943 - lcnr:generic-args-ref, r=compiler-errors
always use `GenericArgsRef`

r? ```@compiler-errors```
2024-05-10 07:30:21 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
43ddd1d963
Rollup merge of #124936 - lcnr:cool-beans, r=compiler-errors
analyse visitor: build proof tree in probe

see inline comments

fixes #124791
fixes #124702

r? ```@compiler-errors```
2024-05-10 07:30:21 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
7e4f6082ce
Rollup merge of #124918 - nnethercote:FIXME-lcnr, r=lcnr
Eliminate some `FIXME(lcnr)` comments

In some cases this involved changing code. In some cases the comment was able to removed or replaced.

r? ``@lcnr``
2024-05-10 07:30:20 +02:00
Michael Goulet
1c19b6ad60 Rename Generics::params to Generics::own_params 2024-05-09 20:58:46 -04:00
Nicholas Nethercote
df6f7133ee De-tuple two vtable_trait_first_method_offset args.
Thus eliminating a `FIXME` comment.
2024-05-10 09:55:09 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
24445d3b6a Remove out-of-date comment.
The use of `Binder` was removed in the recent #123900, but the comment
wasn't removed at the same time.
2024-05-10 09:55:09 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fe843feaab Use fewer origins when creating type variables.
`InferCtxt::next_{ty,const}_var*` all take an origin, but the
`param_def_id` is almost always `None`. This commit changes them to just
take a `Span` and build the origin within the method, and adds new
methods for the rare cases where `param_def_id` might not be `None`.
This avoids a lot of tedious origin building.

Specifically:
- next_ty_var{,_id_in_universe,_in_universe}: now take `Span` instead of
  `TypeVariableOrigin`
- next_ty_var_with_origin: added

- next_const_var{,_in_universe}: takes Span instead of ConstVariableOrigin
- next_const_var_with_origin: added

- next_region_var, next_region_var_in_universe: these are unchanged,
  still take RegionVariableOrigin

The API inconsistency (ty/const vs region) seems worth it for the
large conciseness improvements.
2024-05-10 09:47:46 +10:00
lcnr
8f9062530b always use GenericArgsRef 2024-05-09 19:52:02 +00:00
lcnr
83e6da0be5 analyse visitor: build proof tree in probe 2024-05-09 17:29:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
7dbdbaaa8e Fix ICEs in diagnostic::on_unimplemented 2024-05-07 23:13:44 -04:00
bors
a60f077c38 Auto merge of #124683 - estebank:issue-124651, r=compiler-errors
Do not ICE on foreign malformed `diagnostic::on_unimplemented`

Fix #124651.
2024-05-08 00:54:38 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
067f6327a5
Rollup merge of #124846 - compiler-errors:const-eval, r=lcnr
Don't ICE when we cannot eval a const to a valtree in the new solver

Use `const_eval_resolve` instead of `try_const_eval_resolve` because naming aside, the former doesn't ICE when a value can't be evaluated to a valtree.

r? lcnr
2024-05-07 18:12:56 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
4a5bf7b06e
Rollup merge of #124827 - lcnr:generalize-incomplete, r=compiler-errors
generalize hr alias: avoid unconstrainable infer vars

fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/108

see inline comments for more details

r? `@compiler-errors` cc `@BoxyUwU`
2024-05-07 18:12:55 +02:00
lcnr
690d5aa417 generalize hr alias: avoid unconstrainable infer vars 2024-05-07 15:58:06 +00:00
Michael Goulet
b58f5a7800 Don't ICE when we cannot eval a const to a valtree in the new solver 2024-05-07 11:14:25 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
284b5530b8
Rollup merge of #124809 - lcnr:prepopulate-opaques, r=compiler-errors
borrowck: prepopulate opaque storage more eagerly

otherwise we ICE due to ambiguity when normalizing while computing implied bounds.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2024-05-06 21:46:06 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
f76c8f7f77
Rollup merge of #124759 - compiler-errors:impl-args, r=lcnr
Record impl args in the proof tree in new solver

Rather than rematching them during select.

Also use `ImplSource::Param` instead of `ImplSource::Builtin` for alias-bound candidates, so we don't ICE in `Instance::resolve`.

r? lcnr
2024-05-06 21:46:05 +02:00
Michael Goulet
e34723997a Use correct ImplSource for alias bounds 2024-05-06 14:38:35 -04:00
Michael Goulet
207b4b8e88 Record impl args in the InsepctCandiate rather than rematching during select 2024-05-06 14:17:22 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
43de8225dc
Rollup merge of #124771 - compiler-errors:cand-has-failing-wc, r=lcnr
Don't consider candidates with no failing where clauses when refining obligation causes in new solver

Improves error messages when we have param-env candidates that don't deeply unify (i.e. after alias-bounds).

r? lcnr
2024-05-06 18:50:35 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
2d557ba9f4
Rollup merge of #124724 - compiler-errors:prefer-lower, r=lcnr
Prefer lower vtable candidates in select in new solver

Also, adjust the select visitor to only winnow when the *parent* goal is `Certainty::Yes`. This means that we won't winnow in cases when we have any ambiguous inference guidance from two candidates.

r? lcnr
2024-05-06 18:50:35 +02:00
lcnr
5714c1f364 switch new solver to directly inject opaque types 2024-05-06 16:19:32 +00:00
Michael Goulet
4e3350d43b Don't consider candidates with no failing where clauses 2024-05-06 11:32:50 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a4ee20eb13 Prefer lower vtable candidates in select in new solver 2024-05-06 10:48:39 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
07dc4aa837
Rollup merge of #124718 - compiler-errors:record-impl-args, r=lcnr
Record impl args in the proof tree

Weren't recording these since they went through a different infcx method

r? lcnr
2024-05-04 22:27:33 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
79071ee3a9
Rollup merge of #124717 - compiler-errors:do-not-recomment-next-solver, r=lcnr
Implement `do_not_recommend` in the new solver

Put the test into `diagnostic_namespace` test folder even though it's not in the diagnostic namespace, because it should be soon.

r? lcnr
cc `@weiznich`
2024-05-04 22:27:32 +02:00
Michael Goulet
50338aa59a Record impl args in the proof tree 2024-05-04 12:57:01 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b33599485b Implement do_not_recommend in the new solver 2024-05-04 12:51:10 -04:00
Michael Goulet
6714216eaa Only consider ambiguous goals when finding best obligation for ambiguities 2024-05-04 12:05:36 -04:00
Michael Goulet
e3bf0a13cf
Rollup merge of #124418 - compiler-errors:better-cause, r=lcnr
Use a proof tree visitor to refine the `Obligation` for error reporting in new solver

With the magic of `ProofTreeVisitor`, we can close the gap that we have on `ObligationCause`s being not as descriptive in the new trait solver.

r? lcnr

Needs some work and obviously documentation.
2024-05-03 23:34:21 -04:00
Esteban Küber
4847f2249f Do not ICE on foreign malformed diagnostic::on_unimplemented
Fix #124651.
2024-05-03 21:53:19 +00:00
Michael Goulet
92861517aa Take ocx by move for pending obligations 2024-05-02 22:03:01 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d9eb5232b6 Use ObligationCtxt in favor of TraitEngine in many places 2024-05-02 22:03:01 -04:00
Michael Goulet
34e91ece90 Higher ranked goal source, do overflow handling less badly 2024-05-02 21:56:14 -04:00
Michael Goulet
3e03b1b190 Use a proof tree visitor to refine the Obligation for error reporting 2024-05-02 21:56:14 -04:00
Michael Goulet
382d0f73ad Record more kinds of things as impl where bounds 2024-05-02 21:56:14 -04:00
Michael Goulet
6e3808e274 Store goal source in InspectGoal 2024-05-02 21:56:14 -04:00
Michael Goulet
837bde11a2 Record certainty before evaluating nesteds, so we make candidates 2024-05-02 21:56:14 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
d6940fb43d
Rollup merge of #124624 - WaffleLapkin:old_unit, r=fmease
Use `tcx.types.unit` instead of `Ty::new_unit(tcx)`

I don't think there is any need for the function, given that we can just access the `.types`, similarly to all other primitives?
2024-05-02 19:42:50 +02:00
Waffle Lapkin
698d7a031e Inline & delete Ty::new_unit, since it's just a field access 2024-05-02 17:49:23 +02:00
lcnr
c4e882fd99 shallow resolve in orphan check 2024-05-02 15:44:05 +00:00
bors
f5efc3c286 Auto merge of #124521 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-bump, r=albertlarsan68
Bump bootstrap compiler to latest beta

https://forge.rust-lang.org/release/process.html#master-bootstrap-update-t-2-day-tuesday

This also cherry-picks d716d72586548963f32e5c8d57c41db0065fa6e0 from the beta branching, to continue to workaround #122758.

r? bootstrap
2024-05-02 09:21:43 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
a64f941611 Step bootstrap cfgs 2024-05-01 22:19:11 -04:00
bors
f92d49b7fe Auto merge of #124529 - compiler-errors:select, r=lcnr
Rewrite select (in the new solver) to use a `ProofTreeVisitor`

We can use a proof tree visitor rather than collecting and recomputing all the nested goals ourselves.

Based on #124415
2024-05-02 00:36:38 +00:00
Michael Goulet
9834c8307f Rewrite select to use a ProofTreeVisitor 2024-05-01 14:19:34 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
0dbe07f201
Rollup merge of #124566 - lcnr:normalizes-to-proof-tree, r=compiler-errors
fix `NormalizesTo` proof tree issue

fixes #124422
cc #121848

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2024-05-01 20:05:26 +02:00
lcnr
f323f9dedb review 2024-05-01 15:03:15 +00:00
bors
f5355b93ba Auto merge of #124356 - fmease:fewer-magic-numbers-in-names, r=lcnr
Cleanup: Replace item names referencing GitHub issues or error codes with something more meaningful

**lcnr** in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117164#pullrequestreview-1969935387:

> […] while I know that there's precendent to name things `Issue69420`, I really dislike this as it requires looking up the issue to figure out the purpose of such a variant. Actually referring to the underlying issue, e.g. `AliasMayNormToUncovered` or whatever and then linking to the issue in a doc comment feels a lot more desirable to me. We should ideally rename all the functions and enums which currently use issue numbers.

I've grepped through `compiler/` like crazy and think that I've found all instances of this pattern.
However, I haven't renamed `compute_2229_migrations_*`. Should I?

The first commit introduces an abhorrent and super long name for an item because naming is hard but also scary looking / unwelcoming names are good for things related to temporary-ish backcompat hacks. I'll let you discover it by yourself.

Contains a bit of drive-by cleanup and a diag migration bc that was the simplest option.

r? lcnr or compiler
2024-05-01 00:04:36 +00:00
bors
f705de5962 Auto merge of #117164 - fmease:orphan-norm, r=lcnr
Lazily normalize inside trait ref during orphan check & consider ty params in rigid alias types to be uncovered

Fixes #99554, fixes rust-lang/types-team#104.
Fixes #114061.

Supersedes #100555.

Tracking issue for the future compatibility lint: #124559.

r? lcnr
2024-04-30 20:51:46 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
9e739b723b
Give items related to issue 33140 a more meaningful name 2024-04-30 22:27:19 +02:00
lcnr
da969d41a3 fix NormalizesTo proof tree issue 2024-04-30 20:03:33 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
951e902562
Normalize trait ref before orphan check & consider ty params in alias types to be uncovered 2024-04-30 21:54:54 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
784316eadc
Rollup merge of #124511 - nnethercote:rm-extern-crates, r=fee1-dead
Remove many `#[macro_use] extern crate foo` items

This requires the addition of more `use` items, which often make the code more verbose. But they also make the code easier to read, because `#[macro_use]` obscures where macros are defined.

r? `@fee1-dead`
2024-04-30 15:04:08 +02:00
Michael Goulet
7597d1504e Split out instantiate_nested_goals 2024-04-29 17:06:34 -04:00
Michael Goulet
13825dcc15 Take proof trees by value in inspect goal 2024-04-29 17:06:34 -04:00
Michael Goulet
2eb7c8196b Only register candidate if it is associated w a shallow certainty 2024-04-29 10:25:51 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7cf1c547c2 Actually use probes when needed and stop relying on existing outer probes 2024-04-29 10:25:51 -04:00
Michael Goulet
5776aec662 Make names more accurate 2024-04-29 10:25:05 -04:00
Nicholas Nethercote
52e9a23bdc Remove extern crate smallvec from a couple of crates. 2024-04-29 18:47:54 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7418aa1a07 Remove extern crate rustc_data_structures from numerous crates. 2024-04-29 18:45:14 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4814fd0a4b Remove extern crate rustc_macros from numerous crates. 2024-04-29 10:21:54 +10:00
Michael Goulet
17728a9bb2 Record certainty of evaluate_added_goals_and_make_canonical_response call in candidate 2024-04-27 17:46:29 -04:00
bors
1b3a32958b Auto merge of #122385 - lcnr:analyze-obligations-for-infer, r=compiler-errors
`obligations_for_self_ty`: use `ProofTreeVisitor` for nested goals

As always, dealing with proof trees continues to be a hacked together mess. After this PR and #124380 the only remaining blocker for core is https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/90. There is also a `ProofTreeVisitor` issue causing an ICE when compiling `alloc` which I will handle in a separate PR. This issue likely affects coherence diagnostics more generally.

The core idea is to extend the proof tree visitor to support visiting nested candidates without using a `probe`. We then simply recurse into nested candidates if they are the only potentially applicable candidate for a given goal and check whether the self type matches the expected one.

For that to work, we need to improve `CanonicalState` to also handle unconstrained inference variables created inside of the trait solver. This is done by extending the `var_values` of `CanoncalState` with each fresh inference variables. Furthermore, we also store the state of all inference variables at the end of each probe. When recursing into `InspectCandidates` we then unify the values of all these states.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-04-26 15:37:05 +00:00
Michael Goulet
88eae31261
Rollup merge of #124381 - compiler-errors:derived-for-wf, r=lcnr
Renamed `DerivedObligation` to `WellFormedDeriveObligation`

It's used when computing `WellFormed` obligations, so let's give it a less ambiguous name.
2024-04-25 20:07:41 -04:00
Michael Goulet
4494140244
Rollup merge of #124379 - compiler-errors:remove-new-solver-lookup-behavior, r=lcnr
Remove special-casing for `SimplifiedType` for next solver

It's unnecessary due to the way that we fully normalize the self type before assembly begins.

r? lcnr
2024-04-25 20:07:41 -04:00
Michael Goulet
132f8ce3dc Renamed DerivedObligation to WellFormedDeriveObligation 2024-04-25 16:55:15 -04:00
lcnr
b64f687cb0 use EagerResolver 2024-04-25 20:19:01 +00:00
lcnr
03878c682a hir typeck: look into nested goals
uses a `ProofTreeVisitor` to look into nested
goals when looking at the pending obligations
during hir typeck. Used by closure signature
inference, coercion, and for async functions.
2024-04-25 19:44:00 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f2518cd798 Remove special-casing for SimplifiedType for next solver 2024-04-25 14:27:39 -04:00
Esteban Küber
ad9a5a5f9f Suggest cloning captured binding in move closure
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `bar`, a captured variable in an `FnMut` closure
  --> $DIR/borrowck-move-by-capture.rs:9:29
   |
LL |     let bar: Box<_> = Box::new(3);
   |         --- captured outer variable
LL |     let _g = to_fn_mut(|| {
   |                        -- captured by this `FnMut` closure
LL |         let _h = to_fn_once(move || -> isize { *bar });
   |                             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^   ----
   |                             |                  |
   |                             |                  variable moved due to use in closure
   |                             |                  move occurs because `bar` has type `Box<isize>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
   |                             `bar` is moved here
   |
help: clone the value before moving it into the closure
   |
LL ~         let value = bar.clone();
LL ~         let _h = to_fn_once(move || -> isize { value });
   |
```
2024-04-24 22:21:16 +00:00
Esteban Küber
4aba2c55e6 Modify find_expr from Span to better account for closures
Start pointing to where bindings were declared when they are captured in closures:

```
error[E0597]: `x` does not live long enough
  --> $DIR/suggest-return-closure.rs:23:9
   |
LL |     let x = String::new();
   |         - binding `x` declared here
...
LL |     |c| {
   |     --- value captured here
LL |         x.push(c);
   |         ^ borrowed value does not live long enough
...
LL | }
   | -- borrow later used here
   | |
   | `x` dropped here while still borrowed
```

Suggest cloning in more cases involving closures:

```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `foo` in pattern guard
  --> $DIR/issue-27282-move-ref-mut-into-guard.rs:11:19
   |
LL |             if { (|| { let mut bar = foo; bar.take() })(); false } => {},
   |                   ^^                 --- move occurs because `foo` has type `&mut Option<&i32>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
   |                   |
   |                   `foo` is moved here
   |
   = note: variables bound in patterns cannot be moved from until after the end of the pattern guard
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
   |
LL |             if { (|| { let mut bar = foo.clone(); bar.take() })(); false } => {},
   |                                         ++++++++
```
2024-04-24 22:21:13 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
6e423e1651
Rollup merge of #124218 - Xiretza:subsubdiagnostics, r=davidtwco
Allow nesting subdiagnostics in #[derive(Subdiagnostic)]
2024-04-23 17:25:17 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
80f2b91b20
Rollup merge of #120929 - long-long-float:wrap-dyn-in-suggestion, r=fmease
Wrap dyn type with parentheses in suggestion

Close #120223

Fix wrong suggestion that is grammatically incorrect.
Specifically, I added parentheses to dyn types that need lifetime bound.

```
help: consider adding an explicit lifetime bound
  |
4 |     executor: impl FnOnce(T) -> (dyn Future<Output = ()>) + 'static,
  |                                 +                       +++++++++++
```
2024-04-23 17:25:14 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
326cd5cb68
Rollup merge of #124168 - oli-obk:define_opaque_types12, r=lcnr
Use `DefiningOpaqueTypes::Yes` in rustdoc, where the `InferCtxt` is guaranteed to have no opaque types it can define

r? `@lcnr`

I manually checked there it's always `tcx.infer_ctxt().build()`
2024-04-23 06:24:56 +02:00
bors
aca749eefc Auto merge of #121801 - zetanumbers:async_drop_glue, r=oli-obk
Add simple async drop glue generation

This is a prototype of the async drop glue generation for some simple types. Async drop glue is intended to behave very similar to the regular drop glue except for being asynchronous. Currently it does not execute synchronous drops but only calls user implementations of `AsyncDrop::async_drop` associative function and awaits the returned future. It is not complete as it only recurses into arrays, slices, tuples, and structs and does not have same sensible restrictions as the old `Drop` trait implementation like having the same bounds as the type definition, while code assumes their existence (requires a future work).

This current design uses a workaround as it does not create any custom async destructor state machine types for ADTs, but instead uses types defined in the std library called future combinators (deferred_async_drop, chain, ready_unit).

Also I recommend reading my [explainer](https://zetanumbers.github.io/book/async-drop-design.html).

This is a part of the [MCP: Low level components for async drop](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/727) work.

Feature completeness:

 - [x] `AsyncDrop` trait
 - [ ] `async_drop_in_place_raw`/async drop glue generation support for
   - [x] Trivially destructible types (integers, bools, floats, string slices, pointers, references, etc.)
   - [x] Arrays and slices (array pointer is unsized into slice pointer)
   - [x] ADTs (enums, structs, unions)
   - [x] tuple-like types (tuples, closures)
   - [ ] Dynamic types (`dyn Trait`, see explainer's [proposed design](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#async-drop-glue-for-dyn-trait))
   - [ ] coroutines (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123948)
 - [x] Async drop glue includes sync drop glue code
 - [x] Cleanup branch generation for `async_drop_in_place_raw`
 - [ ] Union rejects non-trivially async destructible fields
 - [ ] `AsyncDrop` implementation requires same bounds as type definition
 - [ ] Skip trivially destructible fields (optimization)
 - [ ] New [`TyKind::AdtAsyncDestructor`](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#adt-async-destructor-types) and get rid of combinators
 - [ ] [Synchronously undroppable types](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#exclusively-async-drop)
 - [ ] Automatic async drop at the end of the scope in async context
2024-04-23 02:10:23 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
e984447405
Rollup merge of #124183 - compiler-errors:unnecessary-by-ref, r=oli-obk
Stop taking `ParamTy`/`ParamConst`/`EarlyParamRegion`/`AliasTy` by ref

It's unnecessary and is annoying when we have it by value.
2024-04-22 20:25:59 +02:00
long-long-float
31e581ec12 Wrap dyn type with parentheses in suggestion 2024-04-23 00:15:10 +09:00
Oli Scherer
6bff7f45f1 Use DefiningOpaqueTypes::Yes, as the InferCtxt we use has no opaque types it may define 2024-04-22 13:11:29 +00:00
Daria Sukhonina
a9c7465997 Fix copy-paste typo in the comment within consider_builtin_async_destruct_candidate 2024-04-22 15:42:07 +03:00
Daria Sukhonina
0881e3e531 Exhaustivelly match TyKind in consider_builtin_async_destruct_candidate 2024-04-22 15:41:08 +03:00
Xiretza
5646b65cf5 Pass translation closure to add_to_diag_with() as reference 2024-04-21 07:45:03 +00:00
Lukas Markeffsky
31a05a227a merge two impl blocks 2024-04-20 18:24:54 +02:00
Lukas Markeffsky
f9ba863c4d remove InferCtxt::clear_caches 2024-04-20 16:43:00 +02:00
Lukas Markeffsky
88b10c1162 include ParamEnv in projection cache key 2024-04-20 16:42:18 +02:00
Michael Goulet
86756c1804 Stop taking ParamTy/ParamConst/EarlyParamRegion/AliasTy by ref 2024-04-19 21:09:51 -04:00
Oli Scherer
dadece067e Let inherent associated types constrain opaque types during projection 2024-04-19 16:12:54 +00:00
bors
c25473ff62 Auto merge of #124008 - nnethercote:simpler-static_assert_size, r=Nilstrieb
Simplify `static_assert_size`s.

We want to run them on all 64-bit platforms.

r? `@ghost`
2024-04-18 09:47:45 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0d97669a17 Simplify static_assert_sizes.
We want to run them on all 64-bit platforms.
2024-04-18 15:36:25 +10:00
Daria Sukhonina
80c0b7e90f Use non-exhaustive matches for TyKind
Also no longer export noop async_drop_in_place_raw
2024-04-17 20:49:53 +03:00
Jules Bertholet
2a4624ddd1
Rename BindingAnnotation to BindingMode 2024-04-17 09:34:39 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
45940fe6d8
Rollup merge of #122813 - nnethercote:nicer-quals, r=compiler-errors
Qualifier tweaking

Adding and removing qualifiers in some cases that make things nicer. Details in individual commits.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-04-17 05:44:52 +02:00
bors
7e3ba5b8b7 Auto merge of #124040 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-hrrvsgh, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #123673 (Don't ICE for kind mismatches during error rendering)
 - #123675 (Taint const qualifs if a static is referenced that didn't pass wfcheck)
 - #123975 (Port the 2 `rust-lld` run-make tests to `rmake`)
 - #124000 (Use `/* value */` as a placeholder)
 - #124013 (Box::into_raw: make Miri understand that this is a box-to-raw cast)
 - #124027 (Prefer identity equality over equating types during coercion.)
 - #124036 (Remove `default_hidden_visibility: false` from wasm targets)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-04-17 00:04:40 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
4764dceb0f
Rollup merge of #124000 - compiler-errors:sugg-tweaks, r=wesleywiser
Use `/* value */` as a placeholder

The expression `value` isn't a valid suggestion; let's use `/* value */` as a placeholder (which is also invalid) since it more clearly signals to the user that they need to fill it in with something meaningful. This parallels the suggestions we have in a couple other places, like arguments.

We could also print the type name instead of `/* value */`, especially if it's suggestable, but I don't care strongly about that.
2024-04-17 00:00:23 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
4aaa8f964f
Rollup merge of #123673 - oli-obk:sig_wfcheck_ice, r=jieyouxu,estebank
Don't ICE for kind mismatches during error rendering

fixes #123457

also some test suite cleanups to make backtraces easier to read
2024-04-17 00:00:22 +02:00
bors
3fba278231 Auto merge of #123537 - compiler-errors:shallow, r=lcnr
Simplify shallow resolver to just fold ty/consts

Probably faster than using a whole folder?
2024-04-16 21:59:36 +00:00
zetanumbers
24a24ec6ba Add simple async drop glue generation
Explainer: https://zetanumbers.github.io/book/async-drop-design.html

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121801
2024-04-16 20:45:07 +03:00
Oli Scherer
0a88339a57 Don't ICE for kind mismatches during error rendering 2024-04-16 11:52:12 +00:00
Gurinder Singh
c30e15aded Fail candidate assembly for erroneous types
Trait predicates for types which have errors may still
evaluate to OK leading to downstream ICEs. Now we return
a selection error for such types in candidate assembly and
thereby prevent such issues
2024-04-16 12:42:48 +05:30
Nicholas Nethercote
4b27cc8b7a Avoid lots of hir::HirId{,Map,Set} qualifiers.
Because they're a bit redundant.
2024-04-16 16:29:15 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
27374a0214 Avoid unnecessary rustc_span::DUMMY_SP usage.
In some cases `DUMMY_SP` is already imported. In other cases this commit
adds the necessary import, in files where `DUMMY_SP` is used more than
once.
2024-04-16 15:55:24 +10:00
Michael Goulet
c95761385e Make array suggestions slightly more accurate 2024-04-15 21:45:47 -04:00
Michael Goulet
8a981b6fee Use /* value */ as a placeholder 2024-04-15 21:36:52 -04:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
9cc26b598a
Rollup merge of #123016 - compiler-errors:no-type-var-origin, r=lcnr
Remove `TypeVariableOriginKind` and `ConstVariableOriginKind`

It's annoying to have to import `TypeVariableOriginKind` just to fill it with `MiscVariable` for almost every use. Every other usage other than `TypeParameterDefinition` wasn't even used -- I can see how it may have been useful once for debugging, but I do quite a lot of typeck debugging and I've never really needed it.

So let's just remove it, and keep around the only useful thing which is the `DefId` of the param for `var_for_def`.

This is based on #123006, which removed the special use of `TypeVariableOriginKind::OpaqueInference`, which I'm pretty sure I was the one that added.

r? lcnr or re-roll to types
2024-04-16 01:12:36 +02:00
Michael Goulet
ecef296a03 Simplify shallow resolver to just fold ty/consts 2024-04-15 18:09:16 -04:00
Michael Goulet
eb6f856169 Remove ConstVariableOriginKind 2024-04-15 16:52:12 -04:00
Michael Goulet
34bce07e8e Remove TypeVariableOriginKind 2024-04-15 16:51:50 -04:00
Michael Goulet
20a5fb3b4a
Rollup merge of #123924 - compiler-errors:tuple-sugg, r=estebank
Fix various bugs in `ty_kind_suggestion`

Consolidates two implementations of `ty_kind_suggestion`
Fixes some misuse of the empty param-env
Fixes a problem where we suggested `(42)` instead of `(42,)` for tuple suggestions
Suggest a value when `return;`, making it consistent with `break;`
Fixes #123906
2024-04-15 15:18:06 -04:00
Michael Goulet
314dee528b
Rollup merge of #123900 - compiler-errors:nobound, r=lcnr
Stop using `PolyTraitRef` for closure/coroutine predicates already instantiated w placeholders

r? lcnr
2024-04-15 15:18:05 -04:00
Michael Goulet
9e630d3f21 PolyTraitRefs -> TraitRefs 2024-04-15 12:04:44 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d2ec957680 Stop using PolyTraitRef for closure/coroutine predicates already instantiated w placeholders 2024-04-15 10:32:21 -04:00
Guillaume Gomez
86b791a272
Rollup merge of #123618 - compiler-errors:overflow-ambig, r=spastorino
Discard overflow obligations in `impl_may_apply`

Hacky fix for #123493. Throws away obligations that are overflowing in `impl_may_apply` when we recompute if an impl applies, since those will lead to fatal overflow if processed during fulfillment.

Something about #114811 (I think it's the predicate reordering) caused us to evaluate predicates differently in error reporting leading to fatal overflow, though I believe the underlying overflow is possible to hit since this code was rewritten to use fulfillment.

Fixes #123493
2024-04-14 23:24:33 +02:00
Michael Goulet
325b24d763 Fix 1-tuple value suggestion 2024-04-14 09:42:53 -04:00
Michael Goulet
e4c71f1fd8 Fix value suggestion for array in generic context 2024-04-14 09:42:53 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d6ac50e547 Consolidate two copies of ty_kind_suggestion 2024-04-14 09:42:53 -04:00
Michael Goulet
3253c021cb Add a helper for extending a span to include any trailing whitespace 2024-04-09 14:06:09 -04:00
Guillaume Gomez
e5b2935dc1
Rollup merge of #123662 - compiler-errors:no-upvars-yet, r=oli-obk
Don't rely on upvars being assigned just because coroutine-closure kind is assigned

Previously, code relied on the implicit assumption that if a coroutine-closure's kind variable was constrained, then its upvars were also constrained. This is because we assign all of them at once at the end up upvar analysis.

However, there's another way that a coroutine-closure's kind can be constrained: from a signature hint in closure signature deduction. After #123350, we use these hints, which means the implicit assumption above no longer holds.

This PR adds the necessary checks so that we don't ICE.

r? oli-obk
2024-04-09 13:39:23 +02:00
Michael Goulet
6f96d7d012 Don't rely on upvars being assigned just because coroutine-closure kind is assigned 2024-04-08 22:43:32 -04:00
bors
b234e44944 Auto merge of #122077 - oli-obk:eager_opaque_checks4, r=lcnr
Pass list of defineable opaque types into canonical queries

This eliminates `DefiningAnchor::Bubble` for good and brings the old solver closer to the new one wrt cycles and nested obligations. At that point the difference between `DefiningAnchor::Bind([])` and `DefiningAnchor::Error` was academic. We only used the difference for some sanity checks, which actually had to be worked around in places, so I just removed `DefiningAnchor` entirely and just stored the list of opaques that may be defined.

fixes #108498
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116877

* [x] run crater
  - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122077#issuecomment-2013293931
2024-04-08 23:01:50 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
984767e500
Rollup merge of #123578 - lqd:regression-123275, r=compiler-errors
Restore `pred_known_to_hold_modulo_regions`

As requested by `@lcnr` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123275#issuecomment-2031885563 this PR restores `pred_known_to_hold_modulo_regions` to fix that "unexpected unsized tail" beta regression.

This also adds the reduced repro from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123275#issuecomment-2041222851 as a sub-optimal test is better than no test at all, and it'll also cover #108721. It still ICEs on master, even though https://github.com/phlip9/rustc-warp-ice doesn't on nightly anymore, since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122493.

Fixes #123275.

r? `@compiler-errors` but feel free to close if you'd rather have a better test instead
cc `@wesleywiser` who had signed up to do the revert

Will need a backport if we go with this PR: `@rustbot` label +beta-nominated
2024-04-08 22:06:23 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
0e27c99332
Rollup merge of #123367 - jswrenn:layoutify, r=compiler-errors
Safe Transmute: Compute transmutability from `rustc_target::abi::Layout`

In its first step of computing transmutability, `rustc_transmutability` constructs a byte-level representation of type layout (`Tree`). Previously, this representation was computed for ADTs by inspecting the ADT definition and performing our own layout computations. This process was error-prone, verbose, and limited our ability to analyze many types (particularly default-repr types).

In this PR, we instead construct `Tree`s from `rustc_target::abi::Layout`s. This helps ensure that layout optimizations are reflected our analyses, and increases the kinds of types we can now analyze, including:
- default repr ADTs
- transparent unions
- `UnsafeCell`-containing types

Overall, this PR expands the expressvity of `rustc_transmutability` to be much closer to the transmutability analysis performed by miri. Future PRs will work to close the remaining gaps (e.g., support for `Box`, raw pointers, `NonZero*`, coroutines, etc.).

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-04-08 22:06:21 +02:00
Jack Wrenn
3aa14e3b2e Compute transmutability from rustc_target::abi::Layout
In its first step of computing transmutability, `rustc_transmutability`
constructs a byte-level representation of type layout (`Tree`). Previously, this
representation was computed for ADTs by inspecting the ADT definition and
performing our own layout computations. This process was error-prone, verbose,
and limited our ability to analyze many types (particularly default-repr types).

In this PR, we instead construct `Tree`s from `rustc_target::abi::Layout`s. This
helps ensure that layout optimizations are reflected our analyses, and increases
the kinds of types we can now analyze, including:
- default repr ADTs
- transparent unions
- `UnsafeCell`-containing types

Overall, this PR expands the expressvity of `rustc_transmutability` to be much
closer to the transmutability analysis performed by miri. Future PRs will work
to close the remaining gaps (e.g., support for `Box`, raw pointers, `NonZero*`,
coroutines, etc.).
2024-04-08 15:36:52 +00:00
Oli Scherer
7cfa521931 Avoid fetching the opaque type origin when only "is this in the defining scope" is actually needed 2024-04-08 15:01:21 +00:00
Oli Scherer
2f2350e577 Eliminate DefiningAnchor now that is just a single-variant enum 2024-04-08 15:00:27 +00:00
Oli Scherer
dd72bf922a Scrape extraneous regions from instantiate_nll_query_response_and_region_obligations 2024-04-08 15:00:26 +00:00
Oli Scherer
19bd91d128 Pass list of defineable opaque types into canonical queries 2024-04-08 15:00:26 +00:00
Oli Scherer
84acfe86de Actually create ranged int types in the type system. 2024-04-08 12:02:19 +00:00
Michael Goulet
87a387a722 Discard overflow obligations in impl_may_apply 2024-04-07 23:21:45 -04:00
Rémy Rakic
68b4257ccf Revert "remove pred_known_to_hold_modulo_regions"
This reverts commit 399a258f46.
2024-04-06 23:29:59 +00:00
Santiago Pastorino
60be29bec8
Add a debug asserts call to match_projection_projections to ensure invariant 2024-04-06 14:45:48 -03:00
bors
8d490e33ad Auto merge of #123471 - compiler-errors:match_projection_projections, r=oli-obk
Check def id before calling `match_projection_projections`

When I "inlined" `assemble_candidates_from_predicates` into `for_each_item_bound` in #120584, I forgot to copy over the check that actually made sure the def id of the candidate was equal to the def id of the obligation. This means that we normalize goal a bit too often even if it's not productive to do so.

This PR adds that def id check back.
Fixes #123448
2024-04-06 06:36:42 +00:00
bors
9d79cd5f79 Auto merge of #122747 - Urgau:non-local-defs_perfect_impl, r=lcnr
Implement T-types suggested logic for perfect non-local impl detection

This implement [T-types suggested logic](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121621#issuecomment-1976826895) for perfect non-local impl detection:

> for each impl, instantiate all local types with inference vars and then assemble candidates for that goal, if there are more than 1 (non-private impls), it does not leak

This extension to the current logic is meant to address issues reported in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121621.

This PR also re-enables the lint `non_local_definitions` to warn-by-default.

Implementation was discussed in this [zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/144729-t-types/topic/Implementing.20new.20non-local.20impl.20defs.20logic).

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121621
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121746

r? `@lcnr` *(feel free to re-roll)*
2024-04-05 20:09:57 +00:00
Urgau
617324095b Expose rustc_trait_selection::error_reporting::ambiguity module 2024-04-05 18:39:37 +02:00
Urgau
524f3c9c44 Take the polarity into account in compute_applicable_impls 2024-04-05 18:39:37 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
9cb517aede
Rollup merge of #123496 - lcnr:wf-ping, r=compiler-errors
ping on wf changes, remove fixme

extend core type system pings to `wf.rs`

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-04-05 16:38:52 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
cb6a1c8d45
Rollup merge of #122894 - compiler-errors:downgrade, r=lcnr
Move check for error in impl header outside of reporting

Fixes #121006

r? lcnr

test location kinda sucks, can move it if needed
2024-04-05 16:38:49 +02:00
lcnr
6db7ac6233 ping on wf changes, remove fixme 2024-04-05 15:09:48 +02:00
Jacob Pratt
e01d3e0824
Rollup merge of #123477 - lcnr:forced_ambig-no-ice, r=compiler-errors
do not ICE in `fn forced_ambiguity` if we get an error

see the comment. currently causing an ICE in typenum which we've been unable to minimize.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-04-04 21:16:58 -04:00
Jacob Pratt
58eb6e5803
Rollup merge of #123464 - fmease:rn-has-proj-to-has-aliases, r=compiler-errors
Cleanup: Rename `HAS_PROJECTIONS` to `HAS_ALIASES` etc.

The name of the bitflag `HAS_PROJECTIONS` and of its corresponding method `has_projections` is quite historical dating back to a time when projections were the only kind of alias type.

I think it's time to update it to clear up any potential confusion for newcomers and to reduce unnecessary friction during contributor onboarding.

r? types
2024-04-04 21:16:58 -04:00
Jacob Pratt
fcb0e9d07a
Rollup merge of #123363 - lcnr:normalizes-to-zero-to-inf, r=BoxyUwU
change `NormalizesTo` to fully structurally normalize

notes in https://hackmd.io/wZ016dE4QKGIhrOnHLlThQ

need to also update the dev-guide once this PR lands. in short, the setup is now as follows:

`normalizes-to` internally implements one step normalization, applying that normalization to the `goal.predicate.term` causes the projected term to get recursively normalized. With this `normalizes-to` normalizes until the projected term is rigid, meaning that we normalize as many steps necessary, but at least 1.

To handle rigid aliases, we add another candidate only if the 1 to inf step normalization failed. With this `normalizes-to` is now full structural normalization. We can now change `AliasRelate` to simply emit `normalizes-to` goals for the rhs and lhs.

This avoids the concerns from https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/103 and generally feels cleaner
2024-04-04 21:16:56 -04:00
lcnr
9444ca354a do not ICE in forced ambiguity if we get an error 2024-04-05 00:04:38 +02:00
Michael Goulet
43dae69341 Check def id before calling match_projection_projections 2024-04-04 16:01:13 -04:00
bors
a4b11c8e60 Auto merge of #121394 - oli-obk:define_opaque_types, r=compiler-errors
some smaller DefiningOpaqueTypes::No -> Yes switches

r? `@compiler-errors`

These are some easy cases, so let's get them out of the way first.
I added tests exercising the specialization code paths that I believe weren't tested so far.

follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117348
2024-04-04 17:42:07 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
6f17b7f0ab
Rename HAS_PROJECTIONS to HAS_ALIASES etc. 2024-04-04 19:26:17 +02:00
Oli Scherer
0183d92df0 Allow defining opaque types when checking const equality bounds 2024-04-04 15:43:02 +00:00
Oli Scherer
8e226e092e Add some regression tests for opaque types and const generics 2024-04-04 15:02:27 +00:00
lcnr
92b280ce81 normalizes-to change from '1' to '0 to inf' steps 2024-04-04 12:39:58 +02:00
Oli Scherer
2247aaf276 Use DefineOpaqueTypes::Yes where the new solver is unconditionally used already 2024-04-04 10:16:52 +00:00
Oli Scherer
82ceed2add Specialization can switch to DefineOpaqueTypes::Yes without having an effect.
The reason is that in specialization graph computation we use `DefiningAnchor::Error`, so there's no difference anyway. And in the other use cases, we

* already errored in the specialization_graph computation, or
* already errored in coherence, or
* are comparing opaque types with inference variables already, or
* there are no opaque types involved
2024-04-04 10:01:45 +00:00
Oli Scherer
b54d72264a Use DefineOpaqueTypes::Yes in diagnostics code 2024-04-04 10:01:44 +00:00
bors
4c6c629866 Auto merge of #115538 - lcnr:fn-def-wf, r=compiler-errors
check `FnDef` return type for WF

better version of #106807, fixes #84533 (mostly). It's not perfect given that we still ignore WF requirements involving bound regions but I wasn't able to quickly write an example, so even if theoretically exploitable, it should be far harder to trigger.

This is strictly more restrictive than checking the return type for WF as part of the builtin `FnDef: FnOnce` impl (#106807) and moving to this approach in the future will not break any code.

~~It also agrees with my theoretical view of how this should behave~~

r? types
2024-04-04 08:43:53 +00:00
lcnr
d99c775feb unconstrained NormalizesTo term for opaques 2024-04-04 07:47:22 +02:00
bors
43f4f2a3b1 Auto merge of #119820 - lcnr:leak-check-2, r=jackh726
instantiate higher ranked goals outside of candidate selection

This PR modifies `evaluate` to more eagerly instantiate higher-ranked goals, preventing the `leak_check` during candidate selection from detecting placeholder errors involving that binder.

For a general background regarding higher-ranked region solving and the leak check, see https://hackmd.io/qd9Wp03cQVy06yOLnro2Kg.

> The first is something called the **leak check**. You can think of it as a "quick and dirty" approximation for the region check, which will come later. The leak check detects some kinds of errors early, essentially deciding between "this set of outlives constraints are guaranteed to result in an error eventually" or "this set of outlives constraints may be solvable".

## The ideal future

We would like to end up with the following idealized design to handle universal binders:
```rust
fn enter_forall<'tcx, T, R>(
    forall: Binder<'tcx, T>,
    f: impl FnOnce(T) -> R,
) -> R {
    let new_universe = infcx.increment_universe_index();
    let value = instantiate_binder_with_placeholders_in(new_universe, forall);

    let result = f(value);

    eagerly_handle_higher_ranked_region_constraints_in(new_universe);
    infcx.decrement_universe_index();

    assert!(!result.has_placeholders_in_or_above(new_universe));
    result
}
```

That is, when universally instantiating a binder, anything using the placeholders has to happen inside of a limited scope (the closure `f`). After this closure has completed, all constraints involving placeholders are known.

We then handle any *external constraints* which name these placeholders. We destructure `TypeOutlives` constraints involving placeholders and eagerly handle any region constraints involving these placeholders. We do not return anything mentioning the placeholders created inside of this function to the caller.

Being able to eagerly handle *all* region constraints involving placeholders will be difficult due to complex `TypeOutlives` constraints, involving inference variables or alias types, and higher ranked implied bounds. The exact issues and possible solutions are out of scope of this FCP.

#### How does the leak check fit into this

The `leak_check` is an underapproximation of `eagerly_handle_higher_ranked_region_constraints_in`. It detects some kinds of errors involving placeholders from `new_universe`, but not all of them.

It only looks at region outlives constraints, ignoring `TypeOutlives`, and checks whether one of the following two conditions are met for **placeholders in or above `new_universe`**, in which case it results in an error:
- `'!p1: '!p2` a placeholder `'!p2` outlives a different placeholder `'!p1`
- `'!p1: '?2` an inference variable `'?2` outlives a placeholder `'!p1` *which it cannot name*

It does not handle all higher ranked region constraints, so we still return constraints involving placeholders from `new_universe` which are then (re)checked by `lexical_region_resolve` or MIR borrowck.

As we check higher ranked constraints in the full regionck anyways, the `leak_check` is not soundness critical. It's current only purpose is to move some higher ranked region errors earlier, enabling it to guide type inference and trait solving. Adding additional uses of the `leak_check` in the future would only strengthen inference and is therefore not breaking.

## Where do we use currently use the leak check

The `leak_check` is currently used in two places:

Coherence does not use a proper regionck, only relying on the `leak_check` called [at the end of the implicit negative overlap check](8b94152af6/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/coherence.rs (L235-L238)). During coherence all parameters are instantiated with inference variables, so the only possible region errors are higher-ranked. We currently also sometimes make guesses when destructuring `TypeOutlives` constraints which can theoretically result in incorrect errors. This could result in overlapping impls.

We also use the `leak_check` [at the end of `fn evaluation_probe`](8b94152af6/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L607-L610)). This function is used during candidate assembly for `Trait` goals. Most notably we use [inside of `evaluate_candidate` during winnowing](0e4243538b/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L491-L502)). Conceptionally, it is as if we compute each candidate in a separate `enter_forall`.

## The current use in `fn evaluation_probe` is undesirable

Because we only instantiate a higher-ranked goal once inside of `fn evaluation_probe`, errors involving placeholders from that binder can impact selection. This results in inconsistent behavior ([playground](
*[playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=dac60ebdd517201788899ffa77364831)*)):

```rust
trait Leak<'a> {}
impl Leak<'_>      for Box<u32> {}
impl Leak<'static> for Box<u16> {}

fn impls_leak<T: for<'a> Leak<'a>>() {}

trait IndirectLeak<'a> {}
impl<'a, T: Leak<'a>> IndirectLeak<'a> for T {}
fn impls_indirect_leak<T: for<'a> IndirectLeak<'a>>() {}

fn main() {
    // ok
    //
    // The `Box<u16>` impls fails the leak check,
    // meaning that we apply the `Box<u32>` impl.
    impls_leak::<Box<_>>();

    // error: type annotations needed
    //
    // While the `Box<u16>` impl would fail the leak check
    // we have already instantiated the binder while applying
    // the generic `IndirectLeak` impl, so during candidate
    // selection of `Leak` we do not detect the placeholder error.
    // Evaluation of `Box<_>: Leak<'!a>` is therefore ambiguous,
    // resulting in `for<'a> Box<_>: Leak<'a>` also being ambiguous.
    impls_indirect_leak::<Box<_>>();
}
```

We generally prefer `where`-bounds over implementations during candidate selection, both for [trait goals](11f32b73e0/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L1863-L1887)) and during [normalization](11f32b73e0/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/project.rs (L184-L198)). However, we currently **do not** use the `leak_check` during candidate assembly in normalizing. This can result in inconsistent behavior:
```rust
trait Trait<'a> {
    type Assoc;
}
impl<'a, T> Trait<'a> for T {
    type Assoc = usize;
}

fn trait_bound<T: for<'a> Trait<'a>>() {}
fn projection_bound<T: for<'a> Trait<'a, Assoc = usize>>() {}

// A function with a trivial where-bound which is more
// restrictive than the impl.
fn function<T: Trait<'static, Assoc = usize>>() {
    // ok
    //
    // Proving `for<'a> T: Trait<'a>` using the where-bound results
    // in a leak check failure, so we use the more general impl,
    // causing this to succeed.
    trait_bound::<T>();

    // error
    //
    // Proving the `Projection` goal `for<'a> T: Trait<'a, Assoc = usize>`
    // does not use the leak check when trying the where-bound, causing us
    // to prefer it over the impl, resulting in a placeholder error.
    projection_bound::<T>();

    // error
    //
    // Trying to normalize the type `for<'a> fn(<T as Trait<'a>>::Assoc)`
    // only gets to `<T as Trait<'a>>::Assoc` once `'a` has been already
    // instantiated, causing us to prefer the where-bound over the impl
    // resulting in a placeholder error. Even if were were to also use the
    // leak check during candidate selection for normalization, this
    // case would still not compile.
    let _higher_ranked_norm: for<'a> fn(<T as Trait<'a>>::Assoc) = |_| ();
}
```

This is also likely to be more performant. It enables more caching in the new trait solver by simply [recursively calling the canonical query][new solver] after instantiating the higher-ranked goal.

It is also unclear how to add the leak check to normalization in the new solver. To handle https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/1 `Projection` goals are implemented via `AliasRelate`. This again means that we instantiate the binder before ever normalizing any alias. Even if we were to avoid this, we lose the ability to [cache normalization by itself, ignoring the expected `term`](5bd5d214ef/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/solve/normalizes_to/mod.rs (L34-L49)). We cannot replace the `term` with an inference variable before instantiating the binder, as otherwise `for<'a> T: Trait<Assoc<'a> = &'a ()>` breaks. If we only replace the term after instantiating the binder, we cannot easily evaluate the goal in a separate context, as [we'd then lose the information necessary for the leak check](11f32b73e0/compiler/rustc_next_trait_solver/src/canonicalizer.rs (L230-L232)). Adding this information to the canonical input also seems non-trivial.

## Proposed solution

I propose to instantiate the binder outside of candidate assembly, causing placeholders from higher-ranked goals to get ignored while selecting their candidate. This mostly[^1] matches the [current behavior of the new solver][new solver]. The impact of this change is therefore as follows:

```rust
trait Leak<'a> {}
impl Leak<'_>      for Box<u32> {}
impl Leak<'static> for Box<u16> {}

fn impls_leak<T: for<'a> Leak<'a>>() {}

trait IndirectLeak<'a> {}
impl<'a, T: Leak<'a>> IndirectLeak<'a> for T {}
fn impls_indirect_leak<T: for<'a> IndirectLeak<'a>>() {}

fn guide_selection() {
    // ok -> ambiguous
    impls_leak::<Box<_>>();

    // ambiguous
    impls_indirect_leak::<Box<_>>();
}

trait Trait<'a> {
    type Assoc;
}
impl<'a, T> Trait<'a> for T {
    type Assoc = usize;
}

fn trait_bound<T: for<'a> Trait<'a>>() {}
fn projection_bound<T: for<'a> Trait<'a, Assoc = usize>>() {}

// A function which a trivial where-bound which is more
// restrictive than the impl.
fn function<T: Trait<'static, Assoc = usize>>() {
    // ok -> error
    trait_bound::<T>();

    // error
    projection_bound::<T>();

    // error
    let _higher_ranked_norm: for<'a> fn(<T as Trait<'a>>::Assoc) = |_| ();
}
```

This does not change the behavior if candidates have higher ranked nested goals, as in this case the `leak_check` causes the nested goal to result in an error ([playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=a74c25300b23db9022226de99d8a2fa6)):
```rust
trait LeakCheckFailure<'a> {}
impl LeakCheckFailure<'static> for () {}

trait Trait<T> {}
impl Trait<u32> for () where for<'a> (): LeakCheckFailure<'a> {}
impl Trait<u16> for () {}
fn impls_trait<T: Trait<U>, U>() {}
fn main() {
    // ok
    //
    // It does not matter whether candidate assembly
    // considers the placeholders from higher-ranked goal.
    //
    // Either `for<'a> (): LeakCheckFailure<'a>` has no
    // applicable candidate or it has a single applicable candidate
    // when then later results in an error. This allows us to
    // infer `U` to `u16`.
    impls_trait::<(), _>()
}
```

## Impact on existing crates

This is a **breaking change**. [A crater run](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119820#issuecomment-1926862174) found 17 regressed crates with 7 root causes.

For a full analysis of all affected crates, see https://gist.github.com/lcnr/7c1c652f30567048ea240554a36ed95c.

---

I believe this breakage to be acceptable and would merge this change. I am confident that the new position of the leak check matches our idealized future and cannot envision any other consistent alternative. Where possible, I intend to open PRs fixing/avoiding the regressions before landing this PR.

I originally intended to remove the `coherence_leak_check` lint in the same PR. However, while I am confident in the *position* of the leak check, deciding on its exact behavior is left as future work, cc #112999. This PR therefore only moves the leak check while keeping the lint when relying on it in coherence.

[new solver]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/solve/eval_ctxt/mod.rs#L479-L484

[^1]: the new solver has a separate cause of inconsistent behavior rn https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/53#issuecomment-1914310171

r? `@nikomatsakis`
2024-04-04 04:36:12 +00:00
bors
0accf4ec4c Auto merge of #123440 - jhpratt:rollup-yat6crk, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #122356 (std::rand: fix dragonflybsd after #121942.)
 - #123093 (Add a nice header to our README.md)
 - #123307 (Fix f16 and f128 feature gating on different editions)
 - #123401 (Check `x86_64` size assertions on `aarch64`, too)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-04-04 02:11:23 +00:00
Boxy
82789763c7 rebase 2024-04-04 02:14:57 +01:00
lcnr
2b67f0104a check FnDef return type for WF 2024-04-04 01:55:29 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
4332498a6d
Rollup merge of #123401 - Zalathar:assert-size-aarch64, r=fmease
Check `x86_64` size assertions on `aarch64`, too

(Context: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Checking.20size.20assertions.20on.20aarch64.3F)

Currently the compiler has around 30 sets of `static_assert_size!` for various size-critical data structures (e.g. various IR nodes), guarded by `#[cfg(all(target_arch = "x86_64", target_pointer_width = "64"))]`.

(Presumably this cfg avoids having to maintain separate size values for 32-bit targets and unusual 64-bit targets. Apparently it may have been necessary before the i128/u128 alignment changes, too.)

This is slightly incovenient for people on aarch64 workstations (e.g. Macs), because the assertions normally aren't checked until we push to a PR. So this PR adds `aarch64` to the `#[cfg(..)]` guarding all of those assertions in the compiler.

---

Implemented with a simple find/replace. Verified by manually inspecting each `static_assert_size!` in `compiler/`, and checking that either the replacement succeeded, or adding aarch64 wouldn't have been appropriate.
2024-04-03 20:17:06 -04:00
bors
b4acbe4233 Auto merge of #123240 - compiler-errors:assert-args-compat, r=fmease
Assert that args are actually compatible with their generics, rather than just their count

Right now we just check that the number of args is right, rather than actually checking the kinds. Uplift a helper fn that I wrote from trait selection to do just that. Found a couple bugs along the way.

r? `@lcnr` or `@fmease` (or anyone really lol)
2024-04-04 00:09:02 +00:00
lcnr
4fa5fb684e move leak check out of candidate evaluation
this prevents higher ranked goals from guiding selection
2024-04-03 22:32:46 +01:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
b40ea03f8a rustc_index: Add a ZERO constant to index types
It is commonly used.
2024-04-03 19:06:22 +03:00
Michael Goulet
c9f8529793 Uplift and start using check_args_compatible more liberally 2024-04-03 11:18:55 -04:00
Michael Goulet
e3025d6a55 Stop chopping off args for no reason 2024-04-03 11:16:58 -04:00
Zalathar
2d47cd77ac Check x86_64 size assertions on aarch64, too
This makes it easier for contributors on aarch64 workstations (e.g. Macs) to
notice when these assertions have been violated.
2024-04-03 16:53:03 +11:00
bors
b688d53a17 Auto merge of #123396 - jhpratt:rollup-oa54mh1, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #122865 (Split hir ty lowerer's error reporting code in check functions to mod errors.)
 - #122935 (rename ptr::from_exposed_addr -> ptr::with_exposed_provenance)
 - #123182 (Avoid expanding to unstable internal method)
 - #123203 (Add `Context::ext`)
 - #123380 (Improve bootstrap comments)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-04-03 02:13:07 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
0697ee9af5
Rollup merge of #122865 - surechen:refactor_astconv_error_report_20240321, r=lcnr
Split hir ty lowerer's error reporting code in check functions to mod errors.

Move some error report codes to mod `astconv/errors.rs`

r? `@lcnr`
2024-04-02 20:37:39 -04:00
bors
40f743da23 Auto merge of #122791 - compiler-errors:make-coinductive-always, r=lcnr
Make inductive cycles always ambiguous

 This makes inductive cycles always result in ambiguity rather than be treated like a stack-dependent error.

This has some  interactions with specialization, and so breaks a few UI tests that I don't agree should've ever worked in the first place, and also breaks a handful of crates in a way that I don't believe is a problem.

On the bright side, it puts us in a better spot when it comes to eventually enabling coinduction everywhere.

## Results

This was cratered in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116494#issuecomment-2008657494, which boils down to two regressions:
* `lu_packets` - This code should have never compiled in the first place. More below.
* **ALL** other regressions are due to `commit_verify@0.11.0-beta.1` (edit: and `commit_verify@0.10.x`) - This actually seems to be fixed in version `0.11.0-beta.5`, which is the *most* up to date version, but it's still prerelease on crates.io so I don't think cargo ends up picking `beta.5` when building dependent crates.

### `lu_packets`

Firstly, this crate uses specialization, so I think it's automatically worth breaking. However, I've minimized [the regression](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-116494-3/try%23d614ed876e31a5f3ad1d0fbf848fcdab3a29d1d8/gh/lcdr.lu_packets/log.txt) to:

```rust
// Upstream crate
pub trait Serialize {}
impl Serialize for &() {}
impl<S> Serialize for &[S] where for<'a> &'a S: Serialize {}

// ----------------------------------------------------------------------- //

// Downstream crate
#![feature(specialization)]
#![allow(incomplete_features, unused)]

use upstream::Serialize;

trait Replica {
    fn serialize();
}

impl<T> Replica for T {
    default fn serialize() {}
}

impl<T> Replica for Option<T>
where
    for<'a> &'a T: Serialize,
{
    fn serialize() {}
}
```

Specifically this fails when computing the specialization graph for the `downstream` crate.

The code ends up cycling on `&[?0]: Serialize` when we equate `&?0 = &[?1]` during impl matching, which ends up needing to prove `&[?1]: Serialize`, which since cycles are treated like ambiguity, ends up in a **fatal overflow**. For some reason this requires two crates, squashing them into one crate doesn't work.

Side-note: This code is subtly order dependent. When minimizing, I ended up having the code start failing on `nightly` very easily after removing and reordering impls. This seems to me all the more reason to remove this behavior altogether.

## Side-note: Item Bounds (edit: this was fixed independently in #121123)

Due to the changes in #120584 where we now consider an alias's item bounds *and* all the item bounds of the alias's nested self type aliases, I've had to add e6b64c6194 which is a hack to make sure we're not eagerly normalizing bounds that have nothing to do with the predicate we're trying to solve, and which result in.

This is fixed in a more principled way in #121123.

---

r? lcnr for an initial review
2024-04-03 00:09:44 +00:00
bors
5dbaafdb93 Auto merge of #123340 - fmease:rustdoc-simplify-auto-trait-impl-synth, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: heavily simplify the synthesis of auto trait impls

`gd --numstat HEAD~2 HEAD src/librustdoc/clean/auto_trait.rs`
**+315 -705** 🟩🟥🟥🟥

---

As outlined in issue #113015, there are currently 3[^1] large separate routines that “clean” `rustc_middle::ty` data types related to generics & predicates to rustdoc data types. Every single one has their own kinds of bugs. While I've patched a lot of bugs in each of the routines in the past, it's about time to unify them. This PR is only the first in a series. It completely **yanks** the custom “bounds cleaning” of mod `auto_trait` and reuses the routines found in mod `simplify`. As alluded to, `simplify` is also flawed but it's still more complete than `auto_trait`'s routines. [See also my review comment over at `tests/rustdoc/synthetic_auto/bounds.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123340#discussion_r1546900539).

This is preparatory work for rewriting “bounds cleaning” from scratch in follow-up PRs in order to finally [fix] #113015.

Apart from that, I've eliminated all potential sources of *instability* in the rendered output.
See also #119597. I'm pretty sure this fixes #119597.

This PR does not attempt to fix [any other issues related to synthetic auto trait impls](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3AA-synthetic-impls%20label%3AA-auto-traits).
However, it's definitely meant to be a *stepping stone* by making `auto_trait` more contributor-friendly.

---

* Replace `FxHash{Map,Set}` with `FxIndex{Map,Set}` to guarantee a stable iteration order
  * Or as a perf opt, `UnordSet` (a thin wrapper around `FxHashSet`) in cases where we never iterate over the set.
  * Yes, we do make use of `swap_remove` but that shouldn't matter since all the callers are deterministic. It does make the output less “predictable” but it's still better than before. Ofc, I rely on `rustc_infer` being deterministic. I hope that holds.
* Utilizing `clean::simplify` over the custom “bounds cleaning” routines wipes out the last reference to `collect_referenced_late_bound_regions` in rustdoc (`simplify` uses `bound_vars`) which was a source of instability / unpredictability (cc #116388)
* Remove the types `RegionTarget` and `RegionDeps` from `librustdoc`. They were duplicates of the identical types found in `rustc`. Just import them from `rustc`. For some reason, they were duplicated when splitting `auto_trait` in two in #49711.
* Get rid of the useless “type namespace” `AutoTraitFinder` in `librustdoc`
  * The struct only held a `DocContext`, it was over-engineered
  * Turn the associated functions into free ones
    * Eliminates rightward drift; increases legibility
  * `rustc` also contains a useless `AutoTraitFinder` struct but I plan on removing that in a follow-up PR
* Rename a bunch of methods to be way more descriptive
* Eliminate `use super::*;`
  * Lead to `clean/mod.rs` accumulating a lot of unnecessary imports
  * Made `auto_traits` less modular
* Eliminate a custom `TypeFolder`: We can just use the rustc helper `fold_regions` which does that for us

I plan on adding extensive documentation to `librustdoc`'s `auto_trait` in follow-up PRs.
I don't want to do that in this PR because further refactoring & bug fix PRs may alter the overall structure of `librustdoc`'s & `rustc`'s `auto_trait` modules to a great degree. I'm slowly digging into the dark details of `rustc`'s `auto_trait` module again and once I have the full picture I will be able to provide proper docs.

---

While this PR does indeed touch `rustc`'s `auto_trait` — mostly tiny refactorings — I argue this PR doesn't need any compiler reviewers next to rustdoc ones since that module falls under the purview of rustdoc — it used to be part of `librustdoc` after all (#49711).

Sorry for not having split this into more commits. If you'd like me to I can try to split it into more atomic commits retroactively. However, I don't know if that would actually make reviewing easier. I think the best way to review this might just be to place the master version of `auto_trait` on the left of your screen and the patched one on the right, not joking.

r? `@GuillaumeGomez`

[^1]: Or even 4 depending on the way you're counting.
2024-04-02 12:13:44 +00:00
surechen
1012218ba8 t plit astconv's error report code in check functions to mod errors.
Move some error report codes to mod `astconv/errors.rs`
2024-04-02 20:10:35 +08:00
Michael Goulet
09ea3f93ee Fix obligation param and bless tests 2024-04-01 22:48:23 -04:00
Michael Goulet
5f59b7f763 Instantiate closure-like bounds with placeholders to deal with binders correctly 2024-04-01 22:48:23 -04:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
069e7f2a76
rustdoc: heavily simplify synthesis of auto trait impls 2024-04-02 01:49:57 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
cbd593ed18
rustdoc: synthetic impls: auto traits: Fx{Hash↦Index}{Map,Set} 2024-04-01 22:15:09 +02:00
Michael Goulet
88296bddf8 Remove EvaluatedToErrStackDependent 2024-03-31 20:44:30 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b8396d10c4 Always make inductive cycles as ambig during typeck 2024-03-31 20:44:30 -04:00
Michael Goulet
bda301ead8 Stop calling visitors V 2024-03-30 11:13:33 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
8d820c0c47
Rollup merge of #123188 - klensy:clippy-me2, r=Nilstrieb
compiler: fix few unused_peekable and needless_pass_by_ref_mut clippy lints

This fixes few instances of `unused_peekable` and `needless_pass_by_ref_mut`. While i expected to fix more warnings, `needless_pass_by_ref_mut` produced too much for one PR, so i stopped here.

Better reviewed commit by commit, as fixes splitted by chunks.
2024-03-29 15:17:11 +01:00
klensy
c64a440312 fix few more
warning: this argument is a mutable reference, but not used mutably
   --> compiler\rustc_trait_selection\src\traits\project.rs:511:12
    |
511 |     selcx: &mut SelectionContext<'a, 'tcx>,
    |            ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider changing to: `&SelectionContext<'a, 'tcx>`
    |
    = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_pass_by_ref_mut

warning: this argument is a mutable reference, but not used mutably
   --> compiler\rustc_trait_selection\src\traits\specialize\specialization_graph.rs:201:28
    |
201 | fn iter_children(children: &mut Children) -> impl Iterator<Item = DefId> + '_ {
    |                            ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider changing to: `&Children`
    |
    = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_pass_by_ref_mut
2024-03-28 13:16:22 +03:00
klensy
bf47641726 compiler: fix unused_peekable clippy lint
warning: `peek` never called on `Peekable` iterator
   --> compiler\rustc_session\src\utils.rs:130:13
    |
130 |     let mut args = std::env::args_os().map(|arg| arg.to_string_lossy().to_string()).peekable();
    |             ^^^^
    |
    = help: consider removing the call to `peekable`
    = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#unused_peekable

warning: `peek` never called on `Peekable` iterator
    --> compiler\rustc_trait_selection\src\traits\error_reporting\suggestions.rs:4934:17
     |
4934 |         let mut bounds = pred.bounds.iter().peekable();
     |                 ^^^^^^
     |
     = help: consider removing the call to `peekable`
     = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#unused_peekable
2024-03-28 10:50:09 +03:00
Oli Scherer
727807293b Don't sort DefIds in suggestions 2024-03-27 14:02:16 +00:00
Oli Scherer
459ea32a27 Remove Partial/Ord from BoundRegion 2024-03-27 14:02:16 +00:00
Oli Scherer
e87d10846e Remove Ord from BoundTy 2024-03-27 14:02:16 +00:00
Oli Scherer
ae24fef028 Use TraitRef::to_string sorting in favor of TraitRef::ord, as the latter compares DefIds which we need to avoid 2024-03-27 14:02:15 +00:00
bors
dda2372cf3 Auto merge of #122802 - estebank:unconstrained-generic-const, r=Nadrieril
Provide structured suggestion for unconstrained generic constant

```
error: unconstrained generic constant
  --> $DIR/const-argument-if-length.rs:18:10
   |
LL |     pad: [u8; is_zst::<T>()],
   |          ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
   |
help: try adding a `where` bound
   |
LL | pub struct AtLeastByte<T: ?Sized> where [(); is_zst::<T>()]: {
   |                                   ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```

Detect when the constant expression isn't `usize` and suggest casting:

```
error: unconstrained generic constant
 --> f300.rs:6:10
  |
6 |     bb::<{!N}>();
  |          ^^^^
-Ztrack-diagnostics: created at compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/error_reporting/type_err_ctxt_ext.rs:3539:36
  |
help: try adding a `where` bound
  |
5 | fn b<const N: bool>() where [(); {!N} as usize]: {
  |                       ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```

Fix #122395.
2024-03-25 09:59:37 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
99e34b4f7a
Rollup merge of #122780 - GuillaumeGomez:rename-hir-local, r=oli-obk
Rename `hir::Local` into `hir::LetStmt`

Follow-up of #122776.

As discussed on [zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Improve.20naming.20of.20.60ExprKind.3A.3ALet.60.3F).

I made this change into a separate PR because I'm less sure about this change as is. For example, we have `visit_local` and `LocalSource` items. Is it fine to keep these two as is (I supposed it is but I prefer to ask) or not? Having `Node::Local(LetStmt)` makes things more explicit but is it going too far?

r? ```@oli-obk```
2024-03-23 15:00:18 +01:00
bors
0ad5e0d2de Auto merge of #122900 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-nls90mb, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #114009 (compiler: allow transmute of ZST arrays with generics)
 - #122195 (Note that the caller chooses a type for type param)
 - #122651 (Suggest `_` for missing generic arguments in turbofish)
 - #122784 (Add `tag_for_variant` query)
 - #122839 (Split out `PredicatePolarity` from `ImplPolarity`)
 - #122873 (Merge my contributor emails into one using mailmap)
 - #122885 (Adjust better spastorino membership to triagebot's adhoc_groups)
 - #122888 (add a couple more tests)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-03-22 22:35:11 +00:00
Michael Goulet
5333f2a9d1 Move check for error in impl header outside of reporting 2024-03-22 17:46:40 -04:00
Guillaume Gomez
e0d3439226 Rename hir::Node::Local into hir::Node::LetStmt 2024-03-22 20:48:36 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
b376f49e30 Rename hir::Local into hir::LetStmt 2024-03-22 20:36:21 +01:00
Michael Goulet
127e42d33b Use != Positive rather than == Negative
Feels more complete, and for ImplPolarity has the side-effect of making
sure we also handle reservation impls correctly
2024-03-22 11:16:57 -04:00
Michael Goulet
4b87c0b9c9 Split out ImplPolarity and PredicatePolarity 2024-03-22 11:16:56 -04:00
Michael Goulet
ff0c31e6b9 Programmatically convert some of the pat ctors 2024-03-22 11:13:29 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f0f224a37f Ty::new_ref and Ty::new_ptr stop using TypeAndMut 2024-03-22 11:13:27 -04:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
b79335dbed
Update local variables and tracing calls
Most of the tracing calls didn't fully leverage the power of `tracing`.
For example, several of them used to hard-code method names / tracing spans
as well as variable names. Use `#[instrument]` and `?var` / `%var` (etc.) instead.

In my opinion, this is the proper way to migrate them from the old
AstConv nomenclature to the new HIR ty lowering one.
2024-03-22 06:32:23 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
82c2c8deb1
Update (doc) comments
Several (doc) comments were super outdated or didn't provide enough context.

Some doc comments shoved everything in a single paragraph without respecting
the fact that the first paragraph should be a single sentence because rustdoc
treats these as item descriptions / synopses on module pages.
2024-03-22 06:31:51 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
05d48b936f
Rename AstConv to HIR ty lowering
This includes updating astconv-related items and a few local variables.
2024-03-22 06:31:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1757cb5871
Rollup merge of #122829 - ShoyuVanilla:gen-block-impl-fused-iter, r=compiler-errors
Implement `FusedIterator` for `gen` block

cc #117078
2024-03-22 01:07:31 +01:00
Shoyu Vanilla
ae4c5c891e Implement FusedIterator for gen block 2024-03-22 02:02:34 +09:00
Matthias Krüger
2e41425de6
Rollup merge of #122402 - weiznich:fix/122391, r=compiler-errors
Make `#[diagnostic::on_unimplemented]` format string parsing more robust

This commit fixes several issues with the format string parsing of the `#[diagnostic::on_unimplemented]` attribute that were pointed out by `@ehuss.`
In detail it fixes:

* Appearing format specifiers (display, etc). For these we generate a warning that the specifier is unsupported. Otherwise we ignore them
* Positional arguments. For these we generate a warning that positional arguments are unsupported in that location and replace them with the format string equivalent (so `{}` or `{n}` where n is the index of the positional argument)
* Broken format strings with enclosed }. For these we generate a warning about the broken format string and set the emitted message literally to the provided unformatted string
* Unknown format specifiers. For these we generate an additional warning about the unknown specifier. Otherwise we emit the literal string as message.

This essentially makes those strings behave like `format!` with the minor difference that we do not generate hard errors but only warnings. After that we continue trying to do something unsuprising (mostly either ignoring the broken parts or falling back to just giving back the literal string as provided).

Fix #122391

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-03-21 17:46:48 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e78522fd00
Rollup merge of #122358 - compiler-errors:bound-regions-in-generator, r=lcnr
Don't ICE when encountering bound regions in generator interior type

I'm pretty sure this meant to say "`has_free_regions`", probably just a typo in 4a4fc3bb5b. We can have bound regions (because we only convert non-bound regions into existential regions in generator interiors), but we can't have (non-ReErased) free regions.

r? lcnr
2024-03-21 12:05:05 +01:00
Georg Semmler
5568c569c0
Make #[diagnostic::on_unimplemented] format string parsing more robust
This commit fixes several issues with the format string parsing of the
`#[diagnostic::on_unimplemented]` attribute that were pointed out by
@ehuss.
In detail it fixes:

* Appearing format specifiers (display, etc). For these we generate a
warning that the specifier is unsupported. Otherwise we ignore them
* Positional arguments. For these we generate a warning that positional
arguments are unsupported in that location and replace them with the
format string equivalent (so `{}` or `{n}` where n is the index of the
positional argument)
* Broken format strings with enclosed }. For these we generate a warning
about the broken format string and set the emitted message literally to
the provided unformatted string
* Unknown format specifiers. For these we generate an additional warning
about the unknown specifier. Otherwise we emit the literal string as
message.

This essentially makes those strings behave like `format!` with the
minor difference that we do not generate hard errors but only warnings.
After that we continue trying to do something unsuprising (mostly either
ignoring the broken parts or falling back to just giving back the
literal string as provided).

Fix #122391
2024-03-21 08:27:26 +01:00
Esteban Küber
6b24fdf811 Provide structured suggestion for unconstrained generic constant
```
error: unconstrained generic constant
  --> $DIR/const-argument-if-length.rs:18:10
   |
LL |     pad: [u8; is_zst::<T>()],
   |          ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
   |
help: try adding a `where` bound
   |
LL | pub struct AtLeastByte<T: ?Sized> where [(); is_zst::<T>()]: {
   |                                   ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```

Detect when the constant expression isn't `usize` and suggest casting:

```
error: unconstrained generic constant
 --> f300.rs:6:10
  |
6 |     bb::<{!N}>();
  |          ^^^^
-Ztrack-diagnostics: created at compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/error_reporting/type_err_ctxt_ext.rs:3539:36
  |
help: try adding a `where` bound
  |
5 | fn b<const N: bool>() where [(); {!N} as usize]: {
  |                       ++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```

Fix #122395.
2024-03-21 00:03:59 +00:00
Michael Goulet
aa39dbb962 Split item bounds and item super predicates 2024-03-20 13:00:34 -04:00
bors
a128516cf9 Auto merge of #122754 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-bump, r=albertlarsan68
Bump to 1.78 bootstrap compiler

https://forge.rust-lang.org/release/process.html#master-bootstrap-update-t-2-day-tuesday
2024-03-20 13:43:41 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
02f1930595 step cfgs 2024-03-20 08:49:13 -04:00
bors
c86f3ac24f Auto merge of #120717 - compiler-errors:cap-closure-kind, r=oli-obk
For async closures, cap closure kind, get rid of `by_mut_body`

Right now we have three `AsyncFn*` traits, and three corresponding futures that are returned by the `call_*` functions for them. This is fine, but it is a bit excessive, since the future returned by `AsyncFn` and `AsyncFnMut` are identical. Really, the only distinction we need to make with these bodies is "by ref" and "by move".

This PR removes `AsyncFn::CallFuture` and renames `AsyncFnMut::CallMutFuture` to `AsyncFnMut::CallRefFuture`. This simplifies MIR building for async closures, since we don't need to build an extra "by mut" body, but just a "by move" body which is materially different.

We need to do a bit of delicate handling of the ClosureKind for async closures, since we need to "cap" it to `AsyncFnMut` in some cases when we only care about what body we're looking for.

This also fixes a bug where `<{async closure} as Fn>::call` was returning a body that takes the async-closure receiver *by move*.

This also helps align the `AsyncFn` traits to the `LendingFn` traits' eventual designs.
2024-03-20 11:40:45 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
ffdb147aa4
Rollup merge of #122732 - compiler-errors:coroutine-captures-note, r=nnethercote
Remove redundant coroutine captures note

This note is redundant, since we'll always be printing this "captures the following types..." between *more* descriptive `BuiltinDerivedObligationCause`s.

Please review with whitespace disabled, since I also removed an unnecessary labeled break.
2024-03-20 05:51:23 +01:00
bors
b7dcabe55e Auto merge of #122119 - estebank:issue-117846, r=Nadrieril
Silence unecessary !Sized binding error

When gathering locals, we introduce a `Sized` obligation for each
binding in the pattern. *After* doing so, we typecheck the init
expression. If this has a type failure, we store `{type error}`, for
both the expression and the pattern. But later we store an inference
variable for the pattern.

We now avoid any override of an existing type on a hir node when they've
already been marked as `{type error}`, and on E0277, when it comes from
`VariableType` we silence the error in support of the type error.

Fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117846
2024-03-20 02:36:37 +00:00
Esteban Küber
b1575b71d4 Silence unecessary !Sized binding error
When gathering locals, we introduce a `Sized` obligation for each
binding in the pattern. *After* doing so, we typecheck the init
expression. If this has a type failure, we store `{type error}`, for
both the expression and the pattern. But later we store an inference
variable for the pattern.

We now avoid any override of an existing type on a hir node when they've
already been marked as `{type error}`, and on E0277, when it comes from
`VariableType` we silence the error in support of the type error.

Fix #117846.
2024-03-19 21:26:11 +00:00
Michael Goulet
05116c5c30 Only split by-ref/by-move futures for async closures 2024-03-19 16:59:23 -04:00
Michael Goulet
3d56178880 Remove redundant coroutine captures note 2024-03-19 12:02:21 -04:00
Michael Goulet
bca708b9fa Do binder folding eagerly in bound_coroutine_hidden_types
I refuse to fix this in the old solver; its lazy instantiation of
binders will be the end of me.
2024-03-19 11:52:45 -04:00