Add tests (and a bit of cleanup) for interior mut handling in promotion and const-checking
Basically these are the parts of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121786 that can be salvaged.
r? ``@oli-obk``
const_mut_refs: allow mutable pointers to statics
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118447
Writing this PR became a bit messy, see [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/146212-t-compiler.2Fconst-eval/topic/Statics.20pointing.20to.20interior.20mutable.20statics) for some of my journey.^^ Turns out there was a long-standing bug in our qualif logic that led to us incorrectly classifying certain places as "no interior mut" when they actually had interior mut. Due to that the `const_refs_to_cell` feature gate was required far less often than it otherwise would, e.g. in [this code](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=9e0c042c451b3d11d64dd6263679a164). Fixing this however would be a massive breaking change all over libcore and likely the wider ecosystem. So I also changed the const-checking logic to just not require the feature gate for the affected cases. While doing so I discovered a bunch of logic that is not explained and that I could not explain. However I think stabilizing some const-eval feature will make most of that logic inconsequential so I just added some FIXMEs and left it at that.
r? `@oli-obk`
This fixes the issue wherein the lint didn't fire for promoteds
in the case of SHL/SHR operators in non-optimized builds
and all arithmetic operators in optimized builds
allow mutable references in const values when they point to no memory
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120450
The second commit is just some drive-by test suite cleanup.
r? `@oli-obk`
Implement intrinsics with fallback bodies
fixes#93145 (though we can port many more intrinsics)
cc #63585
The way this works is that the backend logic for generating custom code for intrinsics has been made fallible. The only failure path is "this intrinsic is unknown". The `Instance` (that was `InstanceDef::Intrinsic`) then gets converted to `InstanceDef::Item`, which represents the fallback body. A regular function call to that body is then codegenned. This is currently implemented for
* codegen_ssa (so llvm and gcc)
* codegen_cranelift
other backends will need to adjust, but they can just keep doing what they were doing if they prefer (though adding new intrinsics to the compiler will then require them to implement them, instead of getting the fallback body).
cc `@scottmcm` `@WaffleLapkin`
### todo
* [ ] miri support
* [x] default intrinsic name to name of function instead of requiring it to be specified in attribute
* [x] make sure that the bodies are always available (must be collected for metadata)
Instead we re-use the static's alloc id within the interpreter for its initializer to refer to the `Allocation` that only exists within the interpreter.
Continue compilation after check_mod_type_wf errors
The ICEs fixed here were probably reachable through const eval gymnastics before, but now they are easily reachable without that, too.
The new errors are often bugfixes, where useful errors were missing, because they were reported after the early abort. In other cases sometimes they are just duplication of already emitted errors, which won't be user-visible due to deduplication.
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120860
add another test for promoteds-in-static
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119614 led to validation of promoteds recursing into statics. These statics can point to `static mut` and interior mutable `static` and do other things we don't allow in `const`, but promoteds are validated as `const`, so we get strange errors (saying "in `const`" when there is no const) and surprising validation failures.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120960 fixes that; this here adds another test.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120968
check_consts: fix duplicate errors, make importance consistent
This is stuff I noticed while working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120932, but it's orthogonal to that PR.
r? ``@oli-obk``
This also now allows promoteds everywhere to point to 'extern static', because why not?
We still check that constants cannot transitively reach 'extern static' through references.
(We allow it through raw pointers.)
static mut: allow mutable reference to arbitrary types, not just slices and arrays
For historical reasons, we allow this:
```rust
static mut ARRAY: &'static mut [isize] = &mut [1];
```
However, we do not allow this:
```rust
static mut INT: &'static mut isize = &mut 1;
```
I think that's terribly inconsistent. I don't care much for `static mut`, but we have to keep it around for backwards compatibility and so we have to keep supporting it properly in the compiler. In recent refactors of how we deal with mutability of data in `static` and `const`, I almost made a fatal mistake since I tested `static mut INT: &'static mut isize = &mut 1` and concluded that we don't allow such `'static` mutable references even inside `static mut`. After all, nobody would expect this to be allowed only for arrays and slices, right?!?? So for the sake of our own sanity, and of whoever else reverse engineers these rules in the future to understand what the Rust compiler accepts or does not accept, I propose that we accept this for all types, not just arrays and slices.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #119939 (Improve 'generic param from outer item' error for `Self` and inside `static`/`const` items)
- #120331 (pattern_analysis: use a plain `Vec` in `DeconstructedPat`)
- #120396 (Account for unbounded type param receiver in suggestions)
- #120423 (update indirect structural match lints to match RFC and to show up for dependencies)
- #120435 (Suggest name value cfg when only value is used for check-cfg)
- #120502 (Remove `ffi_returns_twice` feature)
- #120507 (Account for non-overlapping unmet trait bounds in suggestion)
- #120513 (Normalize type outlives obligations in NLL for new solver)
- #120707 (Don't expect early-bound region to be local when reporting errors in RPITIT well-formedness)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #119759 (Add FileCheck annotations to dataflow-const-prop tests)
- #120323 (On E0277 be clearer about implicit `Sized` bounds on type params and assoc types)
- #120473 (Only suggest removal of `as_*` and `to_` conversion methods on E0308)
- #120540 (add test for try-block-in-match-arm)
- #120547 (`#![feature(inline_const_pat)]` is no longer incomplete)
- #120552 (Correctly check `never_type` feature gating)
- #120555 (put pnkfelix (me) back on the review queue.)
- #120556 (Improve the diagnostics for unused generic parameters)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #120484 (Avoid ICE when is_val_statically_known is not of a supported type)
- #120516 (pattern_analysis: cleanup manual impls)
- #120517 (never patterns: It is correct to lower `!` to `_`.)
- #120523 (Improve `io::Read::read_buf_exact` error case)
- #120528 (Store SHOULD_CAPTURE as AtomicU8)
- #120529 (Update data layouts in custom target tests for LLVM 18)
- #120531 (Remove a bunch of `has_errors` checks that have no meaningful or the wrong effect)
- #120533 (Correct paths for hexagon-unknown-none-elf platform doc)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Don't hash lints differently to non-lints.
`Diagnostic::keys`, which is used for hashing and equating diagnostics, has a surprising behaviour: it ignores children, but only for lints. This was added in #88493 to fix some duplicated diagnostics, but it doesn't seem necessary any more.
This commit removes the special case and only four tests have changed output, with additional errors. And those additional errors aren't exact duplicates, they're just similar. For example, in src/tools/clippy/tests/ui/same_name_method.rs we currently have this error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:79:9
|
LL | impl T1 for S {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
and with this change we also get this error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:81:9
|
LL | impl T2 for S {}
|
```
I think printing this second argument is reasonable, possibly even preferable to hiding it. And the other cases are similar.
r? `@estebank`
Expand the primary span of E0277 when the immediate unmet bound is not what the user wrote:
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `i32: Bar` is not satisfied
--> f100.rs:6:6
|
6 | <i32 as Foo>::foo();
| ^^^ the trait `Bar` is not implemented for `i32`, which is required by `i32: Foo`
|
help: this trait has no implementations, consider adding one
--> f100.rs:2:1
|
2 | trait Bar {}
| ^^^^^^^^^
note: required for `i32` to implement `Foo`
--> f100.rs:3:14
|
3 | impl<T: Bar> Foo for T {}
| --- ^^^ ^
| |
| unsatisfied trait bound introduced here
```
Fix#40120.
`Diagnostic::keys`, which is used for hashing and equating diagnostics,
has a surprising behaviour: it ignores children, but only for lints.
This was added in #88493 to fix some duplicated diagnostics, but it
doesn't seem necessary any more.
This commit removes the special case and only four tests have changed
output, with additional errors. And those additional errors aren't
exact duplicates, they're just similar. For example, in
src/tools/clippy/tests/ui/same_name_method.rs we currently have this
error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:79:9
|
LL | impl T1 for S {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
and with this change we also get this error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:81:9
|
LL | impl T2 for S {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
I think printing this second argument is reasonable, possibly even
preferable to hiding it. And the other cases are similar.
Deduplicate more sized errors on call exprs
Change the implicit `Sized` `Obligation` `Span` for call expressions to include the whole expression. This aids the existing deduplication machinery to reduce the number of errors caused by a single unsized expression.
remove StructuralEq trait
The documentation given for the trait is outdated: *all* function pointers implement `PartialEq` and `Eq` these days. So the `StructuralEq` trait doesn't really seem to have any reason to exist any more.
One side-effect of this PR is that we allow matching on some consts that do not implement `Eq`. However, we already allowed matching on floats and consts containing floats, so this is not new, it is just allowed in more cases now. IMO it makes no sense at all to allow float matching but also sometimes require an `Eq` instance. If we want to require `Eq` we should adjust https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115893 to check for `Eq`, and rule out float matching for good.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115881
Replacement of #114390: Add new intrinsic `is_var_statically_known` and optimize pow for powers of two
This adds a new intrinsic `is_val_statically_known` that lowers to [``@llvm.is.constant.*`](https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-is-constant-intrinsic).` It also applies the intrinsic in the int_pow methods to recognize and optimize the idiom `2isize.pow(x)`. See #114390 for more discussion.
While I have extended the scope of the power of two optimization from #114390, I haven't added any new uses for the intrinsic. That can be done in later pull requests.
Note: When testing or using the library, be sure to use `--stage 1` or higher. Otherwise, the intrinsic will be a noop and the doctests will be skipped. If you are trying out edits, you may be interested in [`--keep-stage 0`](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/building/suggested.html#faster-builds-with---keep-stage).
Fixes#47234Resolves#114390
`@Centri3`
Remove all ConstPropNonsense
We track all locals and projections on them ourselves within the const propagator and only use the InterpCx to actually do some low level operations or read from constants (via `OpTy` we get for said constants).
This helps moving the const prop lint out from the normal pipeline and running it just based on borrowck information. This in turn allows us to make progress on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108730#issuecomment-1875557745
there are various follow up cleanups that can be done after this PR (e.g. not matching on Rvalue twice and doing binop checks twice), but lets try landing this one first.
r? `@RalfJung`
Change the implicit `Sized` `Obligation` `Span` for call expressions to
include the whole expression. This aids the existing deduplication
machinery to reduce the number of errors caused by a single unsized
expression.
Fix overflow check
Make MIRI choose the path randomly and rename the intrinsic
Add back test
Add miri test and make it operate on `ptr`
Define `llvm.is.constant` for primitives
Update MIRI comment and fix test in stage2
Add const eval test
Clarify that both branches must have the same side effects
guaranteed non guarantee
use immediate type instead
Co-Authored-By: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
Errors in `DiagCtxtInner::emit_diagnostic` are never set to
`Level::Bug`, because the condition never succeeds, because
`self.treat_err_as_bug()` is called *before* the error counts are
incremented.
This commit switches to `self.treat_next_err_as_bug()`, fixing the
problem. This changes the error message output to actually say "internal
compiler error".
Avoid silencing relevant follow-up errors
r? `@matthewjasper`
This PR only adds new errors to tests that are already failing and fixes one ICE.
Several tests were changed to not emit new errors. I believe all of them were faulty tests, and not explicitly testing for the code that had new errors.
Reorder check_item_type diagnostics so they occur next to the corresponding `check_well_formed` diagnostics
The first commit is just a cleanup.
The second commit moves most checks from `check_mod_item_types` into `check_well_formed`, invoking the checks in lockstep per-item instead of iterating over all items twice.
Implement constant propagation on top of MIR SSA analysis
This implements the idea I proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110719#issuecomment-1718324700
Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/109597
The value numbering "GVN" pass formulates each rvalue that appears in MIR with an abstract form (the `Value` enum), and assigns an integer `VnIndex` to each. This abstract form can be used to deduplicate values, reusing an earlier local that holds the same value instead of recomputing. This part is proposed in #109597.
From this abstract representation, we can perform more involved simplifications, for example in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111344.
With the abstract representation `Value`, we can also attempt to evaluate each to a constant using the interpreter. This builds a `VnIndex -> OpTy` map. From this map, we can opportunistically replace an operand or a rvalue with a constant if their value has an associated `OpTy`.
The most relevant commit is [Evaluated computed values to constants.](2767c4912e)"
r? `@oli-obk`
Introduce `const Trait` (always-const trait bounds)
Feature `const_trait_impl` currently lacks a way to express “always const” trait bounds. This makes it impossible to define generic items like fns or structs which contain types that depend on const method calls (\*). While the final design and esp. the syntax of effects / keyword generics isn't set in stone, some version of “always const” trait bounds will very likely form a part of it. Further, their implementation is trivial thanks to the `effects` backbone.
Not sure if this needs t-lang sign-off though.
(\*):
```rs
#![feature(const_trait_impl, effects, generic_const_exprs)]
fn compute<T: const Trait>() -> Type<{ T::generate() }> { /*…*/ }
struct Store<T: const Trait>
where
Type<{ T::generate() }>:,
{
field: Type<{ T::generate() }>,
}
```
Lastly, “always const” trait bounds are a perfect fit for `generic_const_items`.
```rs
#![feature(const_trait_impl, effects, generic_const_items)]
const DEFAULT<T: const Default>: T = T::default();
```
Previously, we (oli, fee1-dead and I) wanted to reinterpret `~const Trait` as `const Trait` in generic const items which would've been quite surprising and not very generalizable.
Supersedes #117530.
---
cc `@oli-obk`
As discussed
r? fee1-dead (or compiler)
codegen: panic when trying to compute size/align of extern type
The alignment is also computed when accessing a field of extern type at non-zero offset, so we also panic in that case.
Previously `size_of_val` worked because the code path there assumed that "thin pointer" means "sized". But that's not true any more with extern types. The returned size and align are just blatantly wrong, so it seems better to panic than returning wrong results. We use a non-unwinding panic since code probably does not expect size_of_val to panic.
Attribute values must be literals. The error you get when that doesn't
hold is pretty bad, e.g.:
```
unexpected expression: 1 + 1
```
You also get the same error if the attribute value is a literal, but an
invalid literal, e.g.:
```
unexpected expression: "foo"suffix
```
This commit does two things.
- Changes the error message to "attribute value must be a literal",
which gives a better idea of what the problem is and how to fix it. It
also no longer prints the invalid expression, because the carets below
highlight it anyway.
- Separates the "not a literal" case from the "invalid literal" case.
Which means invalid literals now get the specific error at the literal
level, rather than at the attribute level.
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.
for #117772 :
In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and
removing redundant imports code into two PR.
interpret: simplify handling of shifts by no longer trying to handle signed and unsigned shift amounts in the same branch
While we're at it, also update comments in codegen and MIR building related to shifts, and fix the overflow error printed by Miri on negative shift amounts.
patterns: reject raw pointers that are not just integers
Matching against `0 as *const i32` is fine, matching against `&42 as *const i32` is not.
This extends the existing check against function pointers and wide pointers: we now uniformly reject all these pointer types during valtree construction, and then later lint because of that. See [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116930#issuecomment-1784654073) for some more explanation and context.
Also fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116929.
Cc `@oli-obk` `@lcnr`
Stabilize `const_maybe_uninit_zeroed` and `const_mem_zeroed`
Make `MaybeUninit::zeroed` and `mem::zeroed` const stable. Newly stable API:
```rust
// core::mem
pub const unsafe fn zeroed<T>() ->;
impl<T> MaybeUninit<T> {
pub const fn zeroed() -> MaybeUninit<T>;
}
```
This relies on features based around `const_mut_refs`. Per `@RalfJung,` this should be OK since we do not leak any `&mut` to the user.
For this to be possible, intrinsics `assert_zero_valid` and `assert_mem_uninitialized_valid` were made const stable.
Tracking issue: #91850
Zulip discussion: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/146212-t-compiler.2Fconst-eval/topic/.60const_mut_refs.60.20dependents
r? libs-api
`@rustbot` label -T-libs +T-libs-api +A-const-eval
cc `@RalfJung` `@oli-obk` `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`
Make `core::mem::zeroed` const stable. Newly stable API:
// core::mem
pub const unsafe fn zeroed<T>() -> T;
This is stabilized with `const_maybe_uninit_zeroed` since it is a simple
wrapper.
In order to make this possible, intrinsics `assert_zero_valid` was made
const stable under `const_assert_type2`.
`assert_mem_uninitialized_valid` was also made const stable since it is
under the same gate.
Allow partially moved values in match
This PR attempts to unify the behaviour between `let _ = PLACE`, `let _: TY = PLACE;` and `match PLACE { _ => {} }`.
The logical conclusion is that the `match` version should not check for uninitialised places nor check that borrows are still live.
The `match PLACE {}` case is handled by keeping a `FakeRead` in the unreachable fallback case to verify that `PLACE` has a legal value.
Schematically, `match PLACE { arms }` in surface rust becomes in MIR:
```rust
PlaceMention(PLACE)
match PLACE {
// Decision tree for the explicit arms
arms,
// An extra fallback arm
_ => {
FakeRead(ForMatchedPlace, PLACE);
unreachable
}
}
```
`match *borrow { _ => {} }` continues to check that `*borrow` is live, but does not read the value.
`match *borrow {}` both checks that `*borrow` is live, and fake-reads the value.
Continuation of ~https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102256~ ~https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104844~
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99180https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53114
THIR unsafety checking was getting a cycle of
function unsafety checking
-> building THIR for the function
-> evaluating pattern inline constants in the function
-> building MIR for the inline constant
-> checking unsafety of functions (so that THIR can be stolen)
This is fixed by not stealing THIR when generating MIR but instead when
unsafety checking.
This leaves an issue with pattern inline constants not being unsafety
checked because they are evaluated away when generating THIR.
To fix that we now represent inline constants in THIR patterns and
visit them in THIR unsafety checking.
const_eval: allow function pointer signatures containing &mut T in const contexts
potentially fixes#114994
We utilize a `TypeVisitor` here in order to more easily handle control flow.
- In the event the typekind the Visitor sees is a function pointer, we skip over it
- However, otherwise we do one of two things:
- If we find a mutable reference, check it, then continue visiting types
- If we find any other type, continue visiting types
This means we will check if the function pointer _itself_ is mutable, but not if any of the types _within_ are.
const-eval: make misalignment a hard error
It's been a future-incompat error (showing up in cargo's reports) since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104616, Rust 1.68, released in March. That should be long enough.
The question for the lang team is simply -- should we move ahead with this, making const-eval alignment failures a hard error? (It turns out some of them accidentally already were hard errors since #104616. But not all so this is still a breaking change. Crater found no regression.)
improve the suggestion of `generic_bound_failure`
- Fixes#115375
- suggest the bound in the correct scope: trait or impl header vs assoc item. See `tests/ui/suggestions/lifetimes/type-param-bound-scope.rs`
- don't suggest a lifetime name that conflicts with the other late-bound regions of the function:
```rust
type Inv<'a> = *mut &'a ();
fn check_bound<'a, T: 'a>(_: T, _: Inv<'a>) {}
fn test<'a, T>(_: &'a str, t: T, lt: Inv<'_>) { // suggests a new name `'a`
check_bound(t, lt); //~ ERROR
}
```
Add a note to duplicate diagnostics
Helps explain why there may be a difference between manual testing and the test suite output and highlights them as something to potentially look into
For existing duplicate diagnostics I just blessed them other than a few files that had other `NOTE` annotations in
Correctly deny late-bound lifetimes from parent in anon consts and TAITs
Reuse the `AnonConstBoundary` scope (introduced in #108553, renamed in this PR to `LateBoundary`) to deny late-bound vars of *all* kinds (ty/const/lifetime) in anon consts and TAITs.
Side-note, but I would like to consolidate this with the error reporting for RPITs (E0657):
c4f25777a0/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/collect/resolve_bound_vars.rs (L733-L754) but the semantics about what we're allowed to capture there are slightly different, so I'm leaving that untouched.
Fixes#115474
Don't require `Drop` for `[PhantomData<T>; N]` where `N` and `T` are generic, if `T` requires `Drop`
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115403
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115410
This was accidentally regressed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114134, because it was accidentally stabilized in #102204 (cc `@rust-lang/lang,` seems like an innocent stabilization, considering this PR is more of a bugfix than a feature).
While we have a whole month to beta backport this change before the regression hits stable, I'd still prefer not to go through an FCP on this PR (which fixes a regression), if T-lang wants an FCP, I can can open an issue about the change itself.
remove some unnecessary ignore-debug clauses
ignore-debug is only needed when the debug assertions *in the standard library* somehow affect the test. This can happen with inlining but otherwise should be rare. ignore-debug is problematic since PR CI is only run with debug assertions.
r? `@cjgillot` since it looks like you added most of these
As of commit 7767cbb3b0,
the tests/ui/consts/const-eval/ub-int-array.rs test is
failing on big-endian platforms (in particular s390x),
as the stderr output contains a hex dump that depends
on endianness.
Since this point intentionally verifies the hex dump to
check the uninitialized byte markers, I think we should
not simply standardize away the hex dump as is done with
some of the other tests in this directory.
However, most of the test is already endian-independent.
The only exception is one line of hex dump, which can
also be made endian-independent by choosing appropriate
constants in the source code.
Since the 32bit and 64bit stderr outputs were already
(and remain) identical, I've merged them and removed
the stderr-per-bitwidth marker.
Fixes (again) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105383.
Warn on elided lifetimes in associated constants (`ELIDED_LIFETIMES_IN_ASSOCIATED_CONSTANT`)
Elided lifetimes in associated constants (in impls) erroneously resolve to fresh lifetime parameters on the impl since #97313. This is not correct behavior (see #38831).
I originally opened #114716 to fix this, but given the time that has passed, the crater results seem pretty bad: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114716#issuecomment-1682091952
This PR alternatively implements a lint against this behavior, and I'm hoping to bump this to deny in a few versions.
Improve spans for indexing expressions
fixes#114388
Indexing is similar to method calls in having an arbitrary left-hand-side and then something on the right, which is the main part of the expression. Method calls already have a span for that right part, but indexing does not. This means that long method chains that use indexing have really bad spans, especially when the indexing panics and that span in coverted into a panic location.
This does the same thing as method calls for the AST and HIR, storing an extra span which is then put into the `fn_span` field in THIR.
r? compiler-errors
Indexing is similar to method calls in having an arbitrary
left-hand-side and then something on the right, which is the main part
of the expression. Method calls already have a span for that right part,
but indexing does not. This means that long method chains that use
indexing have really bad spans, especially when the indexing panics and
that span in coverted into a panic location.
This does the same thing as method calls for the AST and HIR, storing an
extra span which is then put into the `fn_span` field in THIR.
const validation: point at where we found a pointer but expected an integer
Instead of validation just printing "unable to turn pointer into bytes", make this a regular validation error that says where in the value the bad pointer was found. Also distinguish "expected integer, got pointer" from "expected pointer, got partial pointer or mix of pointers".
To avoid duplicating things too much I refactored the diagnostics for validity a bit, so that "got uninit, expected X" and "got pointer, expected X" can share the "X" part. Also all the errors emitted for validation are now grouped under `const_eval_validation` so that they are in a single group in the ftl file.
r? `@oli-obk`
Expand, rename and improve `incorrect_fn_null_checks` lint
This PR,
- firstly, expand the lint by now linting on references
- secondly, it renames the lint `incorrect_fn_null_checks` -> `useless_ptr_null_checks`
- and thirdly it improves the lint by catching `ptr::from_mut`, `ptr::from_ref`, as well as `<*mut _>::cast` and `<*const _>::cast_mut`
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113601
cc ```@est31```
Miri: fix error on dangling pointer inbounds offset
We used to claim that the pointer was "dereferenced", but that is just not true.
Can be reviewed commit-by-commit. The first commit is an unrelated rename that didn't seem worth splitting into its own PR.
r? `@oli-obk`
Change default panic handler message format.
This changes the default panic hook's message format from:
```
thread '{thread}' panicked at '{message}', {location}
```
to
```
thread '{thread}' panicked at {location}:
{message}
```
This puts the message on its own line without surrounding quotes, making it easiser to read. For example:
Before:
```
thread 'main' panicked at 'env variable `IMPORTANT_PATH` should be set by `wrapper_script.sh`', src/main.rs:4:6
```
After:
```
thread 'main' panicked at src/main.rs:4:6:
env variable `IMPORTANT_PATH` should be set by `wrapper_script.sh`
```
---
See this PR by `@nyurik,` which does that for only multi-line messages (specifically because of `assert_eq`): https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111071
This is the change that does that for *all* panic messages.
`const`-stablilize `NonNull::as_ref`
A bunch of pointer to reference methods have been made unstably const some time ago in #91823 under the feature gate `const_ptr_as_ref`.
Out of these, `NonNull::as_ref` can be implemented as a `const fn` in stable rust today, so i hereby propose to const stabilize this function only.
Tracking issue: #91822
``@rustbot`` label +T-libs-api -T-libs