Add primary marker on codegen unit and generate main wrapper on primary codegen.
This is the codegen part of changes extracted from #84062.
This add a marker called `primary` on each codegen units, where exactly one codegen unit will be `primary = true` at a time. This specific codegen unit will take charge of generating `main` wrapper when `main` is imported from a foreign crate after the implementation of RFC 1260.
cc #28937
I'm not sure who should i ask for review for codegen changes, so feel free to reassign.
r? `@nagisa`
Report coverage `0` of dead blocks
Fixes: #84018
With `-Z instrument-coverage`, coverage reporting of dead blocks
(for example, blocks dropped because a conditional branch is dropped,
based on const evaluation) is now supported.
If `instrument-coverage` is enabled, `simplify::remove_dead_blocks()`
finds all dropped coverage `Statement`s and adds their `code_region`s as
`Unreachable` coverage `Statement`s to the `START_BLOCK`, so they are
still included in the coverage map.
Check out the resulting changes in the test coverage reports in this PR (in [commit 1](0b0d293c7c)).
r? `@tmandry`
cc: `@wesleywiser`
CTFE inbounds-error-messages tweak
* use CheckInAllocMsg::PointerArithmeticTest for ptr_offset error
* nicer errors for some null pointer cases
r? `@oli-obk`
Coverage instruments closure bodies in macros (not the macro body)
Fixes: #84884
This solution might be considered a compromise, but I think it is the
better choice.
The results in the `closure.rs` test correctly resolve all test cases
broken as described in #84884.
One test pattern (in both `closure_macro.rs` and
`closure_macro_async.rs`) was also affected, and removes coverage
statistics for the lines inside the closure, because the closure
includes a macro. (The coverage remains at the callsite of the macro, so
we lose some detail, but there isn't a perfect choice with macros.
Often macro implementations are split across the macro and the callsite,
and there doesn't appear to be a single "right choice" for which body
should be covered. For the current implementation, we can't do both.
The callsite is most likely to be the preferred site for coverage.
r? `@tmandry`
cc: `@wesleywiser`
Fixes: #84884
This solution might be considered a compromise, but I think it is the
better choice.
The results in the `closure.rs` test correctly resolve all test cases
broken as described in #84884.
One test pattern (in both `closure_macro.rs` and
`closure_macro_async.rs`) was also affected, and removes coverage
statistics for the lines inside the closure, because the closure
includes a macro. (The coverage remains at the callsite of the macro, so
we lose some detail, but there isn't a perfect choice with macros.
Often macro implementations are split across the macro and the callsite,
and there doesn't appear to be a single "right choice" for which body
should be covered. For the current implementation, we can't do both.
The callsite is most likely to be the preferred site for coverage.
I applied this fix to all `MacroKinds`, not just `Bang`.
I'm trying to resolve an issue of lost coverage in a
`MacroKind::Attr`-based, function-scoped macro. Instead of only
searching for a body_span that is "not a function-like macro" (that is,
MacroKind::Bang), I'm expanding this to all `MacroKind`s. Maybe I should
expand this to `ExpnKind::Desugaring` and `ExpnKind::AstPass` (or
subsets, depending on their sub-kinds) as well, but I'm not sure that's
a good idea.
I'd like to add a test of the `Attr` macro on functions, but I need time
to figure out how to constract a good, simple example without external
crate dependencies. For the moment, all tests still work as expected (no
change), this new commit shouldn't have a negative affect, and more
importantly, I believe it will have a positive effect. I will try to
confirm this.
Fixes: #84018
With `-Z instrument-coverage`, coverage reporting of dead blocks
(for example, blocks dropped because a conditional branch is dropped,
based on const evaluation) is now supported.
If `instrument-coverage` is enabled, `simplify::remove_dead_blocks()`
finds all dropped coverage `Statement`s and adds their `code_region`s as
`Unreachable` coverage `Statement`s to the `START_BLOCK`, so they are
still included in the coverage map.
Check out the resulting changes in the test coverage reports in this PR.
Vastly improves coverage spans for macros
Fixes: #84561
This resolves problems where macros like `trace!(...)` would show zero coverage if tracing was disabled, and `assert_eq!(...)` would show zero coverage if the assertion did not fail, because only one coverage span was generated, for the branch.
This PR started with an idea that I could just drop branching blocks with same span as expanded macro. (See the fixed issue for more details.)
That did help, but it didn't resolve everything.
I also needed to add a span specifically for the macro name (plus `!`) to ensure the macro gets coverage even if it's internal expansion adds conditional branching blocks that are retained, and would otherwise drop the outer span. Now that outer span is _only_ the `(argument, list)`, which can safely be dropped now), because the macro name has its own span.
While testing, I also noticed the spanview debug output can cause an ICE on a function with no body. The
workaround for this is included in this PR (separate commit).
r? `@tmandry`
cc? `@wesleywiser`
Implement RFC 1260 with feature_name `imported_main`.
This is the second extraction part of #84062 plus additional adjustments.
This (mostly) implements RFC 1260.
However there's still one test case failure in the extern crate case. Maybe `LocalDefId` doesn't work here? I'm not sure.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/28937
r? `@petrochenkov`
use correct feature flag for impl-block-level trait bounds on const fn
I am not sure what that special hack was needed for, but it doesn't seem needed any more...
This removes the last use of the `const_fn` feature flag -- Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84510
r? `@oli-obk`
Adds feature-gated `#[no_coverage]` function attribute, to fix derived Eq `0` coverage issue #83601
Derived Eq no longer shows uncovered
The Eq trait has a special hidden function. MIR `InstrumentCoverage`
would add this function to the coverage map, but it is never called, so
the `Eq` trait would always appear uncovered.
Fixes: #83601
The fix required creating a new function attribute `no_coverage` to mark
functions that should be ignored by `InstrumentCoverage` and the
coverage `mapgen` (during codegen).
Adding a `no_coverage` feature gate with tracking issue #84605.
r? `@tmandry`
cc: `@wesleywiser`
Improve coverage spans for chained function calls
Fixes: #84180
For chained function calls separated by the `?` try operator, the
function call following the try operator produced a MIR `Call` span that
matched the span of the first call. The `?` try operator started a new
span, so the second call got no span.
It turns out the MIR `Call` terminator has a `func` `Operand`
for the `Constant` representing the function name, and the function
name's Span can be used to reset the starting position of the span.
r? `@tmandry`
cc: `@wesleywiser`
The Eq trait has a special hidden function. MIR `InstrumentCoverage`
would add this function to the coverage map, but it is never called, so
the `Eq` trait would always appear uncovered.
Fixes: #83601
The fix required creating a new function attribute `no_coverage` to mark
functions that should be ignored by `InstrumentCoverage` and the
coverage `mapgen` (during codegen).
While testing, I also noticed two other issues:
* spanview debug file output ICEd on a function with no body. The
workaround for this is included in this PR.
* `assert_*!()` macro coverage can appear covered if followed by another
`assert_*!()` macro. Normally they appear uncovered. I submitted a new
Issue #84561, and added a coverage test to demonstrate this issue.
Fix coverage ICE because fn_sig can have a span that crosses file bou…
Fixes: #83792
MIR `InstrumentCoverage` assumed the `FnSig` span was contained within a
single file, but this is not always the case. Some macro constructions
can result in a span that starts in one `SourceFile` and ends in a
different one.
The `FnSig` span is included in coverage results as long as that span is
in the same `SourceFile` and the same macro context, but by assuming the
`FnSig` span's `hi()` and `lo()` were in the same file, I took this for
granted, and checked only that the `FnSig` `hi()` was in the same
`SourceFile` as the `body_span`.
I actually drop the `hi()` though, and extend the `FnSig` span to the
`body_span.lo()`, so I really should have simply checked that the
`FnSig` span's `lo()` was in the `SourceFile` of the `body_span`.
r? `@tmandry`
cc: `@wesleywiser`
Fixes: #84180
For chained function calls separated by the `?` try operator, the
function call following the try operator produced a MIR `Call` span that
matched the span of the first call. The `?` try operator started a new
span, so the second call got no span.
It turns out the MIR `Call` terminator has a `func` `Operand`
for the `Constant` representing the function name, and the function
name's Span can be used to reset the starting position of the span.
further split up const_fn feature flag
This continues the work on splitting up `const_fn` into separate feature flags:
* `const_fn_trait_bound` for `const fn` with trait bounds
* `const_fn_unsize` for unsizing coercions in `const fn` (looks like only `dyn` unsizing is still guarded here)
I don't know if there are even any things left that `const_fn` guards... at least libcore and liballoc do not need it any more.
`@oli-obk` are you currently able to do reviews?
Fixes: #83792
MIR `InstrumentCoverage` assumed the `FnSig` span was contained within a
single file, but this is not always the case. Some macro constructions
can result in a span that starts in one `SourceFile` and ends in a
different one.
The `FnSig` span is included in coverage results as long as that span is
in the same `SourceFile` and the same macro context, but by assuming the
`FnSig` span's `hi()` and `lo()` were in the same file, I took this for
granted, and checked only that the `FnSig` `hi()` was in the same
`SourceFile` as the `body_span`.
I actually drop the `hi()` though, and extend the `FnSig` span to the
`body_span.lo()`, so I really should have simply checked that the
`FnSig` span's `lo()` was in the `SourceFile` of the `body_span`.
Implement a lint that highlights all moves larger than a configured limit
Tracking issue: #83518
[MCP 420](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/420) still ~blazing~ in progress
r? ```@pnkfelix```
The main open issue I see with this minimal impl of the feature is that the lint is immediately "stable" (so it can be named on stable), even if it is never executed on stable. I don't think we have the concept of unstable lint names or hiding lint names without an active feature gate, so that would be a bigger change.
Suggest `.as_ref()` on borrow error involving `Option`/`Result`
When encountering a E0382 borrow error involving an `Option` or `Result`
provide a suggestion to use `.as_ref()` on the prior move location to
avoid the move.
Fix#84165.
coverage of async function bodies should match non-async
This fixes some missing coverage within async function bodies.
Commit 1 demonstrates the problem in the fixed issue, and commit 2 corrects it.
Fixes: #83985
When encountering a E0382 borrow error involving an `Option` or `Result`
provide a suggestion to use `.as_ref()` on the prior move location to
avoid the move.
Fix#84165.
This message is emitted as guidance by the compiler when a developer attempts to reassign a value to an immutable variable. Following the message will always currently work, but it may not always be the best course of action; following the 'consider ...' messaging pattern provides a hint to the developer that it could be wise to explore other alternatives.
Don't concatenate binders across types
Partially addresses #83737
There's actually two issues that I uncovered in #83737. The first is that we are concatenating bound vars across types, i.e. in
```
F: Fn(&()) -> &mut (dyn Future<Output = ()> + Unpin)
```
the bound vars on `Future` get set as `for<anon>` since those are the binders on `Fn(&()`. This is obviously wrong, since we should only concatenate directly nested trait refs. This is solved here by introducing a new `TraitRefBoundary` scope, that we put around the "syntactical" trait refs and basically don't allow concatenation across.
Now, this alone *shouldn't* be a super terrible problem. At least not until you consider the other issue, which is a much more elusive and harder to design a "perfect" fix. A repro can be seen in:
```
use core::future::Future;
async fn handle<F>(slf: &F)
where
F: Fn(&()) -> &mut (dyn for<'a> Future<Output = ()> + Unpin),
{
(slf)(&()).await;
}
```
Notice the `for<'a>` around `Future`. Here, `'a` is unused, so the `for<'a>` Binder gets changed to a `for<>` Binder in the generator witness, but the "local decl" still has it. This has heavy intersections with region anonymization and erasing. Luckily, it's not *super* common to find this unique set of circumstances. It only became apparently because of the first issue mentioned here. However, this *is* still a problem, so I'm leaving #83737 open.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Use AnonConst for asm! constants
This replaces the old system which used explicit promotion. See #83169 for more background.
The syntax for `const` operands is still the same as before: `const <expr>`.
Fixes#83169
Because the implementation is heavily based on inline consts, we suffer from the same issues:
- We lose the ability to use expressions derived from generics. See the deleted tests in `src/test/ui/asm/const.rs`.
- We are hitting the same ICEs as inline consts, for example #78174. It is unlikely that we will be able to stabilize this before inline consts are stabilized.
2229: Fix diagnostic issue when using FakeReads in closures
This PR fixes a diagnostic issue caused by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82536. A temporary work around was used in this merged PR which involved feature gating the addition of FakeReads introduced as a result of pattern matching in closures.
The fix involves adding an optional closure DefId to ForLet and ForMatchedPlace FakeReadCauses. This DefId will only be added if a closure pattern matches a Place starting with an Upvar.
r? ```@nikomatsakis```
Only public items are monomorphization roots. This can be confirmed by noting that this program compiles:
```rust
fn foo<T>() { if true { foo::<Option<T>>() } }
fn bar() { foo::<()>() }
```
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #83535 (Break when there is a mismatch in the type count)
- #83721 (Add a button to copy the "use statement")
- #83740 (Fix comment typo in once.rs)
- #83745 (Add my new email address to .mailmap)
- #83754 (Add test to ensure search tabs behaviour)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Break when there is a mismatch in the type count
When other errors are generated, there can be a mismatch between the
amount of input types in MIR, and the amount in the function itself.
Break from the comparative loop if this is the case to prevent
out-of-bounds.
Fixes#83499
normalize mir::Constant differently from ty::Const in preparation for valtrees
Valtrees are unable to represent many kind of constant values (this is on purpose). For constants that are used at runtime, we do not need a valtree representation and can thus use a different form of evaluation. In order to make this explicit and less fragile, I added a `fold_constant` method to `TypeFolder` and implemented it for normalization. Normalization can now, when it wants to eagerly evaluate a constant, normalize `mir::Constant` directly into a `mir::ConstantKind::Val` instead of relying on the `ty::Const` evaluation.
In the future we can get rid of the `ty::Const` in there entirely and add our own `Unevaluated` variant to `mir::ConstantKind`. This would allow us to remove the `promoted` field from `ty::ConstKind::Unevaluated`, as promoteds can never occur in the type system.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`
r? `@lcnr`
Run LLVM coverage instrumentation passes before optimization passes
This matches the behavior of Clang and allows us to remove several
hacks which were needed to ensure functions weren't optimized away
before reaching the instrumentation pass.
Fixes#83429
cc `@richkadel`
r? `@tmandry`
This matches the behavior of Clang and allows us to remove several
hacks which were needed to ensure functions weren't optimized away
before reaching the instrumentation pass.
- Add back various diagnostic methods on `Session`.
It seems unfortunate to duplicate these in so many places, but in the
meantime, making the API inconsistent between `Session` and `Diagnostic`
also seems unfortunate.
- Add back TyCtxtAt methods
These will hopefully be used in the near future.
- Add back `with_const`, it would need to be added soon after anyway.
- Add back `split()` and `get_mut()`, they're useful.
- Add back `HirIdVec`, with a comment that it will soon be used.
- Add back `*_region` functions, with a comment they may soon be used.
- Remove `-Z borrowck_stats` completely. It didn't do anything.
- Remove `make_nop` completely.
- Add back `current_loc`, which is used by an out-of-tree tool.
- Fix style nits
- Remove `AtomicCell` with `cfg(parallel_compiler)` for consistency.