Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #114079 (Use `upvar_tys` in more places, make it return a list)
- #114166 (Add regression test for resolving `--extern libc=test.rlib`)
- #114321 (get auto traits for parallel rustc)
- #114335 (fix and extend ptr_comparison test)
- #114347 (x.py print more detailed format files and untracked files count)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Improve `invalid_reference_casting` lint
This PR is a follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111567 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113422.
This PR does multiple things:
- First it adds support for deferred de-reference, the goal is to support code like this, where the casting and de-reference are not done on the same expression
```rust
let myself = self as *const Self as *mut Self;
*myself = Self::Ready(value);
```
- Second it does not lint anymore on SB/TB UB code by only checking assignments (`=`, `+=`, ...) and creation of mutable references `&mut *`
- Thirdly it greatly improves the diagnostics in particular for cast from `&mut` to `&mut` or assignments
- ~~And lastly it renames the lint from `cast_ref_to_mut` to `invalid_reference_casting` which is more consistent with the ["rules"](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/2845) and also more consistent with what the lint checks~~ *https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113422*
This PR is best reviewed commit by commit.
r? compiler
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`
Fix invalid slice coercion suggestion reported in turbofish
This PR fixes the invalid slice coercion suggestion reported in turbofish and inferred generics by not emitting them.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110063
Don't check unnecessarily that impl trait is RPIT
We have this random `return_type_impl_trait` function to detect if a function returns an RPIT which is used in outlives suggestions, but removing it doesn't actually change any diagnostics. Let's just remove it.
Also, suppress a spurious outlives error from a ReError.
Fixes#114274
Account for macros when suggesting a new let binding
Provide a structured suggestion when the expression comes from a macro expansion:
```
error[E0716]: temporary value dropped while borrowed
--> $DIR/borrowck-let-suggestion.rs:2:17
|
LL | let mut x = vec![1].iter();
| ^^^^^^^ - temporary value is freed at the end of this statement
| |
| creates a temporary value which is freed while still in use
LL |
LL | x.use_mut();
| - borrow later used here
|
= note: this error originates in the macro `vec` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
help: consider using a `let` binding to create a longer lived value
|
LL ~ let binding = vec![1];
LL ~ let mut x = binding.iter();
|
```
cleanup: remove pointee types
This can't be merged until the oldest LLVM version we support uses opaque pointers, which will be the case after #114148. (Also note `-Cllvm-args="-opaque-pointers=0"` can technically be used in LLVM 15, though I don't think we should support that configuration.)
I initially hoped this would provide some minor perf win, but in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105412#issuecomment-1341224450 it had very little impact, so this is only valuable as a cleanup.
As a followup, this will enable #96242 to be resolved.
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` label S-blocked
Improve diagnostic for wrong borrow on binary operations
This PR improves the diagnostic for wrong borrow on binary operations by suggesting to reborrow on appropriate expressions.
```diff
+ = note: an implementation for `&Foo * &Foo` exist
+ help: consider reborrowing both sides
+ |
+ LL | let _ = &*ref_mut_foo * &*ref_mut_foo;
+ | ++ ++
```
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109352
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.
Detect trait upcasting through struct tail unsizing in new solver select
Oops, we were able to hide trait upcasting behind a parent unsize goal that evaluated to `Certainty::Yes`. Let's do rematching for `Certainty::Yes` unsize goals with `BuiltinImplSource::Misc` sources (corresponding to all of the other unsize rules) to make sure we end up selecting any nested goals which may be satisfied via `BuiltinImplSource::TraitUpcasting` or `::TupleUnsizing`.
r? ``@lcnr``
Update lexer emoji diagnostics to Unicode 15.0
This replaces the `unic-emoji-char` dep tree (which hasn't been updated for a while) with `unicode-properties` crate which contains Unicode 15.0 data.
Improves diagnostics for added emoji characters in recent years. (See tests).
cc #101840
cc ``@Manishearth``
Map RPITIT's opaque type bounds back from projections to opaques
An RPITIT in a program's AST is eventually translated into both a projection GAT and an opaque. The opaque is used for default trait methods, like:
```
trait Foo {
fn bar() -> impl Sized { 0i32 }
}
```
The item bounds for both the projection and opaque are identical, and both have a *projection* self ty. This is mostly okay, since we can normalize this projection within the default trait method body to the opaque, but it does two things:
1. it leads to bugs in places where we don't normalize item bounds, like `deduce_future_output_from_obligations`
2. it leads to extra match arms that are both suspicious looking and also easy to miss
This PR maps the opaque type bounds of the RPITIT's *opaque* back to the opaque's self type to avoid this quirk. Then we can fix the UI test for #108304 (1.) and also remove a bunch of match arms (2.).
Fixes#108304
r? `@spastorino`
Check lazy type aliases for well-formedness
Previously we didn't check if `T: Mul` holds given lazy `type Alias<T> = <T as Mul>::Output;`.
Now we do. It only makes sense.
`@rustbot` label F-lazy_type_alias
r? `@oli-obk`
Only golden arches
A number of tests in the test suite have applied the somewhat comedic practice of ignoring *every* single target architecture that rustc has ever supported. This is silly, when they are clearly tests built around certain assumptions, primarily of the x86-64 architecture, or in one case when they are only relevant for a handful of 32-bit targets. This has even resulted, in one case, in the same architecture being ignored twice!
Document these better, and use a "revision + only-arch" idiom in the test headers to denote the "golden arches" that actually pass these tests.
Don't install default projection bound for return-position `impl Trait` in trait methods with no body
This ensures that we never try to project to an opaque type in a trait method that has no body to infer its hidden type, which means we never later call `type_of` on that opaque. This is because opaque types try to reveal their hidden type when proving auto traits.
I thought about this a lot, and I think this is a fix that's less likely to introduce other strange downstream ICEs than #113461.
Fixes#113434
r? `@spastorino`
Fix invalid suggestion for mismatched types in closure arguments
This PR fixes the invalid suggestion for mismatched types in closure arguments.
The invalid suggestion came from a wrongly created span in the parser for closure arguments that don't have a type specified. Specifically, the span in this case was the last token span, but in the case of tuples, the span represented the last parenthesis instead of the whole tuple, which is fixed by taking the more accurate span of the pattern.
There is one unfortunate downside of this fix, it worsens even more the diagnostic for mismatched types in closure args without an explicit type. This happens because there is no correct span for implied inferred type. I tried also fixing this but it's a rabbit hole.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114180
`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
The invalid suggestion came from a wrongly created span in `rustc_parse'
for closure arguments that didn't have a type specified. Specifically,
the span in this case was the last token span, but in the case of
tuples, the span represented the last parenthesis instead of the whole
tuple, which is fixed by taking the more accurate span of the pattern.
Combining revisions with only-arch allows specifying
that a test only applies to a handful of targets.
This allows removing a large amount of repetition
in the test suite for tests that do not benefit.
The revisions are suboptimal for this for some tests,
so they aren't preferred in those cases.