Add more license annotations
This PR updates the `.reuse/dep5` file to include more accurate licensing data for everything in the repository (*excluding* submodules and dependencies). Some decisions were made in this PR:
* The standard copyright attribution for files maintained by us is "The Rust Project Developers (see https://thanks.rust-lang.org)", to avoid having to maintain an in-tree `AUTHORS` file.
* For files that have specific licensing terms, we added the terms to the `.reuse/dep5` rather than adding SPDX comments in the files themselves.
* REUSE picks up any comment/text line with `Copyright` on it, so I had to sprinkle around `REUSE-IgnoreStart` and `REUSE-IgnoreEnd` comments.
The rendered `COPYRIGHT` file is available at https://gist.github.com/pietroalbini/efb81103f69596d39758114f3f6a8688.
r? `@pnkfelix`
Remove an extraneous include
SymbolWrapper.cpp doesn't use std::optional or llvm::Optional, so this patch removes the extraneous include. Note that llvm/ADT/Optional.h has been deprecated upstream. This patch ensures that SymbolWrapper.cpp continues to compile even after the upcoming removal of Optional.h.
Add `--no-undefined-version` link flag and fix associated breakage
LLVM upstream sets `--no-undefined-version` by default in lld: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135402.
Due to a bug in how version scripts are generated, this breaks the `dylib` output type for most crates. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105967#issuecomment-1428671533 for details.
This PR adds the flag to gcc flavor linkers in anticipation of this LLVM change rolling in, and patches `rustc` to not attempt to export `__rust_*` allocator symbols when they weren't generated.
Fixes#105967
Stabilize movbe target feature
Almost all "old" x86 target features are stable. As far as I can tell, these are the last two unstable features in the `x86-64-v2` or `x86-64-v3` microarchitecture levels, so I'm not sure if it was an oversight or if they're still unstable for a reason (see #106323 for `f16c`).
Note that this only stabilizes the target features, and not the intrinsics.
cc ```@Amanieu```
r? ```@rust-lang/lang```
Relax ordering rules for `asm!` operands
The `asm!` and `global_asm!` macros require their operands to appear strictly in the following order:
- Template strings
- Positional operands
- Named operands
- Explicit register operands
- `clobber_abi`
- `options`
This is overly strict and can be inconvienent when building complex `asm!` statements with macros. This PR relaxes the ordering requirements as follows:
- Template strings must still come before all other operands.
- Positional operands must still come before named and explicit register operands.
- Named and explicit register operands can be freely mixed.
- `options` and `clobber_abi` can appear in any position after the template strings.
r? ```````@joshtriplett```````
Don't even try to combine consts with incompatible types
~I left a more detailed explanation for why this fixes this issue in the UI test, but in general, we should not try to unify const infer vars and rigid consts if they have incompatible types. That's because we don't want something like a `ConstArgHasType` predicate to suddenly go from passing to failing, or vice versa, due to a shallow resolve.~
1. Use the `type_of` for a parameter in `try_eval_lit_or_param`, instead of the "expected" type from a `WithOptConstParam` def id.
2. Don't combine consts that have incompatible types.
Fixes#108781
feat: implement better error for manual impl of `Fn*` traits
Fixes#39259
cc `@estebank` (you gave me some advice in the linked issue, would you like to review?)
Do not ICE when we have fn pointer `Fn` obligations with bound vars in the self type
We never supported solving `for<'a> fn(&'a ()): Fn(&'a ())` -- I tried to add that support in #104929, but iirc `@lcnr` wanted to support this more generally by eagerly instantiating trait predicate binders with placeholders. That never happened due to blockers in the old solver, but we probably shouldn't ICE in any case.
On the bright side, this passes on the new solver :^)
Emit alias-eq when equating numeric var and projection
This doesn't fix everything having to do with projections and infer vars, but it does fix a common case I saw in HIR typeck.
r? `@lcnr`
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #108879 (Unconstrained terms should account for infer vars being equated)
- #108936 (Rustdoc: don't hide anonymous reexport)
- #108940 (Add myself to compiler reviewers list)
- #108945 (Make some report and emit errors take DefIds instead of BodyIds)
- #108946 (Document the resulting values produced when using `From<bool>` on floats)
- #108956 (Make ptr::from_ref and ptr::from_mut in #106116 const.)
- #108960 (Remove `body_def_id` from `Inherited`)
- #108963 (only call git on git checkouts during bootstrap)
- #108964 (Fix the docs for pointer method with_metadata_of)
Failed merges:
- #108950 (Directly construct Inherited in typeck.)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Introduce a no-op `PlaceMention` statement for `let _ =`.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/54003
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80059
Split from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101500
This PR introduces a new `PlaceMention` statement dedicated to matches that neither introduce bindings nor ascribe types. Without this, all traces of the match would vanish from MIR, making it impossible to diagnose unsafety or use in #101500.
This allows to mark `let _ = <unsafe union access or dereference>` as requiring an unsafe block.
Nominating for lang team, as this introduces an extra error.
Remove `body_def_id` from `Inherited`
We can just use the body id from the obligation cause.
Follow-up to #108945, only my commit is relevant.
r? `@cjgillot` cc `@spastorino`
Unconstrained terms should account for infer vars being equated
Follow-up from the canonicalization PR, wanted to break this one out so I can approve the other PR.
r? `@lcnr`
This is fixed by simply using the currently registered target in the
current session. We need to use it because of target json that are not
by design included in the rustc list of targets.
feat/refactor: improve errors in case of ident with number at start
Improve parser code when we parse a integer (or float) literal but expect an identifier. We emit an error message saying that identifiers can't begin with numbers. This PR just improves that code and expands it to all identifiers. Note that I haven't implemented error recovery (this didn't exist before anyway), I might do that in a follow up PR.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #108754 (Retry `pred_known_to_hold_modulo_regions` with fulfillment if ambiguous)
- #108759 (1.41.1 supported 32-bit Apple targets)
- #108839 (Canonicalize root var when making response from new solver)
- #108856 (Remove DropAndReplace terminator)
- #108882 (Tweak E0740)
- #108898 (Set `LIBC_CHECK_CFG=1` when building Rust code in bootstrap)
- #108911 (Improve rustdoc-gui/tester.js code a bit)
- #108916 (Remove an unused return value in `rustc_hir_typeck`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do not consider `&mut *x` as mutating `x` in `CopyProp`
This PR removes an unfortunate overly cautious case from the current implementation.
Found by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105274 cc `@saethlin`
Canonicalize root var when making response from new solver
During trait solving, if we equate two inference variables `?0` and `?1` but don't equate them with any rigid types, then `InferCtxt::probe_ty_var` will return `Err` for both of these. The canonicalizer code will then canonicalize the variables independently(!), and the response will not reflect the fact that these two variables have been made equal.
This hinders inference and I also don't think it's sound? I haven't thought too much about it past that, so let's talk about it.
r? ``@lcnr``
Retry `pred_known_to_hold_modulo_regions` with fulfillment if ambiguous
Fixes#108721
The problem here is that when we're checking `is_sized_raw` during codegen on some type that has a lot of opaques in it, something emits several nested obligations that are individually ambiguous, but when processed together in a loop then apply modulo regions. Since the `evaluate_predicates_recursively` inner loop doesn't process predicates until they stop changing, we return `EvaluatedToAmbig`, which makes the sized check return false incorrectly. See:
f15f0ea739/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/mod.rs (L596-L606)
... Compared to the analogous loop in the new solver:
f15f0ea739/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/solve/mod.rs (L481-L512)
To fix this, if we get ambiguous during `pred_known_to_hold_modulo_regions`, just retry the obligation in a fulfillment context.
--
Unfortunately... I don't have a test for this. I've only tested this locally. Pending minimization :/
r? types
Rename `MapInPlace` as `FlatMapInPlace`.
After removing the `map_in_place` method, which isn't much use because modifying every element in a collection such as a `Vec` can be done trivially with iteration.
r? ``@lqd``
Suppress copy impl error when post-normalized type references errors
Suppress spurious errors from the `Copy` impl validity check when fields have bad types *post*-normalization, instead of just pre-normalization.
----
The const-generics test regressed recently due to #107965, cc `````@BoxyUwU.`````
* I think it's because `[_; 0u32]: Copy` now fails to hold because a nested obligation `ConstArgHasType(0u32, usize)` fails.
* It's interesting that `[const_error]` shows up in the type only after normalization, though, but I'm pretty sure that it's due to the evaluate call that happens when normalizing unevaluated consts.
StableMIR: Proof-of-concept implementation + test
This PR is part of the [project Stable MIR](https://github.com/rust-lang/project-stable-mir). The PR deletes old re-exports from rustc_smir and introduces a proof-of-concept implementation for APIs to retrieve crate information.
The implementation follows the [design described here](https://hackmd.io/XhnYHKKuR6-LChhobvlT-g?view), but instead of using separate crates for the implementation, it uses separate modules inside `rustc_smir`.
The API introduced at this point should be seen just as an example on how we are planning to structure the communication between tools and the compiler.
I have not explored yet what should be the right granularity, the best starting point for users, neither the best way to implement it.
r? ``````@oli-obk``````
This was previously needed because the indirection used to hide some unexplained lifetime errors, which it turned out were related to the `min_choice` algorithm.
Removing the indirection also solves a couple of cycle errors, large moves and makes async blocks support the `#[track_caller]` annotation.
always resolve to universal regions if possible
`RegionConstraintCollector::opportunistic_resolve_var`, which is used in canonicalization and projection logic, doesn't resolve the region var to an equal universal region. So if we have equated `'static == '1 == '2`, it doesn't resolve `'1` or `'2` to `'static`. Now it does!
Addresses review comment https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107376#discussion_r1093233687.
r? `@lcnr`
In case a variable is unified with two universal regions from different
universes, use the one with the lower universe as it has a higher chance
of being compatible with the variable.
SymbolWrapper.cpp doesn't use std::optional or llvm::Optional, so this
patch removes the extraneous include. Note that llvm/ADT/Optional.h
has been deprecated upstream. This patch ensures that
SymbolWrapper.cpp continues to compile even after the upcoming removal
of Optional.h.
Do not implement HashStable for HashSet (MCP 533)
This PR removes all occurrences of `HashSet` in query results, replacing it either with `FxIndexSet` or with `UnordSet`, and then removes the `HashStable` implementation of `HashSet`. This is part of implementing [MCP 533](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/533), that is, removing the `HashStable` implementations of all collection types with unstable iteration order.
The changes are mostly mechanical. The only place where additional sorting is happening is in Miri's override implementation of the `exported_symbols` query.
After removing the `map_in_place` method, which isn't much use because
modifying every element in a collection such as a `Vec` can be done
trivially with iteration.
The crate hash is needed:
- if debug assertions are enabled, or
- if incr. comp. is enabled, or
- if metadata is being generated, or
- if `-C instrumentation-coverage` is enabled.
This commit avoids computing the crate hash when these conditions are
all false, such as when doing a release build of a binary crate.
It uses `Option` to store the hashes when needed, rather than
computing them on demand, because some of them are needed in multiple
places and computing them on demand would make compilation slower.
The commit also removes `Owner::hash_without_bodies`. There is no
benefit to pre-computing that one, it can just be done in the normal
fashion.
Account for binders correctly when adding default RPITIT method assumption
As of #108203, we install extra projection predicates into the param-env of a default trait method when it has return-position `impl Trait` (or is async).
The implementation didn't account for the fact that it's walking into and out of binders, so we just need to shift all the debruijn indices accordingly when constructing the projection predicates.
Fixes#108579
r? types
Make `rustc_query_system` take `QueryConfig` by instance.
This allows for easy switching between virtual tables and specialized instances for queries. It also has the benefit of less turbofish. `QueryStorage` has also been merged with `QueryCache`.
Split out from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107937.
r? `@cjgillot`
feat: impl better help for `.poll()` not found on `impl Future`
Partially address #108572
I'd like to also address suggestions for generalized `Self` parameters as well. That'll be a separate PR.
Add `round_ties_even` to `f32` and `f64`
Tracking issue: #96710
Redux of #82273. See also #55107
Adds a new method, `round_ties_even`, to `f32` and `f64`, that rounds the float to the nearest integer , rounding halfway cases to the number with an even least significant bit. Uses the `roundeven` LLVM intrinsic to do this.
Of the five IEEE 754 rounding modes, this is the only one that doesn't already have a round-to-integer function exposed by Rust (others are `round`, `floor`, `ceil`, and `trunc`). Ties-to-even is also the rounding mode used for int-to-float and float-to-float `as` casts, as well as float arithmentic operations. So not having an explicit rounding method for it seems like an oversight.
Bikeshed: this PR currently uses `round_ties_even` for the name of the method. But maybe `round_ties_to_even` is better, or `round_even`, or `round_to_even`?
Remove `allow(potential_query_instability)` from `borrowck`
cc #84447
Replace uses of `FxHash*` with `FxIndex*`. One `#[allow]` for a HashMap in an external crate but the output is sorted afterwards.
fix multiple issues when promoting type-test subject
Multiple interdependent fixes. See linked issues for a short description of each.
When Promoting a type-test `T: 'a` from within the closure back to its parent function, there are a couple pre-existing bugs and limitations. They were exposed by the recent changes to opaque types because the type-test subject (`T`) is no longer a simple ParamTy.
Commit 1:
Fixes#108635Fixes#107426
Commit 2:
Fixes#108639
Commit 3:
Fixes#107516
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #107801 (const_eval: `implies_by` in `rustc_const_unstable`)
- #108750 (Fix `ObligationCtxt::sub`)
- #108780 (Add regression tests for issue 70919)
- #108786 (Check for free regions in MIR validation)
- #108790 (Do not ICE when interpreting a cast between non-monomorphic types)
- #108803 (Do not ICE when failing to normalize in ConstProp.)
- #108807 (Emit the suspicious_auto_trait_impls for negative impls as well)
- #108812 (Add regression test for #98444)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do not ICE when failing to normalize in ConstProp.
There is no reason to delay a bug there, as we bubble up the failure as TooGeneric.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97728
Check for free regions in MIR validation
This turns https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108720 into a MIR validation failure that will reproduce without debug-assertions enabled.
```
error: internal compiler error: broken MIR in Item(WithOptConstParam { did: DefId(0:296 ~ futures_util[3805]::future::future::remote_handle::{impl#3}::poll), const_param_did: None }) (after pass ScalarReplacementOfAggregates) at bb0[0]:
Free regions in optimized runtime-post-cleanup MIR
--> /home/ben/.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/futures-util-0.3.26/src/future/future/remote_handle.rs:96:13
|
96 | let this = self.project();
| ^^^^
```
const_eval: `implies_by` in `rustc_const_unstable`
Fixes#107605.
Extend support for `implies_by` (from `#[stable]` and `#[unstable]`) to `#[rustc_const_stable]` and `#[rustc_const_unstable]`.
cc ``@steffahn``
Allow using `bool` instead of `Option<()>` in diagnostics
~~Disallow the unit type for `#[help]`, `#[note]` etc, instead using `bool` to express optional annotations without a span which I believe is more intuitive.~~
~~Test output ordering has changed in a few places, where a field was of type `()` and the annotation has been moved to the struct itself. If any of these changes are an issue, this can be restricted to allowing specifically `()`, and not `Option<()>`~~
~~Actual changes here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108402/files#diff-815b1d8debfc564112bd51093791d7c3f2ee288a37a8f5c0e89c11d1f609b4c0~~
Allows using `bool` in derive diagnostics to indicate an optional subdiagnostic without a span, where previously `Option<()>` had to be used
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics
rustc_middle: Remove trait `DefIdTree`
This trait was a way to generalize over both `TyCtxt` and `Resolver`, but now `Resolver` has access to `TyCtxt`, so this trait is no longer necessary.
Desugaring of drop and replace at MIR build
This commit desugars the drop and replace deriving from an
assignment at MIR build, avoiding the construction of the
`DropAndReplace` terminator (which will be removed in a following PR).
In order to retain the same error messages for replaces a new
`DesugaringKind::Replace` variant is introduced.
The changes in the borrowck are also useful for future work in moving drop elaboration
before borrowck, as no `DropAndReplace` would be present there anymore.
Notes on test diffs:
* `tests/ui/borrowck/issue-58776-borrowck-scans-children`: the assignment deriving from the desugaring kills the borrow.
* `tests/ui/async-await/async-fn-size-uninit-locals.rs`, `tests/mir-opt/issue_41110.test.ElaborateDrops.after.mir`, `tests/mir-opt/issue_41888.main.ElaborateDrops.after.mir`: drop elaboration generates (or reads from) a useless drop flag due to an issue with the dataflow analysis. Will be fixed independently by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106430.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104488 for more context
Make compressed rmeta contain compressed data length after header
Fixes#90056, which is caused by link.exe introducing padding to the `.rustc` section, since it assumes this will have no effect besides allowing it to possibly use the extra space in future links.
Fuchsia is in the process of implementing the RISC-V support. This
change implements the minimal Rust compiler support. The support for
building runtime libraries will be implemented in follow up changes
once Fuchsia SDK has the RISC-V support.
Don't call `temporary_scope` twice.
`mirror_expr_inner` calls `temporary_scope`. It then calls `make_mirror_unadjusted` which makes an identical call to `temporary_scope`.
This commit changes the `mirror_expr_inner` to get the `temp_lifetime` out of the expression produced by `make_mirror_unadjusted`, similar to how it currently gets the type.
r? `@cjgillot`
rustc_expand: make proc-macro derive error translatable
kept this tiny so as to point to it as an example in rustc-dev-guide
`@rustbot` label +A-translation
Remove `NormalizationError::ConstantKind`
No longer in use by `TryNormalizeAfterErasingRegionsFolder` (as of #102355 / e8150fa60c it seems). It's making `LayoutError`, etc. kinda large -- that was noticed by `@zoxc.`