Specify a log level in tracing instrument macro explicitly.
Additionally reduce the used log level from a default info level to a
debug level (all of those appear to be developer oriented logs, so there
should be no need to include them in release builds).
Querying layout of a generator requires its optimized MIR. Thus
computing layout during MIR optimization of a generator might create a
query cycle. Disable RemoveZsts in generators to avoid the issue
(similar approach is used in ConstProp transform already).
Use a separate interner type for UniqueTypeId
Using symbol::Interner makes it very easy to mixup UniqueTypeId symbols
with the global interner. In fact the Debug implementation of
UniqueTypeId did exactly this.
Using a separate interner type also avoids prefilling the interner with
unused symbols and allow for optimizing the symbol interner for parallel
access without negatively affecting the single threaded module codegen.
Const drop
The changes are pretty primitive at this point. But at least it works. ^-^
Problems with the current change that I can think of now:
- [x] `~const Drop` shouldn't change anything in the non-const world.
- [x] types that do not have drop glues shouldn't fail to satisfy `~const Drop` in const contexts. `struct S { a: u8, b: u16 }` This might not fail for `needs_non_const_drop`, but it will fail in `rustc_trait_selection`.
- [x] The current change accepts types that have `const Drop` impls but have non-const `Drop` glue.
Fixes#88424.
Significant Changes:
- `~const Drop` is no longer treated as a normal trait bound. In non-const contexts, this bound has no effect, but in const contexts, this restricts the input type and all of its transitive fields to either a) have a `const Drop` impl or b) can be trivially dropped (i.e. no drop glue)
- `T: ~const Drop` will not be linted like `T: Drop`.
- Instead of recursing and iterating through the type in `rustc_mir::transform::check_consts`, we use the trait system to special case `~const Drop`. See [`rustc_trait_selection::...::candidate_assembly#assemble_const_drop_candidates`](https://github.com/fee1-dead/rust/blob/const-drop/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/candidate_assembly.rs#L817) and others.
Changes not related to `const Drop`ping and/or changes that are insignificant:
- `Node.constness_for_typeck` no longer returns `hir::Constness::Const` for type aliases in traits. This was previously used to hack how we determine default bound constness for items. But because we now use an explicit opt-in, it is no longer needed.
- Removed `is_const_impl_raw` query. We have `impl_constness`, and the only existing use of that query uses `HirId`, which means we can just operate it with hir.
- `ty::Destructor` now has a field `constness`, which represents the constness of the destructor.
r? `@oli-obk`
Fixes#88910
When we initially store a `NormalizedTy` in the projection cache,
we discard all obligations that we can (while ensuring that we
don't cause any issues with incremental compilation).
Marking a projection cache entry as 'completed' discards all
obligations associated with it. This can only cause problems,
since any obligations stored in the cache are there for a reason
(e.g. they evaluate to `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions`).
This commit removes `complete` and `complete_normalized` entirely.
Add linting on non_exhaustive structs and enum variants
Add ui tests for non_exhaustive reachable lint
Rename to non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns and avoid triggering on if let
This encoding allows for random access without an expensive upfront decoding
state which in turn allows simplifying the DefPathIndex lookup logic without
regressing performance.
Enum should prefer discriminant zero for niche
Given an enum with unassigned zero-discriminant, rust should prefer it for niche selection.
Zero as discriminant for `Option<Enum>` makes it possible for LLVM to optimize resulting asm.
- Eliminate branch when expected value coincides.
- Use smaller instruction `test eax, eax` instead of `cmp eax, ?`
- Possible interaction with zeroed memory?
Example:
```rust
pub enum Size {
One = 1,
Two = 2,
Three = 3,
}
pub fn handle(x: Option<Size>) -> u8 {
match x {
None => {0}
Some(size) => {size as u8}
}
}
```
In this case discriminant zero is available as a niche.
Above example on nightly:
```asm
mov eax, edi
cmp al, 4
jne .LBB0_2
xor eax, eax
.LBB0_2:
ret
```
PR:
```asm
mov eax, edi
ret
```
I created this PR because I had a performance regression when I tried to use an enum to represent legal grapheme byte-length for utf8.
Using an enum instead of `NonZeroU8` [here](d683304f5d/src/internal/decoder_incomplete.rs (L90))
resulted in a performance regression of about 5%.
I consider this to be a somewhat realistic benchmark.
Thanks to `@ogoffart` for pointing me in the right direction!
Edit: Updated description
Improve error message for missing trait in trait impl
Fixes#88818. For the following example:
```rust
struct S { }
impl for S { }
```
the current output is:
```
error: missing trait in a trait impl
--> t1.rs:2:5
|
2 | impl for S { }
| ^
```
With my changes, I get:
```
error: missing trait in a trait impl
--> t1.rs:2:5
|
2 | impl for S { }
| ^
|
help: add a trait here
|
2 | impl Trait for S { }
| +++++
help: for an inherent impl, drop this `for`
|
2 - impl for S { }
2 + impl S { }
|
```
Fix duplicate bounds for const_trait_impl
Fixes#88383.
Compare the constness of the candidates before winnowing and removing a `~const` `BoundCandidate`.
Use smaller spans for some structured suggestions
Use more accurate suggestion spans for
* argument parse error
* fully qualified path
* missing code block type
* numeric casts
Mark all of these as locals so the debugger does not try to interpret
them as being a pointer to the value. This extends the approach used in
PR #81898.
Currently, for the following code, the compiler produces the errors like the
following error:
```rust
struct Type<T>
impl<T: Clone> Type<T> {
fn const f() {}
}
```
```text
error[E0658]: trait bounds other than `Sized` on const fn parameters are unstable
--> ./test.rs:3:6
|
3 | impl<T: Clone> Type<T> {
| ^
|
= note: see issue #57563 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57563> for more information
= help: add `#![feature(const_fn_trait_bound)]` to the crate attributes to enable
```
This can be confusing (especially to newcomers) since the error mentions
"const fn parameters", but highlights only the impl.
This commits adds function highlighting, changing the error to the following:
```text
error[E0658]: trait bounds other than `Sized` on const fn parameters are unstable
--> ./test.rs:3:6
|
3 | impl<T: Clone> Type<T> {
| ^
4 | pub const fn f() {}
| ---------------- function declared as const here
|
= note: see issue #57563 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/57563> for more information
= help: add `#![feature(const_fn_trait_bound)]` to the crate attributes to enable
```
Using symbol::Interner makes it very easy to mixup UniqueTypeId symbols
with the global interner. In fact the Debug implementation of
UniqueTypeId did exactly this.
Using a separate interner type also avoids prefilling the interner with
unused symbols and allow for optimizing the symbol interner for parallel
access without negatively affecting the single threaded module codegen.
This PR adds a suggestion to replace an inexisting field for an
unmentioned field. Given the following code:
```rust
enum Foo {
Bar { alpha: u8, bravo: u8, charlie: u8 },
}
fn foo(foo: Foo) {
match foo {
Foo::Bar {
alpha,
beta, // `bravo` miswritten as `beta` here.
charlie,
} => todo!(),
}
}
```
the compiler now emits the error messages below.
```text
error[E0026]: variant `Foo::Bar` does not have a field named `beta`
--> src/lib.rs:9:13
|
9 | beta, // `bravo` miswritten as `beta` here.
| ^^^^
| |
| variant `Foo::Bar` does not have this field
| help: `Foo::Bar` has a field named `bravo`: `bravo`
```
Note that this suggestion is available iff the number of inexisting
fields and unmentioned fields are both 1.
ARMv6K Nintendo 3DS Tier 3 target added
Addition of the target specifications to build .elf files for Nintendo 3DS (ARMv6K, Horizon). Requires devkitARM 3DS toolkit for system libraries and arm-none-eabi-gcc linker.
Introduce NullOp::AlignOf
This PR introduces `Rvalue::NullaryOp(NullOp::AlignOf, ty)`, which will be lowered from `align_of`, similar to `size_of` lowering to `Rvalue::NullaryOp(NullOp::SizeOf, ty)`.
The changes are originally part of #88700 but since it's not dependent on other changes and could have performance impact on its own, it's separated into its own PR.
Add -Z panic-in-drop={unwind,abort} command-line option
This PR changes `Drop` to abort if an unwinding panic attempts to escape it, making the process abort instead. This has several benefits:
- The current behavior when unwinding out of `Drop` is very unintuitive and easy to miss: unwinding continues, but the remaining drops in scope are simply leaked.
- A lot of unsafe code doesn't expect drops to unwind, which can lead to unsoundness:
- https://github.com/servo/rust-smallvec/issues/14
- https://github.com/bluss/arrayvec/issues/3
- There is a code size and compilation time cost to this: LLVM needs to generate extra landing pads out of all calls in a drop implementation. This can compound when functions are inlined since unwinding will then continue on to process drops in the callee, which can itself unwind, etc.
- Initial measurements show a 3% size reduction and up to 10% compilation time reduction on some crates (`syn`).
One thing to note about `-Z panic-in-drop=abort` is that *all* crates must be built with this option for it to be sound since it makes the compiler assume that dropping `Box<dyn Any>` will never unwind.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/97
Rework DepthFirstSearch API
This expands the API to be more flexible, allowing for more visitation patterns
on graphs. This will be useful to avoid extra datasets (and allocations) in
cases where the expanded DFS API is sufficient.
This also fixes a bug with the previous DFS constructor, which left the start
node not marked as visited (even though it was immediately returned).
Commit written by ```@nikomatsakis``` originally, cherry picked from several commits in work on never type stabilization, but stands alone.
generic_const_exprs: use thir for abstract consts instead of mir
Changes `AbstractConst` building to use `thir` instead of `mir` so that there's less chance of consts unifying when they shouldn't because lowering to mir dropped information (see `abstract-consts-as-cast-5.rs` test)
r? `@lcnr`
Detect stricter constraints on gats where clauses in impls vs trait
I might try to see if I can do a bit more to improve these diagnostics, but any initial feedback is appreciated. I can also do any additional work in a followup PR.
r? `@estebank`
Encode spans relative to the enclosing item
The aim of this PR is to avoid recomputing queries when code is moved without modification.
MCP at https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/443
This is achieved by :
1. storing the HIR owner LocalDefId information inside the span;
2. encoding and decoding spans relative to the enclosing item in the incremental on-disk cache;
3. marking a dependency to the `source_span(LocalDefId)` query when we translate a span from the short (`Span`) representation to its explicit (`SpanData`) representation.
Since all client code uses `Span`, step 3 ensures that all manipulations
of span byte positions actually create the dependency edge between
the caller and the `source_span(LocalDefId)`.
This query return the actual absolute span of the parent item.
As a consequence, any source code motion that changes the absolute byte position of a node will either:
- modify the distance to the parent's beginning, so change the relative span's hash;
- dirty `source_span`, and trigger the incremental recomputation of all code that
depends on the span's absolute byte position.
With this scheme, I believe the dependency tracking to be accurate.
For the moment, the spans are marked during lowering.
I'd rather do this during def-collection,
but the AST MutVisitor is not practical enough just yet.
The only difference is that we attach macro-expanded spans
to their expansion point instead of the macro itself.
Refactor query forcing
The control flow in those functions was very complex, with several layers of continuations.
I tried to simplify the implementation, while keeping essentially the same logic.
Now, all code paths go through `try_execute_query` for the actual query execution.
Communication with the `dep_graph` and the live caches are the only difference between query getting/ensuring/forcing.
Fix ICE for functions with more than 65535 arguments
This pull request fixes#88577 by changing the `param_idx` field in the `Param` variant of `WellFormedLoc` from `u16` to `u32`, thus allowing for more than 65,535 arguments in a function. Note that I also added a regression test, but needed to add `// ignore-tidy-filelength` because the test is more than 8000 lines long.
Change more x64 size checks to not apply to x32.
Commit 95e096d6 changed a bunch of size checks already, but more have
been added, so this fixes the new ones the same way: the various size
checks that are conditional on target_arch = "x86_64" were not intended
to apply to x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32, so add
target_pointer_width = "64" to the conditions.
Fix non-capturing closure return type coercion
Fixes#88097. For the example given there:
```rust
fn peculiar() -> impl Fn(u8) -> u8 {
return |x| x + 1
}
```
which incorrectly reports an error, I noticed something weird in the debug log:
```
DEBUG rustc_typeck::check::coercion coercion::try_find_coercion_lub([closure@test.rs:2:12: 2:21], [closure@test.rs:2:12: 2:21], exprs=1 exprs)
```
Apparently, `try_find_coercion_lub()` thinks that the LUB for two closure types always has to be a function pointer (which explains the `expected closure, found fn pointer` error in #88097). There is one corner case where that isn't true, though — namely, when the two closure types are equal, in which case the trivial LUB is the type itself. This PR fixes this by inserting an explicit check for type equality in `try_find_coercion_lub()`.
rustc: use more correct span data in for loop desugaring
Fixes#82462
Before:
help: consider adding semicolon after the expression so its temporaries are dropped sooner, before the local variables declared by the block are dropped
|
LL | for x in DroppingSlice(&*v).iter(); {
| +
After:
help: consider adding semicolon after the expression so its temporaries are dropped sooner, before the local variables declared by the block are dropped
|
LL | };
| +
This seems like a reasonable fix: since the desugared "expr_drop_temps_mut" contains the entire desugared loop construct, its span should contain the entire loop construct as well.
Debug for unit-like enum variants.
The intent here is to allow LLVM to remove the switch entirely in favor of an
indexed load from a table of constant strings, which is likely what the
programmer would write in C. Unfortunately, LLVM currently doesn't perform this
optimization due to a bug, but there is [a
patch](https://reviews.llvm.org/D109565) that fixes this issue. I've verified
that, with that patch applied on top of this commit, Debug for unit-like tuple
variants becomes a load, reducing the O(n) code bloat to O(1).
Note that inlining `DebugTuple::finish()` wasn't enough to allow LLVM to
optimize the code properly; I had to avoid the abstraction entirely. Not using
the abstraction is likely better for compile time anyway.
Part of #88793.
Now that we encode spans relative to the items, the item's own span is
never actually hashed as part of the HIR.
In consequence, we explicitly include it in the crate hash to avoid
missing cross-crate invalidations.
RustWrapper: avoid deleted unclear attribute methods
These were deleted in https://reviews.llvm.org/D108614, and in C++ I
definitely see the argument for their removal. I didn't try and
propagate the changes up into higher layers of rustc in this change
because my initial goal was to get rustc working against LLVM HEAD
promptly, but I'm happy to follow up with some refactoring to make the
API on the Rust side match the LLVM API more directly (though the way
the enum works in Rust makes the API less scary IMO).
r? ``@nagisa`` cc ``@nikic``
Emit proper errors when on missing closure braces
This commit focuses on emitting clean errors for the following syntax
error:
```
Some(42).map(|a|
dbg!(a);
a
);
```
Previous implementation tried to recover after parsing the closure body
(the `dbg` expression) by replacing the next `;` with a `,`, which made
the next expression belong to the next function argument. As such, the
following errors were emitted (among others):
- the semicolon token was not expected,
- a is not in scope,
- Option::map is supposed to take one argument, not two.
This commit allows us to gracefully handle this situation by adding
giving the parser the ability to remember when it has just parsed a
closure body inside a function call. When this happens, we can treat the
unexpected `;` specifically and try to parse as much statements as
possible in order to eat the whole block. When we can't parse statements
anymore, we generate a clean error indicating that the braces are
missing, and return an ExprKind::Err.
Closes#88065.
r? `@estebank`
Fix stray notes when the source code is not available
Fixes#87060. To reproduce it with a local build of rustc, you have to copy the compiler (e.g. `build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage1/`) somewhere and then rename the compiler source directory (maybe there is a smarter way as well). Then, rustc won't find the standard library sources and report stray notes such as
```
note: deref defined here
```
with no location for "here". Another example I've found is this:
```rust
use std::ops::Add;
fn foo<T: Add<Output=()>>(x: T) {
x + x;
}
fn main() {}
```
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `x`
--> binop.rs:4:9
|
3 | fn foo<T: Add<Output=()>>(x: T) {
| - move occurs because `x` has type `T`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
4 | x + x;
| ----^
| | |
| | value used here after move
| `x` moved due to usage in operator
|
note: calling this operator moves the left-hand side
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
3 | fn foo<T: Add<Output=()> + Copy>(x: T) {
| ^^^^^^
error: aborting due to previous error
```
where, again, the note is supposed to point somewhere but doesn't. I have fixed this by checking whether the corresponding source code is actually available before emitting the note.
Add proc_macro::Span::{before, after}.
This adds `proc_macro::Span::before()` and `proc_macro::Span::after()` to get a zero width span at the start or end of the span.
These are equivalent to rustc's `Span::shrink_to_lo()` and `Span::shrink_to_hi()` but with a less cryptic name. They are useful when generating diagnostlics like "missing \<thing\> after \<thing\>".
E.g.
```rust
syn::Error::new(ident.span().after(), "missing `:` after field name").into_compile_error()
```
This commit focuses on emitting clean errors for the following syntax
error:
```
Some(42).map(|a|
dbg!(a);
a
);
```
Previous implementation tried to recover after parsing the closure body
(the `dbg` expression) by replacing the next `;` with a `,`, which made
the next expression belong to the next function argument. As such, the
following errors were emitted (among others):
- the semicolon token was not expected,
- a is not in scope,
- Option::map is supposed to take one argument, not two.
This commit allows us to gracefully handle this situation by adding
giving the parser the ability to remember when it has just parsed a
closure body inside a function call. When this happens, we can treat the
unexpected `;` specifically and try to parse as much statements as
possible in order to eat the whole block. When we can't parse statements
anymore, we generate a clean error indicating that the braces are
missing, and return an ExprKind::Err.
This reverts commit 059b68dd67.
Note that this was manually adjusted to retain some of the refactoring
introduced by commit 059b68dd67, so that it could
likewise retain the correction introduced in commit
5b4bc05fa5
Move *_max methods back to util
change to inline instead of inline(always)
Remove valid_range_exclusive from scalar
Use WrappingRange instead
implement always_valid_for in a safer way
Fix accidental edit
Only follow backwards edges during get_moved_indexes if the move path is
definitely initialized at loop entry. Otherwise, the error occurred prior to the
loop, so we ignore the backwards edges to avoid generating misleading "value
moved here, in previous iteration of loop" errors.
This patch also slightly improves the analysis of inits, including
NonPanicPathOnly initializations (which are ignored by
drop_flag_effects::for_location_inits). This is required for the definite
initialization analysis, but may also help find certain skipped reinits in rare
cases.
Patch passes all non-ignored src/test/ui testcases.
Split rustc_mir
The `rustc_mir` crate is the second largest in the compiler.
This PR splits it up into 5 crates:
- rustc_borrowck;
- rustc_const_eval;
- rustc_mir_dataflow;
- rustc_mir_transform;
- rustc_monomorphize.
Improve diagnostics for unary plus operators (#88276)
This pull request improves the diagnostics emitted on parsing a unary plus operator. See #88276.
Before:
```
error: expected expression, found `+`
--> src/main.rs:2:13
|
2 | let x = +1;
| ^ expected expression
```
After:
```
error: leading `+` is not supported
--> main.rs:2:13
|
2 | let x = +1;
| ^
| |
| unexpected `+`
| help: try removing the `+`
```
This expands the API to be more flexible, allowing for more visitation patterns
on graphs. This will be useful to avoid extra datasets (and allocations) in
cases where the expanded DFS API is sufficient.
This also fixes a bug with the previous DFS constructor, which left the start
node not marked as visited (even though it was immediately returned).
Suggest deriving traits if possible
This only applies to builtin derives as I don't think there is a
clean way to get the available derives in typeck.
Closes#85851
Remove `hir::GenericBound::Unsized`
Rather than "moving" the `?Sized` bounds to the param bounds, just also check where clauses in `astconv`. I also did some related cleanup here, but that's not strictly neccesary. Also going to do a perf run here.
r? `@estebank`
These were deleted in https://reviews.llvm.org/D108614, and in C++ I
definitely see the argument for their removal. I didn't try and
propagate the changes up into higher layers of rustc in this change
because my initial goal was to get rustc working against LLVM HEAD
promptly, but I'm happy to follow up with some refactoring to make the
API on the Rust side match the LLVM API more directly (though the way
the enum works in Rust makes the API less scary IMO).
r? @nagisa cc @nikic
Fix handling of +whole-archive native link modifier.
This PR fixes a bug in `add_upstream_native_libraries` that led to the `+whole-archive` modifier being ignored when linking in native libs.
~~Note that the PR does not address the situation when `+whole-archive` is combined with `+bundle`.~~
`@wesleywiser's` commit adds validation code that turns combining `+whole-archive` with `+bundle` into an error.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88085.
r? `@petrochenkov`
cc `@wesleywiser` `@gcoakes`
Mmap the incremental data instead of reading it.
Instead of reading the full incremental state using `fs::read_file`, we memmap it using a private read-only file-backed map.
This allows the system to reclaim any memory we are not using, while ensuring we are not polluted by
outside modifications to the file.
Suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83036#issuecomment-800458082 by `@bjorn3`
Change scope of temporaries in match guards
Each pattern in a match arm has its own copy of the match guard in MIR, with its own temporary, so it has to be dropped before the the guards are joined to the single copy of the arm. This PR changes `then_else_break` to allow it to put the temporary in the innermost scope possible. This change isn't done for `if` expressions because that affects a large number of mir-opt tests and could more significantly affect performance.
closes#88649
r? `@oli-obk`
Remove SmallVector mention
SmallVector is long gone, as it's been first replaced
by OneVector in commit e5e6375352,
which then has been removed entirely in favour of SmallVec in
commit 130a32fa72.
Improve structured tuple struct suggestion
Previously, the span was just for the constructor name, which meant it
would result in syntactically-invalid code when applied. Now, the span
is for the entire expression.
I also changed it to use `span_suggestion_verbose`, for two reasons:
1. Now that the suggestion span has been corrected, the output is a bit
cluttered and hard to read. Putting the suggestion its own window
creates more space.
2. It's easier to see what's being suggested, since now the version
after the suggestion is applied is shown.
r? `@davidtwco`
Avoid invoking the hir_crate query to traverse the HIR
Walking the HIR tree is done using the `hir_crate` query. However, this is unnecessary, since `hir_owner(CRATE_DEF_ID)` provides the same information. Since depending on `hir_crate` forces dependents to always be executed, this leads to unnecessary work.
By splitting HIR and attributes visits, we can avoid an edge to `hir_crate` when trying to visit the HIR tree.
Stop allocating vtable entries for non-object-safe methods
Current a vtable entry is allocated for all associated fns, even if the method is not object-safe: https://godbolt.org/z/h7vx6f35T
As a result, each vtable for `Iterator`' currently consumes 74 `usize`s. This PR stops allocating vtable entries for those methods, reducing vtable size of each `Iterator` vtable to 7 `usize`s.
Note that this PR introduces will cause more invocations of `is_vtable_safe_method`. So a perf run might be needed. If result isn't favorable then we might need to query-ify `is_vtable_safe_method`.
Each pattern in a match arm has its own copy of the match guard in MIR,
with its own temporary, so it has to be dropped before the the guards
are joined to the single copy of the arm.
Provide `layout_of` automatically (given tcx + param_env + error handling).
After #88337, there's no longer any uses of `LayoutOf` within `rustc_target` itself, so I realized I could move the trait to `rustc_middle::ty::layout` and redesign it a bit.
This is similar to #88338 (and supersedes it), but at no ergonomic loss, since there's no funky `C: LayoutOf<Ty = Ty>` -> `Ty: TyAbiInterface<C>` generic `impl` chain, and each `LayoutOf` still corresponds to one `impl` (of `LayoutOfHelpers`) for the specific context.
After this PR, this is what's needed to get `trait LayoutOf` (with the `layout_of` method) implemented on some context type:
* `TyCtxt`, via `HasTyCtxt`
* `ParamEnv`, via `HasParamEnv`
* a way to transform `LayoutError`s into the desired error type
* an error type of `!` can be paired with having `cx.layout_of(...)` return `TyAndLayout` *without* `Result<...>` around it, such as used by codegen
* this is done through a new `LayoutOfHelpers` trait (and so is specifying the type of `cx.layout_of(...)`)
When going through this path (and not bypassing it with a manual `impl` of `LayoutOf`), the end result is that only the error case can be customized, the query itself and the success paths are guaranteed to be uniform.
(**EDIT**: just noticed that because of the supertrait relationship, you cannot actually implement `LayoutOf` yourself, the blanket `impl` fully covers all possible context types that could ever implement it)
Part of the motivation for this shape of API is that I've been working on querifying `FnAbi::of_*`, and what I want/need to introduce for that looks a lot like the setup in this PR - in particular, it's harder to express the `FnAbi` methods in `rustc_target`, since they're much more tied to `rustc` concepts.
r? `@nagisa` cc `@oli-obk` `@bjorn3`
Commit 95e096d6 changed a bunch of size checks already, but more have
been added, so this fixes the new ones the same way: the various size
checks that are conditional on target_arch = "x86_64" were not intended
to apply to x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32, so add
target_pointer_width = "64" to the conditions.
Fix 2021 `dyn` suggestion that used code as label
The arguments to `span_suggestion` were in the wrong order, so the error
looked like this:
error[E0783]: trait objects without an explicit `dyn` are deprecated
--> src/test/ui/editions/dyn-trait-sugg-2021.rs:10:5
|
10 | Foo::hi(123);
| ^^^ help: <dyn Foo>: `use `dyn``
Now the error looks like this, as expected:
error[E0783]: trait objects without an explicit `dyn` are deprecated
--> src/test/ui/editions/dyn-trait-sugg-2021.rs:10:5
|
10 | Foo::hi(123);
| ^^^ help: use `dyn`: `<dyn Foo>`
This issue was only present in the 2021 error; the 2018 lint was
correct.
r? `@m-ou-se`
SmallVector is long gone, as it's been first replaced
by OneVector in commit e5e6375352,
which then has been removed entirely in favour of SmallVec in
commit 130a32fa72.
The arguments to `span_suggestion` were in the wrong order, so the error
looked like this:
error[E0783]: trait objects without an explicit `dyn` are deprecated
--> src/test/ui/editions/dyn-trait-sugg-2021.rs:10:5
|
10 | Foo::hi(123);
| ^^^ help: <dyn Foo>: `use `dyn``
Now the error looks like this, as expected:
error[E0783]: trait objects without an explicit `dyn` are deprecated
--> src/test/ui/editions/dyn-trait-sugg-2021.rs:10:5
|
10 | Foo::hi(123);
| ^^^ help: use `dyn`: `<dyn Foo>`
This issue was only present in the 2021 error; the 2018 lint was
correct.
As reported in issue #77175, the opaque type generated by the desugaring process of an async function uses the lifetimes defined by the originating function. The definition ID for the lifetimes in the opaque method is different from the one in the originating async function and it could therefore be considered a single use of the lifetimne, this causes the single_use_lifetimes lint to fail compilation if explicitly denied. This fix skips the lint for lifetimes used only once in generated opaque types for an async function that are declared in the parent async function definition.
Include debug info for the allocator shim
Issue Details:
In some cases it is necessary to generate an "allocator shim" to forward various Rust allocation functions (e.g., `__rust_alloc`) to an underlying function (e.g., `malloc`). However, since this allocator shim is a manually created LLVM module it is not processed via the normal module processing code and so no debug info is generated for it (if debugging info is enabled).
Fix Details:
* Modify the `debuginfo` code to allow creating debug info for a module without a `CodegenCx` (since it is difficult, and expensive, to create one just to emit some debug info).
* After creating the allocator shim add in basic debug info.
CrateLocator refactorings
This makes the `CrateLocator` a lot cleaner IMHO and much more self-contained. The last commit removes `extra_filename` from the crate metadata. This is an **insta-stable** change as it allows a crate like `libfoo-abc.rlib` to be used as dependency and then be renamed as `libfoo-bcd.rlib` while still being found as indirect dependency. This may reduce performance when there are a lot of versions of the same crate available as the extra filename won't be used to do an early rejection of crates before trying to load metadata, but it makes the logic to find the right filename a lot cleaner.
Detect bare blocks with type ascription that were meant to be a `struct` literal
Address part of #34255.
Potential improvement: silence the other knock down errors in `issue-34255-1.rs`.
Fix drop handling for `if let` expressions
MIR lowering for `if let` expressions is now more complicated now that
`if let` exists in HIR. This PR adds a scope for the variables bound in
an `if let` expression and then uses an approach similar to how we
handle loops to ensure that we reliably drop the correct variables.
Closes#88307
cc `@flip1995` `@richkadel` `@c410-f3r`
expand: Treat more macro calls as statement macro calls
This PR implements the suggestion from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87981#issuecomment-906641052 and treats fn-like macro calls inside `StmtKind::Item` and `StmtKind::Semi` as statement macro calls, which is consistent with treatment of attribute invocations in the same positions and with token-based macro expansion model in general.
This also allows to remove a special case in `NodeId` assignment (previously tried in #87779), and to use statement `NodeId`s for linting (`assign_id!`).
r? `@Aaron1011`
Point at unclosed delimiters as part of the primary MultiSpan
Both the place where the parser encounters a needed closed delimiter and
the unclosed opening delimiter are important, so they should get the
same level of highlighting in the output.
_Context: https://twitter.com/mwk4/status/1430631546432675840_
Path remapping: Make behavior of diagnostics output dependent on presence of --remap-path-prefix.
This PR fixes a regression (#87745) with `--remap-path-prefix` where the flag stopped causing diagnostic messages to be remapped as well. The regression was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83813 where we erroneously assumed that remapping of diagnostic messages was not desired anymore (because #70642 partially undid that functionality with nobody objecting).
The issue is fixed by making `--remap-path-prefix` remap diagnostic messages again, including for paths that have been remapped in upstream crates (e.g. the standard library). This means that "sysroot-localization" (implemented in #70642) is also disabled if `rustc` is invoked with `--remap-path-prefix`. The assumption is that once someone starts explicitly remapping paths they also don't want paths to their local Rust installation in their build output.
In the future we might want to give more fine-grained control over this behavior via compiler flags (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3127 for a related RFC). For now this PR is intended as a regression fix.
This PR is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88191, which makes diagnostic messages be remapped unconditionally. That approach, however, would effectively revert #70642.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87745.
cc `@cbeuw`
r? `@ghost`
Preserve most sub-obligations in the projection cache
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85360
When we evaluate a projection predicate, we may produce sub-obligations. During trait evaluation, evaluating these sub-obligations might cause us to produce `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions`.
When we cache the result of projection in our projection cache, we try to throw away some of the sub-obligations, so that we don't need to re-evaluate/process them the next time we need to perform this particular projection. However, we may end up throwing away predicates that will (recursively) evaluate to `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions`. If we do, then the result of evaluating a predicate will depend on the state of the predicate cache - this is global untracked state, which interacts badly with incremental compilation.
To fix this, we now only discard global predicates that evaluate to `EvaluatedToOk`. This ensures that any predicates that (may) evaluate to `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions` are kept in the cache, and influence the results of any queries which perform this projection.
Correct doc comments inside `use_expr_visitor.rs`
Just a simple update. I haven't changed any content inside the comments, as they still seem correct. Have a wonderful rest of the day 🙃
Remove redundant `Span` in `QueryJobInfo`
Previously, `QueryJobInfo` was composed of two parts: a `QueryInfo` and
a `QueryJob`. However, both `QueryInfo` and `QueryJob` have a `span`
field, which seem to be the same. So, the `span` was recorded twice.
Now, `QueryJobInfo` is composed of a `QueryStackFrame` (the other field
of `QueryInfo`) and a `QueryJob`. So, now, the `span` is only recorded
once.
For two reasons:
1. Now that the suggestion span has been corrected, the output is a bit
cluttered and hard to read. Putting the suggestion its own window
creates more space.
2. It's easier to see what's being suggested, since now the version
after the suggestion is applied is shown.
(And same for tuple variants.)
Previously, the span was just for the constructor name, which meant it
would result in syntactically-invalid code when applied. Now, the span
is for the entire expression.
MIR lowering for `if let` expressions is now more complicated now that
`if let` exists in HIR. This PR adds a scope for the variables bound in
an `if let` expression and then uses an approach similar to how we
handle loops to ensure that we reliably drop the correct variables.
Previously, `QueryJobInfo` was composed of two parts: a `QueryInfo` and
a `QueryJob`. However, both `QueryInfo` and `QueryJob` have a `span`
field, which seem to be the same. So, the `span` was recorded twice.
Now, `QueryJobInfo` is composed of a `QueryStackFrame` (the other field
of `QueryInfo`) and a `QueryJob`. So, now, the `span` is only recorded
once.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #86376 (Emit specific warning to clarify that `#[no_mangle]` should not be applied on foreign statics or functions)
- #88040 (BTree: remove Ord bound from new)
- #88053 (Fix the flock fallback implementation)
- #88350 (add support for clobbering xer, cr, and cr[0-7] for asm! on OpenPower/PowerPC)
- #88410 (Remove bolding on associated constants)
- #88525 (fix(rustc_typeck): produce better errors for dyn auto trait)
- #88542 (Use the return value of readdir_r() instead of errno)
- #88548 (Stabilize `Iterator::intersperse()`)
- #88551 (Stabilize `UnsafeCell::raw_get()`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Emit specific warning to clarify that `#[no_mangle]` should not be applied on foreign statics or functions
Foreign statics and foreign functions should not have `#[no_mangle]` applied, as it does nothing to the name and has some extra hidden behavior that is normally unwanted. There was an existing warning for this, but it says the attribute is only allowed on "statics or functions", which to the user can be confusing.
This PR adds a specific version of the unused `#[no_mangle]` warning that explains that the target is a *foreign* static or function and that they do not need the attribute.
Fixes#78989
Add bit removal methods to SparseBitMatrix and factor *BitSet relational methods into more extensible trait
I need the ability to clear the bits out of a row from `SparseBitMatrix`. Currently, all the mutating methods only allow insertion of bits, and there is no way to get access to the underlying data.
One approach is simply to make `ensure_row` public, since it grants `&mut` access to the underlying `HybridBitSet`. This PR adds the `pub` modifier. However, presumably this method was private for a reason, so I'm open to other designs. I would prefer general mutable access to the rows, because that way I can add many mutating operations (`clear`, `intersect`, etc.) without filing a PR each time :-)
r? `@ecstatic-morse`
Introduce `let...else`
Tracking issue: #87335
The trickiest part for me was enforcing the diverging else block with clear diagnostics. Perhaps the obvious solution is to expand to `let _: ! = ..`, but I decided against this because, when a "mismatched type" error is found in typeck, there is no way to trace where in the HIR the expected type originated, AFAICT. In order to pass down this information, I believe we should introduce `Expectation::LetElseNever(HirId)` or maybe add `HirId` to `Expectation::HasType`, but I left that as a future enhancement. For now, I simply assert that the block is `!` with a custom `ObligationCauseCode`, and I think this is clear enough, at least to start. The downside here is that the error points at the entire block rather than the specific expression with the wrong type. I left a todo to this effect.
Overall, I believe this PR is feature-complete with regard to the RFC.
Issue Details:
In some cases it is necessary to generate an "allocator shim" to forward various Rust allocation functions (e.g., `__rust_alloc`) to an underlying function (e.g., `malloc`). However, since this allocator shim is a manually created LLVM module it is not processed via the normal module processing code and so no debug info is generated for it (if debugging info is enabled).
Fix Details:
* Modify the `debuginfo` code to allow creating debug info for a module without a `CodegenCx` (since it is difficult, and expensive, to create one just to emit some debug info).
* After creating the allocator shim add in basic debug info.
Concrete regions can show up in mir borrowck if the originated from there
We used to not encounter them here, because we took regions from typeck's opaque type resolution by renumbering them. We don't do that anymore. Instead mir borrock does all the logic, and it can handle concrete regions just fine, as long as it created them itself.
fixes#83190 which was introduced by #87287
r? `@spastorino`
Clean up the lowering of AST items
This PR simplifies and improves `rustc_ast_lowering::item` in various minor ways. The reasons for the changes should mostly be self evident, though I'm happy to specifically explain anything if needed.
These changes used to be part of #88019, but I removed them after it was pointed out that some of my other changes to `rustc_ast_lowering` were unnecessary. It felt like a bad idea to clean up code which I didn't even need to touch anymore.
r? `@cjgillot`
Warn when [T; N].into_iter() is ambiguous in the new edition.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88475
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88475, a situation was found where `[T; N].into_iter()` becomes *ambiguous* in the new edition. This is different than the case where `(&[T; N]).into_iter()` resolves differently, which was the only case handled by the `array_into_iter` lint. This is almost identical to the new-traits-in-the-prelude problem. Effectively, due to the array-into-iter hack disappearing in Rust 2021, we effectively added `IntoIterator` to the 'prelude' in Rust 2021 specifically for arrays.
This modifies the prelude collisions lint to detect that case and emit a `array_into_iter` lint in that case.
Don't use `guess_head_span` in `predicates_of` for foreign span
Previously, the result of `predicates_of` for a foreign trait
would depend on the *current* state of the corresponding source
file in the foreign crate. This could lead to ICEs during incremental
compilation, since the on-disk contents of the upstream source file
could potentially change without the upstream crate being recompiled.
Additionally, this ensure that that the metadata we produce for a crate
only depends on its *compiled* upstream dependencies (e.g an rlib or
rmeta file), *not* the current on-disk state of the upstream crate
source files.
update const generics feature gates
**tl;dr: split const generics into three features: `adt_const_params`, `const_generics_defaults` and `generic_const_exprs`**
continuing the work of `@BoxyUwU` in #88324, this PR
- renames `feature(const_evaluatable_checked)` to `feature(generic_const_exprs)` which now doesn't need any other feature gate to work. Previously `feature(const_evaluatable_checked)` was only useful in combination with `feature(const_generics)`.
- completely removes `feature(lazy_normalization_consts)`. This feature only supplied the parents generics to anonymous constants, which is pretty useless as generic anon consts are only allowed with `feature(generic_const_exprs)` anyways.
- moves the ability to use additional const param types from `feature(const_generics)` into `feature(adt_const_params)`. As `feature(const_generics)` is now mostly useless without `feature(generic_const_exprs)` we also remove that feature flag.
- updates tests, removing duplicates and unnecessary revisions in some cases and also deletes all unused `*.stderr` files.
I not also remove the ordering restriction for const and type parameters if any of the three const generics features is active.
This ordering restriction feels like the only "real" use of the current `feature(const_generics)` right now so this change isn't a perfect solution, but as I intend to stabilize the ordering - and `feature(const_generics_defaults)` - in the very near future, I think this is acceptable for now.
---
cc `@rust-lang/project-const-generics` about the new feature names and this change in general.
I don't think we need any external approval for this change but I do intend to publish an update to the const generics tracking issue the day this PR lands, so I don't want this merged yet.
Apologies to whoever ends up reviewing this PR 😅❤️
r? rust-lang/project-const-generics
`tcx.def_kind()` could theoretically invoke another query, which could
cause an infinite query loop. Accessing the HIR map directly makes that
less likely to happen.
I also changed it to use `as_local()` (`tcx.def_kind()` seems to
implicitly call `expect_local()`) and `opt_def_kind()` to reduce the
chance of panicking on valid code.
rustc_target: `TyAndLayout::field` should never error.
This refactor (making `TyAndLayout::field` return `TyAndLayout` without any `Result` around it) is based on a simple observation, regarding `TyAndLayout::field`:
If `cx.layout_of(ty)` succeeds (for some `cx` and `ty`), then `.field(cx, i)` on the resulting `TyAndLayout` should *always* succeed in computing `cx.layout_of(field_ty)` (where `field_ty` is the type of the `i`th field of `ty`).
The reason for this is that no matter which field is chosen, `cx.layout_of(field_ty)` *will have already been computed*, as part of computing `cx.layout_of(ty)`, as we cannot determine the layout of *any* type without considering the layouts of *all* of its fields.
And so it should be fine to turn any errors into ICEs, since they likely indicate a `cx` mismatch, or some other edge case that is due to a compiler bug (as opposed to ever being an user-facing error).
<hr/>
Each commit should probably be reviewed separately, though note that there's some `where` clauses (in `rustc_target::abi::call::*`) that change in most commits.
cc `@nagisa` `@oli-obk`
Handle match statements with non exhaustive variants in closures
This PR ensures that the behavior for match statements with non exhaustive variants is the same inside and outside closures.
If we have a non-exhaustive SingleVariant which is defined in a different crate, then we should handle the case the same way we would handle a MultiVariant: borrow the match discriminant.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/project-rfc-2229/issues/59
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Remove `Session.if_let_suggestions`
We can instead if either the LHS or RHS types contain
`TyKind::Error`. In addition to covering the case where
we would have previously updated `if_let_suggestions`, this might
also prevent redundant errors in other cases as well.