This sidesteps the normal span refinement code in cases where we know that we
are only dealing with the special signature span that represents having called
an async function.
The query accept arbitrary DefIds, not just owner DefIds.
The return can be an `Option` because if there are no nodes, then it doesn't matter whether it's due to NonOwner or Phantom.
Also rename the query to `opt_hir_owner_nodes`.
Because it's almost always static.
This makes `impl IntoDiagnosticArg for DiagnosticArgValue` trivial,
which is nice.
There are a few diagnostics constructed in
`compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/check_unsafety.rs` and
`compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/errors.rs` that now need symbols
converted to `String` with `to_string` instead of `&str` with `as_str`,
but that' no big deal, and worth it for the simplifications elsewhere.
Error codes are integers, but `String` is used everywhere to represent
them. Gross!
This commit introduces `ErrCode`, an integral newtype for error codes,
replacing `String`. It also introduces a constant for every error code,
e.g. `E0123`, and removes the `error_code!` macro. The constants are
imported wherever used with `use rustc_errors::codes::*`.
With the old code, we have three different ways to specify an error code
at a use point:
```
error_code!(E0123) // macro call
struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg"); // bare ident arg to macro call
\#[diag(name, code = "E0123")] // string
struct Diag;
```
With the new code, they all use the `E0123` constant.
```
E0123 // constant
struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg"); // constant
\#[diag(name, code = E0123)] // constant
struct Diag;
```
The commit also changes the structure of the error code definitions:
- `rustc_error_codes` now just defines a higher-order macro listing the
used error codes and nothing else.
- Because that's now the only thing in the `rustc_error_codes` crate, I
moved it into the `lib.rs` file and removed the `error_codes.rs` file.
- `rustc_errors` uses that macro to define everything, e.g. the error
code constants and the `DIAGNOSTIC_TABLES`. This is in its new
`codes.rs` file.
Remove unused/unnecessary features
~~The bulk of the actual code changes here is replacing try blocks with equivalent closures. I'm not entirely sure that's a good idea since it may have perf impact, happy to revert if that's the case/the change is unwanted.~~
I also removed a lot of `recursion_limit = "256"` since everything seems to build fine without that and most don't have any comment justifying it.
Remove coroutine info when building coroutine drop body
Coroutine drop shims are not themselves coroutines, so erase the "`coroutine`" field from the body so that helper fns like `yield_ty` and `coroutine_kind` properly return `None` for the drop shim.
coverage: Dismantle `Instrumentor` and flatten span refinement
This is a combination of two refactorings that are unrelated, but would otherwise have a merge conflict.
No functional changes, other than a small tweak to debug logging as part of rearranging some functions.
Ignoring whitespace is highly recommended, since most of the modified lines have just been reindented.
---
The first change is to dismantle `Instrumentor` into ordinary functions.
This is one of those cases where encapsulating several values into a struct ultimately hurts more than it helps. With everything stored as local variables in one main function, and passed explicitly into helper functions, it's easier to see what is used where, and make changes as necessary.
---
The second change is to flatten the functions for extracting/refining coverage spans.
Consolidating this code into flatter functions reduces the amount of pointer-chasing required to read and modify it.
Remove all ConstPropNonsense
We track all locals and projections on them ourselves within the const propagator and only use the InterpCx to actually do some low level operations or read from constants (via `OpTy` we get for said constants).
This helps moving the const prop lint out from the normal pipeline and running it just based on borrowck information. This in turn allows us to make progress on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108730#issuecomment-1875557745
there are various follow up cleanups that can be done after this PR (e.g. not matching on Rvalue twice and doing binop checks twice), but lets try landing this one first.
r? `@RalfJung`
coverage: Don't instrument `#[automatically_derived]` functions
This PR makes the coverage instrumentor detect and skip functions that have [`#[automatically_derived]`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/attributes/derive.html#the-automatically_derived-attribute) on their enclosing impl block.
Most notably, this means that methods generated by built-in derives (e.g. `Clone`, `Debug`, `PartialEq`) are now ignored by coverage instrumentation, and won't appear as executed or not-executed in coverage reports.
This is a noticeable change in user-visible behaviour, but overall I think it's a net improvement. For example, we've had a few user requests for this sort of change (e.g. #105055, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84605#issuecomment-1902069040), and I believe it's the behaviour that most users will expect/prefer by default.
It's possible to imagine situations where users would want to instrument these derived implementations, but I think it's OK to treat that as an opportunity to consider adding more fine-grained option flags to control the details of coverage instrumentation, while leaving this new behaviour as the default.
(Also note that while `-Cinstrument-coverage` is a stable feature, the exact details of coverage instrumentation are allowed to change. So we *can* make this change; the main question is whether we *should*.)
Fixes#105055.
coverage: Never emit improperly-ordered coverage regions
If we emit a coverage region that is improperly ordered (end < start), `llvm-cov` will fail with `coveragemap_error::malformed`, which is inconvenient for users and also very hard to debug.
Ideally we would fix the root causes of these situations, but they tend to occur in very obscure edge-case scenarios (often involving nested macros), and we don't always have a good MCVE to work from. So it makes sense to also have a catch-all check that will prevent improperly-ordered regions from ever being emitted.
---
This is mainly aimed at resolving #119453. We don't have a specific way to reproduce it, which is why I haven't been able to add a test case in this PR. But based on the information provided in that issue, this change seems likely to avoid the error in `llvm-cov`.
`````@rustbot````` label +A-code-coverage
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #112806 (Small code improvements in `collect_intra_doc_links.rs`)
- #119766 (Split tait and impl trait in assoc items logic)
- #120139 (Do not normalize closure signature when building `FnOnce` shim)
- #120160 (Manually implement derived `NonZero` traits.)
- #120171 (Fix assume and assert in jump threading)
- #120183 (Add `#[coverage(off)]` to closures introduced by `#[test]` and `#[bench]`)
- #120195 (add several resolution test cases)
- #120259 (Split Diagnostics for Uncommon Codepoints: Add List to Display Characters Involved)
- #120261 (Provide structured suggestion to use trait objects in some cases of `if` arm type divergence)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Only use dense bitsets in dataflow analyses
When a dataflow state has the size close to the number of locals, we should prefer a dense bitset, like we already store locals in a dense vector.
Other occurrences of `ChunkedBitSet` need to be justified by the size of the dataflow state.