Directly add extension instead of using `Path::with_extension`
`Path::with_extension` has a nice footgun when the original path doesn't contain an extension: Anything after the last dot gets removed.
Remove the `ty` field from type system `Const`s
Fixes#125556Fixes#122908
Part of the work on `adt_const_params`/`generic_const_param_types`/`min_generic_const_exprs`/generally making the compiler nicer. cc rust-lang/project-const-generics#44
Please review commit-by-commit otherwise I wasted a lot of time not just squashing this into a giant mess (and also it'll be SO much nicer because theres a lot of fluff changes mixed in with other more careful changes if looking via File Changes
---
Why do this?
- The `ty` field keeps causing ICEs and weird behaviour due to it either being treated as "part of the const" or it being forgotten about leading to ICEs.
- As we move forward with `adt_const_params` and a potential `min_generic_const_exprs` it's going to become more complex to actually lower the correct `Ty<'tcx>`
- It muddles the idea behind how we check `Const` arguments have the correct type. By having the `ty` field it may seem like we ought to be relating it when we relate two types, or that its generally important information about the `Const`.
- Brings the compiler more in line with `a-mir-formality` as that also tracks the type of type system `Const`s via `ConstArgHasType` bounds in the env instead of on the `Const` itself.
- A lot of stuff is a lot nicer when you dont have to pass around the type of a const lol. Everywhere we construct `Const` is now significantly nicer 😅
See #125671's description for some more information about the `ty` field
---
General summary of changes in this PR:
- Add `Ty` to `ConstKind::Value` as otherwise there is no way to implement `ConstArgHasType` to ensure that const arguments are correctly typed for the parameter when we stop creating anon consts for all const args. It's also just incredibly difficult/annoying to thread the correct `Ty` around to a bunch of ctfe functions otherwise.
- Fully implement `ConstArgHasType` in both the old and new solver. Since it now has no reliance on the `ty` field it serves its originally intended purpose of being able to act as a double check that trait vs impls have correctly typed const parameters. It also will now be able to be responsible for checking types of const arguments to parameters under `min_generic_const_exprs`.
- Add `Ty` to `mir::Const::Ty`. I dont have a great understanding of why mir constants are setup like this to be honest. Regardless they need to be able to determine the type of the const and the easiest way to make this happen was to simply store the `Ty` along side the `ty::Const`. Maybe we can do better here in the future but I'd have to spend way more time looking at everywhere we use `mir::Const`.
- rustdoc has its own `Const` which also has a `ty` field. It was relatively easy to remove this.
---
r? `@lcnr` `@compiler-errors`
When `derive`ing, account for HRTB on `BareFn` fields
When given
```rust
trait SomeTrait {
type SomeType<'a>;
}
#[derive(Clone)]
struct Foo<T: SomeTrait> {
x: for<'a> fn(T::SomeType<'a>)
}
```
expand to
```rust
impl<T: ::core::clone::Clone + SomeTrait> ::core::clone::Clone for Foo<T>
where for<'a> T::SomeType<'a>: ::core::clone::Clone {
#[inline]
fn clone(&self) -> Foo<T> {
Foo { x: ::core::clone::Clone::clone(&self.x) }
}
}
```
instead of the previous invalid
```
impl<T: ::core::clone::Clone + SomeTrait> ::core::clone::Clone for Foo<T>
where T::SomeType<'a>: ::core::clone::Clone {
#[inline]
fn clone(&self) -> Foo<T> {
Foo { x: ::core::clone::Clone::clone(&self.x) }
}
}
```
Fix#122622.
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Match ergonomics 2024: align implementation with RFC
- Remove eat-two-layers (`ref_pat_everywhere`)
- Consolidate `mut_preserve_binding_mode_2024` into `ref_pat_eat_one_layer_2024`
- `&mut` no longer peels off `&`
- Apply "no `ref mut` behind `&`" rule on all editions with `ref_pat_eat_one_layer_2024`
- Require `mut_ref` feature gate for all mutable by-reference bindings
r? ``@Nadrieril``
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123076
``@rustbot`` label A-edition-2024 A-patterns
Don't walk the bodies of free constants for reachability.
follow-up to #122371
cc #119214
This avoids codegening items (e.g. functions) that are only used during const eval, but do not reach their final constant value (e.g. via function pointers).
r? `@tmiasko`
It's small and has a single call site.
Also change the second `parse_meta` call to use a simple `match`, like
the first `parse_meta` call, instead of a confusing `map_err`+`ok`
combination.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #124840 (resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings)
- #125622 (Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply)
- #125648 (Remove unused(?) `~/rustsrc` folder from docker script)
- #125672 (Add more ABI test cases to miri (RFC 3391))
- #125800 (Fix `mut` static task queue in SGX target)
- #125871 (Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters)
- #125893 (Handle all GVN binops in a single place.)
- #126008 (Port `tests/run-make-fulldeps/issue-19371` to ui-fulldeps)
- #126032 (Update description of the `IsTerminal` example)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Handle all GVN binops in a single place.
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Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/125359/files#r1608185319
r? ``@oli-obk``
Orphanck[old solver]: Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters
This fixes an oversight of mine in #117164. The change itself has already been FCP'ed.
This only affects the old solver, the next solver already correctly rejects the added test since #117164.
r? ``@lcnr``
set `has_unconstrained_ty_var` when generalizing aliases in bivariant contexts
this previously prevented the `regression-31157` benchmark from building
r? `@compiler-errors`
coverage: Carve out hole spans in a separate early pass
When extracting spans from MIR for use in coverage instrumentation, we sometimes need to identify *hole spans* (currently just closures), and carve up the other spans so that they don't overlap with holes.
This PR simplifies the main coverage-span-refiner by extracting the hole-carving process into a separate early pass. That pass produces a series of independent buckets, and we run the span-refiner on each bucket separately.
There is almost no difference in the resulting mappings, other than in some edge cases involving macros.
Winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply
partially reverts https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/60721
My original motivation was just to avoid the `delay_span_bug` (by attempting to thread the `ErrorGuaranteed` through to here). But then I realized that the error message is wrong. It refers to the `Foo<A>::foo` instead of `Foo<B>::foo`. This is almost invisible, because both functions are the same, but on different lines, so `-Zui-testing` makes it so the test is the same no matter which of these two functions is referenced.
But there's a much more obvious bug: If `Foo<B>` does not have a `foo` method at all, but `Foo<A>` has a private `foo` method, then we'll refer to that one. This has now been fixed, and we report a normal `method not found` error.
The way this is done is by creating a list of all possible private functions (just like we create a list of the public functions that can actually be called), and then winnowing it by analyzing where bounds and `Self` types to see if any of the found methods can actually apply (again, just like with the list of public functions).
I wonder if there is room for doing the same thing with unstable functions instead of running all of method resolution twice.
r? ``@compiler-errors`` for method resolution stuff
resolve: mark it undetermined if single import is not has any bindings
- Fixes#124490
- Fixes#125013
This issue arises from incorrect resolution updates, for example:
```rust
mod a {
pub mod b {
pub mod c {}
}
}
use a::*;
use b::c;
use c as b;
fn main() {}
```
1. In the first loop, binding `(root, b)` is refer to `root:🅰️:b` due to `use a::*`.
1. However, binding `(root, c)` isn't defined by `use b::c` during this stage because `use c as b` falls under the `single_imports` of `(root, b)`, where the `imported_module` hasn't been computed yet. This results in marking the `path_res` for `b` as `Indeterminate`.
2. Then, the `imported_module` for `use c as b` will be recorded.
2. In the second loop, `use b::c` will be processed again:
1. Firstly, it attempts to find the `path_res` for `(root, b)`.
2. It will iterate through the `single_imports` of `use b::c`, encounter `use c as b`, attempt to resolve `c` in `root`, and ultimately return `Err(Undetermined)`, thus passing the iterator.
3. Use the binding `(root, b)` -> `root:🅰️:b` introduced by `use a::*` and ultimately return `root:🅰️:b` as the `path_res` of `b`.
4. Then define the binding `(root, c)` -> `root:🅰️🅱️:c`.
3. Then process `use c as b`, update the resolution for `(root, b)` to refer to `root:🅰️🅱️:c`, ultimately causing inconsistency.
In my view, step `2.2` has an issue where it should exit early, similar to the behavior when there's no `imported_module`. Therefore, I've added an attribute called `indeterminate` to `ImportData`. This will help us handle only those single imports that have at least one determined binding.
r? ``@petrochenkov``
rustc_codegen_ssa: fix `get_rpath_relative_to_output` panic when lib only contains file name
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When compiles program with `-C rpath=yes` but with no output filename specified, or with filename ONLY, we will get an ICE for now. Fix it by treat empty `output` path in `get_rpath_relative_to_output` as current dir.
Before this patch:
```bash
rustc -C prefer_dynamic=yes -C rpath=yes -O h.rs # ICE, no output filename specified
rustc -o hello -C prefer_dynamic=yes -C rpath=yes -O h.rs # ICE, output filename has no path
rustc -o ./hello -C prefer_dynamic=yes -C rpath=yes -O h.rs # Works
```
All those examples work after the patch.
Close#119571.
Close#125785.
Various `HirTyLowerer` cleanups
Previously there was some ad-hoc specialization going on, because you could call `allows_infer`, which basically was deciding between whether the trait object was backed by `FnCtxt` or by `ItemCtxt`. I moved all the different logic into dedicated methods on `HirTyLowerer` and removed `allows_infer`
best reviewed commit-by-commit
Add intra-doc-links to rustc_middle crate-level docs.
Makes it slightly faster to find these modules, as you don't need to hunt for them in the big list.
Detect when user is trying to create a lending `Iterator` and give a custom explanation
The scope for this diagnostic is to detect lending iterators specifically and it's main goal is to help beginners to understand that what they are trying to implement might not be possible for `Iterator` trait specifically.
I ended up to changing the wording from originally proposed in the ticket because it might be misleading otherwise: `Data` might have a lifetime parameter but it can be unrelated to items user is planning to return.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/125337
`rustc --explain E0582` additional example
## Context
*From #124744*
Expands the example for E0582, an error ensuring that lifetime in a function's return type is sufficiently constrained (e.g. actually tied to some input type), to show an additional example where one sees the lifetime occurring syntactically among the relevant function input types, but is nonetheless rejected by rustc because a syntactic occurrence is not always sufficient.
`ct_infer` and `lower_ty` will correctly result in an error constant or type respectively, as they go through a `HirTyLowerer` method (just like `HirTyLowerer::allow_infer` is a method implemented by both implementors
`rustc_parse` top-level cleanups
A bunch of improvements in and around `compiler/rustc_parse/src/lib.rs`. Many of the changes streamline the API in that file from this (12 functions and one macro):
```
name args return type
---- ---- -----------
panictry_buffer! Result<T, Vec<Diag>> T
pub parse_crate_from_file path PResult<Crate>
pub parse_crate_attrs_from_file path PResult<AttrVec>
pub parse_crate_from_source_str name,src PResult<Crate>
pub parse_crate_attrs_from_source_str name,src PResult<AttrVec>
pub new_parser_from_source_str name,src Parser
pub maybe_new_parser_from_source_str name,src Result<Parser, Vec<Diag>>
pub new_parser_from_file path,error_sp Parser
maybe_source_file_to_parser srcfile Result<Parser, Vec<Diag>>
pub parse_stream_from_source_str name,src,override_sp TokenStream
pub source_file_to_stream srcfile,override_sp TokenStream
maybe_file_to_stream srcfile,override_sp Result<TokenStream, Vec<Diag>>
pub stream_to_parser stream,subparser_name Parser
```
to this:
```
name args return type
---- ---- -----------
unwrap_or_emit_fatal Result<T, Vec<Diag>> T
pub new_parser_from_source_str name,src Result<Parser, Vec<Diag>>
pub new_parser_from_file path,error_sp Result<Parser, Vec<Diag>>
new_parser_from_source_file srcfile Result<Parser, Vec<Diag>>
pub source_str_to_stream name,src,override_sp Result<TokenStream, Vec<Diag>>
source_file_to_stream srcfile,override_sp Result<TokenStream, Vec<Diag>>
```
I found the old API quite confusing, with lots of similar-sounding function names and no clear structure. I think the new API is much better.
r? `@spastorino`
Add `size_of` and `size_of_val` and `align_of` and `align_of_val` to the prelude
(Note: need to update the PR to add `align_of` and `align_of_val`, and remove the second commit with the myriad changes to appease the lint.)
Many, many projects use `size_of` to get the size of a type. However,
it's also often equally easy to hardcode a size (e.g. `8` instead of
`size_of::<u64>()`). Minimizing friction in the use of `size_of` helps
ensure that people use it and make code more self-documenting.
The name `size_of` is unambiguous: the name alone, without any prefix or
path, is self-explanatory and unmistakeable for any other functionality.
Adding it to the prelude cannot produce any name conflicts, as any local
definition will silently shadow the one from the prelude. Thus, we don't
need to wait for a new edition prelude to add it.
Instead of using AST pretty printing.
This is a step towards removing `token::Interpolated`, which will
eventually (in #124141) be replaced with a token stream within invisible
delimiters.
This changes (improves) the output of the `stringify!` macro in some
cases. This is allowed. As the `stringify!` docs say: "Note that the
expanded results of the input tokens may change in the future. You
should be careful if you rely on the output."
Test changes:
- tests/ui/macros/stringify.rs: this used to test both token stream
pretty printing and AST pretty printing via different ways of invoking
of `stringify!` (i.e. `$expr` vs `$tt`). But those two different
invocations now give the same result, which is a nice consistency
improvement. This removes the need for all the `c2*` macros. The AST
pretty printer now has more thorough testing thanks to #125236.
- tests/ui/proc-macro/*: minor improvements where small differences
between `INPUT (DISPLAY)` output and `DEEP-RE-COLLECTED (DISPLAY)`
output disappear.
Currently we have an awkward mix of fallible and infallible functions:
```
new_parser_from_source_str
maybe_new_parser_from_source_str
new_parser_from_file
(maybe_new_parser_from_file) // missing
(new_parser_from_source_file) // missing
maybe_new_parser_from_source_file
source_str_to_stream
maybe_source_file_to_stream
```
We could add the two missing functions, but instead this commit removes
of all the infallible ones and renames the fallible ones leaving us with
these which are all fallible:
```
new_parser_from_source_str
new_parser_from_file
new_parser_from_source_file
source_str_to_stream
source_file_to_stream
```
This requires making `unwrap_or_emit_fatal` public so callers of
formerly infallible functions can still work.
This does make some of the call sites slightly more verbose, but I think
it's worth it for the simpler API. Also, there are two `catch_unwind`
calls and one `catch_fatal_errors` call in this diff that become
removable thanks this change. (I will do that in a follow-up PR.)
The first one is out-of-date -- there are no longer functions expr,
item, stmt. And I don't know what a "HOF" is.
The second one doesn't really tell you anything.
- Convert it from a macro to a function, which is nicer.
- Rename it as `unwrap_or_emit_fatal`, which is clearer.
- Fix the comment. In particular, `panictry!` no longer exists.
- Remove the unnecessary `use` declaration.
It has a single call site.
This also means `CFG_ATTR_{GRAMMAR_HELP,NOTE_REF}` can be moved into
`parse_cfg_attr`, now that it's the only function that uses them.
And the commit removes the line break in the URL.
Lexing converts source text into a token stream. Parsing converts a
token stream into AST fragments. This commit renames several lexing
operations that have "parse" in the name. I think these names have been
subtly confusing me for years.
This is just a `s/parse/lex/` on function names, with one exception:
`parse_stream_from_source_str` becomes `source_str_to_stream`, to make
it consistent with the existing `source_file_to_stream`. The commit also
moves that function's location in the file to be just above
`source_file_to_stream`.
The commit also cleans up a few comments along the way.
Convert `proc_macro_back_compat` lint to an unconditional error.
We still check for the `rental`/`allsorts-rental` crates. But now if they are detected we just emit a fatal error, instead of emitting a warning and providing alternative behaviour.
The original "hack" implementing alternative behaviour was added in #73345.
The lint was added in #83127.
The tracking issue is #83125.
The direct motivation for the change is that providing the alternative behaviour is interfering with #125174 and follow-on work.
r? ``@estebank``
Store the types of `ty::Expr` arguments in the `ty::Expr`
Part of #125958
In attempting to remove the `ty` field on `Const` it will become necessary to store the `Ty<'tcx>` inside of `Expr<'tcx>`. In order to do this without blowing up the size of `ConstKind`, we start storing the type/const args as `GenericArgs`
r? `@oli-obk`
Split smir `Const` into `TyConst` and `MirConst`
Part of #125958
Building a `smir::Const` currently requires accessing the `Ty<'tcx>` of a `ty::Const`. This will stop being possible in the future. Replicate the split in rustc of having a representation of type level constants and mir constants with the latter being able to store the former. Ideally we wouldnt have `MirConst::Ty` but 🤷♀️
r? `@oli-obk`
Streamline `nested` calls.
`TyCtxt` impls `PpAnn` in `compiler/rustc_middle/src/hir/map/mod.rs`. We can call that impl, which then calls the one on `intravisit::Map`, instead of calling the one on `intravisit::Map` directly, avoiding a cast and extra references.
r? `@lqd`
Improve renaming suggestion for names with leading underscores
Fixes#125650
Before:
```
error[E0425]: cannot find value `p` in this scope
--> test.rs:2:13
|
2 | let _ = p;
| ^
|
help: a local variable with a similar name exists, consider renaming `_p` into `p`
|
1 | fn a(p: i32) {
| ~
```
After:
```
error[E0425]: cannot find value `p` in this scope
--> test.rs:2:13
|
1 | fn a(_p: i32) {
| -- `_p` defined here
2 | let _ = p;
| ^
|
help: the leading underscore in `_p` marks it as unused, consider renaming it to `p`
|
1 | fn a(p: i32) {
| ~
```
This change doesn't exactly conform to what was proposed in the issue:
1. I've kept the suggested code instead of solely replacing it with the label
2. I've removed the "...similar name exists..." message instead of relocating to the usage span
3. You could argue that it still isn't completely clear that the change is referring to the definition (not the usage), but I'm not sure how to do this without playing down the fact that the error was caused by the usage of an undefined name.
Refactor `#[diagnostic::do_not_recommend]` support
This commit refactors the `#[do_not_recommend]` support in the old parser to also apply to projection errors and not only to selection errors. This allows the attribute to be used more widely.
Part of #51992
r? `@compiler-errors`
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Silence follow-up errors directly based on error types and regions
During type_of, we used to just return an error type if there were any errors encountered. This is problematic, because it means a struct declared as `struct Foo<'static>` will end up not finding any inherent or trait impls because those impl blocks' `Self` type will be `{type error}` instead of `Foo<'re_error>`. Now it's the latter, silencing nonsensical follow-up errors about `Foo` not having any methods.
Unfortunately that now allows for new follow-up errors, because borrowck treats `'re_error` as `'static`, causing nonsensical errors about non-error lifetimes not outliving `'static`. So what I also did was to just strip all outlives bounds that borrowck found, thus never letting it check them. There are probably more nuanced ways to do this, but I worried there would be other nonsensical errors if some outlives bounds were missing. Also from the test changes, it looked like an improvement everywhere.
Handle no values cfgs with `--print=check-cfg`
This PR fix a bug with `--print=check-cfg`, where no values cfgs where not printed since we only printed cfgs that had at least one values.
The representation I choose is `CFG=`, since it doesn't correspond to any valid config, it also IMO nicely complements the `values()` (to indicate no values). Representing the absence of value by the absence of the value.
So for `cfg(feature, values())` we would print `feature=`.
I also added the missing tracking issue number in the doc.
r? ```@petrochenkov```
Align `Term` methods with `GenericArg` methods, add `Term::expect_*`
* `Term::ty` -> `Term::as_type`.
* `Term::ct` -> `Term::as_const`.
* Adds `Term::expect_type` and `Term::expect_const`, and uses them in favor of `.ty().unwrap()`, etc.
I could also shorten these to `as_ty` and then do `GenericArg::as_ty` as well, but I do think the `as_` is important to signal that this is a conversion method, and not a getter, like `Const::ty` is.
r? types
Add tracking issue and unstable book page for `"vectorcall"` ABI
Originally added in 2015 by #30567, the Windows `"vectorcall"` ABI didn't have a tracking issue until now.
Tracking issue: #124485
`TyCtxt` impls `PpAnn` in `compiler/rustc_middle/src/hir/map/mod.rs`. We
can call that impl, which then calls the one on `intravisit::Map`,
instead of calling the one on `intravisit::Map` directly, avoiding a
cast and extra references.
Make `WHERE_CLAUSES_OBJECT_SAFETY` a regular object safety violation
#### The issue
In #50781, we have known about unsound `where` clauses in function arguments:
```rust
trait Impossible {}
trait Foo {
fn impossible(&self)
where
Self: Impossible;
}
impl Foo for &() {
fn impossible(&self)
where
Self: Impossible,
{}
}
// `where` clause satisfied for the object, meaning that the function now *looks* callable.
impl Impossible for dyn Foo {}
fn main() {
let x: &dyn Foo = &&();
x.impossible();
}
```
... which currently segfaults at runtime because we try to call a method in the vtable that doesn't exist. :(
#### What did u change
This PR removes the `WHERE_CLAUSES_OBJECT_SAFETY` lint and instead makes it a regular object safety violation. I choose to make this into a hard error immediately rather than a `deny` because of the time that has passed since this lint was authored, and the single (1) regression (see below).
That means that it's OK to mention `where Self: Trait` where clauses in your trait, but making such a trait into a `dyn Trait` object will report an object safety violation just like `where Self: Sized`, etc.
```rust
trait Impossible {}
trait Foo {
fn impossible(&self)
where
Self: Impossible; // <~ This definition is valid, just not object-safe.
}
impl Foo for &() {
fn impossible(&self)
where
Self: Impossible,
{}
}
fn main() {
let x: &dyn Foo = &&(); // <~ THIS is where we emit an error.
}
```
#### Regressions
From a recent crater run, there's only one crate that relies on this behavior: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124305#issuecomment-2122381740. The crate looks unmaintained and there seems to be no dependents.
#### Further
We may later choose to relax this (e.g. when the where clause is implied by the supertraits of the trait or something), but this is not something I propose to do in this FCP.
For example, given:
```
trait Tr {
fn f(&self) where Self: Blanket;
}
impl<T: ?Sized> Blanket for T {}
```
Proving that some placeholder `S` implements `S: Blanket` would be sufficient to prove that the same (blanket) impl applies for both `Concerete: Blanket` and `dyn Trait: Blanket`.
Repeating here that I don't think we need to implement this behavior right now.
----
r? lcnr
Show files produced by `--emit foo` in json artifact notifications
Right now it is possible to ask `rustc` to save some intermediate representation into one or more files with `--emit=foo`, but figuring out what exactly was produced is difficult. This pull request adds information about `llvm_ir` and `asm` intermediate files into notifications produced by `--json=artifacts`.
Related discussion: https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/easier-access-to-files-generated-by-emit-foo/20477
Motivation - `cargo-show-asm` parses those intermediate files and presents them in a user friendly way, but right now I have to apply some dirty hacks. Hacks make behavior confusing: https://github.com/hintron/computer-enhance/issues/35
This pull request introduces a new behavior: now `rustc` will emit a new artifact notification for every artifact type user asked to `--emit`, for example for `--emit asm` those will include all the `.s` files.
Most users won't notice this behavior, to be affected by it all of the following must hold:
- user must use `rustc` binary directly (when `cargo` invokes `rustc` - it consumes artifact notifications and doesn't emit anything)
- user must specify both `--emit xxx` and `--json artifacts`
- user must refuse to handle unknown artifact types
- user must disable incremental compilation (or deal with it better than cargo does, or use a workaround like `save-temps`) in order not to hit #88829 / #89149
Use parenthetical notation for `Fn` traits
Always use the `Fn(T) -> R` format when printing closure traits instead of `Fn<(T,), Output = R>`.
Address #67100:
```
error[E0277]: expected a `Fn()` closure, found `F`
--> file.rs:6:13
|
6 | call_fn(f)
| ------- ^ expected an `Fn()` closure, found `F`
| |
| required by a bound introduced by this call
|
= note: wrap the `F` in a closure with no arguments: `|| { /* code */ }`
note: required by a bound in `call_fn`
--> file.rs:1:15
|
1 | fn call_fn<F: Fn() -> ()>(f: &F) {
| ^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `call_fn`
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
5 | fn call_any<F: std::any::Any + Fn()>(f: &F) {
| ++++++
```
The `mir!` macro has multiple parts:
- An optional return type annotation.
- A sequence of zero or more local declarations.
- A mandatory starting anonymous basic block, which is brace-delimited.
- A sequence of zero of more additional named basic blocks.
Some `mir!` invocations use braces with a "block" style, like so:
```
mir! {
let _unit: ();
{
let non_copy = S(42);
let ptr = std::ptr::addr_of_mut!(non_copy);
// Inside `callee`, the first argument and `*ptr` are basically
// aliasing places!
Call(_unit = callee(Move(*ptr), ptr), ReturnTo(after_call), UnwindContinue())
}
after_call = {
Return()
}
}
```
Some invocations use parens with a "block" style, like so:
```
mir!(
let x: [i32; 2];
let one: i32;
{
x = [42, 43];
one = 1;
x = [one, 2];
RET = Move(x);
Return()
}
)
```
And some invocations uses parens with a "tighter" style, like so:
```
mir!({
SetDiscriminant(*b, 0);
Return()
})
```
This last style is generally used for cases where just the mandatory
starting basic block is present. Its braces are placed next to the
parens.
This commit changes all `mir!` invocations to use braces with a "block"
style. Why?
- Consistency is good.
- The contents of the invocation is a block of code, so it's odd to use
parens. They are more normally used for function-like macros.
- Most importantly, the next commit will enable rustfmt for
`tests/mir-opt/`. rustfmt is more aggressive about formatting macros
that use parens than macros that use braces. Without this commit's
changes, rustfmt would break a couple of `mir!` macro invocations that
use braces within `tests/mir-opt` by inserting an extraneous comma.
E.g.:
```
mir!(type RET = (i32, bool);, { // extraneous comma after ';'
RET.0 = 1;
RET.1 = true;
Return()
})
```
Switching those `mir!` invocations to use braces avoids that problem,
resulting in this, which is nicer to read as well as being valid
syntax:
```
mir! {
type RET = (i32, bool);
{
RET.0 = 1;
RET.1 = true;
Return()
}
}
```
Do not suggest unresolvable builder methods
Fixes#125303
The issue was that when a builder method cannot be resolved we are suggesting alternatives that themselves cannot be resolved. This PR adds a check that filters them from the list of suggestions.
It has a clumsy type, with repeated `&'a [LintId]`, and sometimes
requires an empty string that isn't used in the `Err`+`None` case.
This commit splits it into two variants.
Avoid checking the edition as much as possible
Inside https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123865, we are adding support for the new semantics for expr2024, but we have noted a performance issue.
While talking with `@eholk,` we realized there is a redundant check for each token regarding an edition. This commit moves the edition check to the end, avoiding some extra checks that can slow down compilation time.
However, we should keep this issue under observation because we may want to improve the edition check if we are unable to significantly improve compiler performance.
r? ghost
Add some more specific checks to the MIR validator
None of the `PointerCoercion`s had any checks, so while there's probably more that could be done here, hopefully these are better than the previous nothing.
r? mir
Make repr(packed) vectors work with SIMD intrinsics
In #117116 I fixed `#[repr(packed, simd)]` by doing the expected thing and removing padding from the layout. This should be the last step in providing a solution to rust-lang/portable-simd#319
Inside #123865, we are adding support for the new semantics
for expr2024, but we have noted a performance issue.
We realized there is a redundant check for each
token regarding an edition. This commit moves the edition
check to the end, avoiding some extra checks that
can slow down compilation time.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123865
Co-Developed-by: @eholk
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Palazzo <vincenzopalazzodev@gmail.com>
Reject `CVarArgs` in `parse_ty_for_where_clause`
Fixes#125847. This regressed in #77035 where the `parse_ty` inside `parse_ty_where_predicate` was replaced with the at the time new `parse_ty_for_where_clause` which incorrectly stated it would permit CVarArgs (maybe a copy/paste error).
r? parser
This commit sets the `target_env` key for the
`wasm32-wasi{,p1,p1-threads}` targets to the string `"p1"`. This mirrors
how the `wasm32-wasip2` target has `target_env = "p2"`. The intention of
this is to more easily detect each target in downstream crates to enable
adding custom code per-target.
cc #125803
Uplift `{Closure,Coroutine,CoroutineClosure}Args` and friends to `rustc_type_ir`
Part of converting the new solver's `structural_traits.rs` to be interner-agnostic.
I decided against aliasing `ClosureArgs<TyCtxt<'tcx>>` to `ClosureArgs<'tcx>` because it seemed so rare. I could do so if desired, though.
r? lcnr
Check index `value <= 0xFFFF_FF00`
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fixes#121126
check `idx <= FieldIdx::MAX_AS_U32` before calling `FieldIdx::from_u32` to avoid panic.
Stabilize `custom_code_classes_in_docs` feature
Fixes#79483.
This feature has been around for quite some time now, I think it's fine to stabilize it now.
## Summary
## What is the feature about?
In short, this PR changes two things, both related to codeblocks in doc comments in Rust documentation:
* Allow to disable generation of `language-*` CSS classes with the `custom` attribute.
* Add your own CSS classes to a code block so that you can use other tools to highlight them.
#### The `custom` attribute
Let's start with the new `custom` attribute: it will disable the generation of the `language-*` CSS class on the generated HTML code block. For example:
```rust
/// ```custom,c
/// int main(void) {
/// return 0;
/// }
/// ```
```
The generated HTML code block will not have `class="language-c"` because the `custom` attribute has been set. The `custom` attribute becomes especially useful with the other thing added by this feature: adding your own CSS classes.
#### Adding your own CSS classes
The second part of this feature is to allow users to add CSS classes themselves so that they can then add a JS library which will do it (like `highlight.js` or `prism.js`), allowing to support highlighting for other languages than Rust without increasing burden on rustdoc. To disable the automatic `language-*` CSS class generation, you need to use the `custom` attribute as well.
This allow users to write the following:
```rust
/// Some code block with `{class=language-c}` as the language string.
///
/// ```custom,{class=language-c}
/// int main(void) {
/// return 0;
/// }
/// ```
fn main() {}
```
This will notably produce the following HTML:
```html
<pre class="language-c">
int main(void) {
return 0;
}</pre>
```
Instead of:
```html
<pre class="rust rust-example-rendered">
<span class="ident">int</span> <span class="ident">main</span>(<span class="ident">void</span>) {
<span class="kw">return</span> <span class="number">0</span>;
}
</pre>
```
To be noted, we could have written `{.language-c}` to achieve the same result. `.` and `class=` have the same effect.
One last syntax point: content between parens (`(like this)`) is now considered as comment and is not taken into account at all.
In addition to this, I added an `unknown` field into `LangString` (the parsed code block "attribute") because of cases like this:
```rust
/// ```custom,class:language-c
/// main;
/// ```
pub fn foo() {}
```
Without this `unknown` field, it would generate in the DOM: `<pre class="language-class:language-c language-c">`, which is quite bad. So instead, it now stores all unknown tags into the `unknown` field and use the first one as "language". So in this case, since there is no unknown tag, it'll simply generate `<pre class="language-c">`. I added tests to cover this.
EDIT(camelid): This description is out-of-date. Using `custom,class:language-c` will generate the output `<pre class="language-class:language-c">` as would be expected; it treats `class:language-c` as just the name of a language (similar to the langstring `c` or `js` or what have you) since it does not use the designed class syntax.
Finally, I added a parser for the codeblock attributes to make it much easier to maintain. It'll be pretty easy to extend.
As to why this syntax for adding attributes was picked: it's [Pandoc's syntax](https://pandoc.org/MANUAL.html#extension-fenced_code_attributes). Even if it seems clunkier in some cases, it's extensible, and most third-party Markdown renderers are smart enough to ignore Pandoc's brace-delimited attributes (from [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110800#issuecomment-1522044456)).
r? `@notriddle`
Also resolve the type of constants, even if we already turned it into an error constant
error constants can still have arbitrary types, and in this case it was turned into an error constant because there was an infer var in the *type* not the *const*.
fixes#125760
Stop using `translate_args` in the new solver
It was unnecessary and also sketchy, since it was doing an out-of-search-graph fulfillment loop. Added a test for the only really minor subtlety of translating args, though not sure if it was being tested before, though I wouldn't be surprised if it wasn't.
r? lcnr
coverage: Optionally instrument the RHS of lazy logical operators
(This is an updated version of #124644 and #124402. Fixes #124120.)
When `||` or `&&` is used outside of a branching context (such as the condition of an `if`), the rightmost value does not directly influence any branching decision, so branch coverage instrumentation does not treat it as its own true-or-false branch.
That is a correct and useful interpretation of “branch coverage”, but might be undesirable in some contexts, as described at #124120. This PR therefore adds a new coverage level `-Zcoverage-options=condition` that behaves like branch coverage, but also adds additional branch instrumentation to the right-hand-side of lazy boolean operators.
---
As discussed at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124120#issuecomment-2092394586, this is mainly intended as an intermediate step towards fully-featured MC/DC instrumentation. It's likely that we'll eventually want to remove this coverage level (rather than stabilize it), either because it has been incorporated into MC/DC instrumentation, or because it's getting in the way of future MC/DC work. The main appeal of landing it now is so that work on tracking conditions can proceed concurrently with other MC/DC-related work.
````@rustbot```` label +A-code-coverage
Apply `x clippy --fix` and `x fmt` on Rustc
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Just run `x clippy --fix` and `x fmt`, and remove some changes like `impl Default`.
Revert propagation of drop-live information from Polonius
#64749 introduced a flow of drop-use data from Polonius to `LivenessResults::add_extra_drop_facts()`, which makes `LivenessResults` agree with Polonius on liveness in the presence of free regions that may be dropped. Later changes accidentally removed this flow. This PR restores it.
Implement `needs_async_drop` in rustc and optimize async drop glue
This PR expands on #121801 and implements `Ty::needs_async_drop` which works almost exactly the same as `Ty::needs_drop`, which is needed for #123948.
Also made compiler's async drop code to look more like compiler's regular drop code, which enabled me to write an optimization where types which do not use `AsyncDrop` can simply forward async drop glue to `drop_in_place`. This made size of the async block from the [async_drop test](67980dd6fb/tests/ui/async-await/async-drop.rs) to decrease by 12%.
Fold item bounds before proving them in `check_type_bounds` in new solver
Vaguely confident that this is sufficient to prevent rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative#46 and rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative#62.
This is not the "correct" solution, but will probably suffice until coinduction, at which point we implement the right solution (`check_type_bounds` must prove `Assoc<...> alias-eq ConcreteType`, normalizing requires proving item bounds).
r? lcnr
Avoid unwrap diag.code directly in note_and_explain_type_err
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Fixes#125757
Rename HIR `TypeBinding` to `AssocItemConstraint` and related cleanup
Rename `hir::TypeBinding` and `ast::AssocConstraint` to `AssocItemConstraint` and update all items and locals using the old terminology.
Motivation: The terminology *type binding* is extremely outdated. "Type bindings" not only include constraints on associated *types* but also on associated *constants* (feature `associated_const_equality`) and on RPITITs of associated *functions* (feature `return_type_notation`). Hence the word *item* in the new name. Furthermore, the word *binding* commonly refers to a mapping from a binder/identifier to a "value" for some definition of "value". Its use in "type binding" made sense when equality constraints (e.g., `AssocTy = Ty`) were the only kind of associated item constraint. Nowadays however, we also have *associated type bounds* (e.g., `AssocTy: Bound`) for which the term *binding* doesn't make sense.
---
Old terminology (HIR, rustdoc):
```
`TypeBinding`: (associated) type binding
├── `Constraint`: associated type bound
└── `Equality`: (associated) equality constraint (?)
├── `Ty`: (associated) type binding
└── `Const`: associated const equality (constraint)
```
Old terminology (AST, abbrev.):
```
`AssocConstraint`
├── `Bound`
└── `Equality`
├── `Ty`
└── `Const`
```
New terminology (AST, HIR, rustdoc):
```
`AssocItemConstraint`: associated item constraint
├── `Bound`: associated type bound
└── `Equality`: associated item equality constraint OR associated item binding (for short)
├── `Ty`: associated type equality constraint OR associated type binding (for short)
└── `Const`: associated const equality constraint OR associated const binding (for short)
```
r? compiler-errors
remove tracing tree indent lines
This allows vscode to collapse nested spans without having to manually remove the indent lines. This is incredibly useful when logging the new solver. I don't mind making them optional depending on some environment flag if you prefer using indent lines
For a gist of the new output, see https://gist.github.com/lcnr/bb4360ddbc5cd4631f2fbc569057e5eb#file-example-output-L181
r? `@oli-obk`
Enable DestinationPropagation by default.
~~Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115291.~~
This PR proposes to enable the destination propagation pass by default.
This pass is meant to reduce the amount of copies present in MIR.
At the same time, this PR removes the `RenameReturnPlace` pass, as it is currently unsound.
`DestinationPropagation` is not limited to `_0`, but does not handle borrowed locals.
Make `std::env::{set_var, remove_var}` unsafe in edition 2024
Allow calling these functions without `unsafe` blocks in editions up until 2021, but don't trigger the `unused_unsafe` lint for `unsafe` blocks containing these functions.
Fixes#27970.
Fixes#90308.
CC #124866.
coverage: Rename MC/DC `conditions_num` to `num_conditions`
Updated version of #124571, without the other changes that were split out into #125108 and #125700.
This value represents a quantity of conditions, not an ID, so the new spelling is more appropriate.
Some of the code touched by this PR could perhaps use some other changes, but I would prefer to keep this PR as a simple renaming and avoid scope creep.
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
Make `body_owned_by` return the `Body` instead of just the `BodyId`
fixes#125677
Almost all `body_owned_by` callers immediately called `body`, too, so just return `Body` directly.
This makes the inline-const query feeding more robust, as all calls to `body_owned_by` will now yield a body for inline consts, too.
I have not yet figured out a good way to make `tcx.hir().body()` return an inline-const body, but that can be done as a follow-up
Do not equate `Const`'s ty in `super_combine_const`
Fixes#114456
In #125451 we started relating the `Const`'s tys outside of a probe so it was no longer simply an assertion to catch bugs.
This was done so that when we _do_ provide a wrongly typed const argument to an item if we wind up relating it with some other instantiation we'll have a `TypeError` we can bubble up and taint the resulting mir allowing const eval to skip evaluation.
In this PR I instead change `ConstArgHasType` to correctly handle checking the types of const inference variables. Previously if we had something like `impl<const N: u32> Trait for [(); N]`, when using the impl we would instantiate it with infer vars and then check that `?x: u32` is of type `u32` and succeed. Then later we would infer `?x` to some `Const` of type `usize`.
We now stall on `?x` in `ConstArgHasType` until it has a concrete value that we can determine the type of. This allows us to fail using the erroneous implementation of `Trait` which allows us to taint the mir.
Long term we intend to remove the `ty` field on `Const` so we would have no way of accessing the `ty` of a const inference variable anyway and would have to do this. I did not fully update `ConstArgHasType` to avoid using the `ty` field as it's not entirely possible right now- we would need to lookup `ConstArgHasType` candidates in the env.
---
As for _why_ I think we should do this, relating the types of const's is not necessary for soundness of the type system. Originally this check started off as a plain `==` in `super_relate_consts` and gradually has been growing in complexity as we support more complicated types. It was never actually required to ensure that const arguments are correctly typed for their parameters however.
The way we currently check that a const argument has the correct type is a little convoluted and confusing (and will hopefully be less weird as time goes on). Every const argument has an anon const with its return type set to type of the const parameter it is an argument to. When type checking the anon const regular type checking rules require that the expression is the same type as the return type. This effectively ensure that no matter what every const argument _always_ has the correct type.
An extra bit of complexity is that during `hir_ty_lowering` we do not represent everything as a `ConstKind::Unevaluated` corresponding to the anon const. For generic parameters i.e. `[(); N]` we simply represent them as `ConstKind::Param` as we do not want `ConstKind::Unevaluated` with generic substs on stable under min const generics. The anon const still gets type checked resulting in errors about type mismatches.
Eventually we intend to not create anon consts for all const arguments (for example for `ConstKind::Param`) and instead check that the argument type is correct via `ConstArgHasType` obligations (these effectively also act as a check that the anon consts have the correctly set return type).
What this all means is that the the only time we should ever have mismatched types when relating two `Const`s is if we have messed up our logic for ensuring that const arguments are of the correct type. Having this not be an assert is:
- Confusing as it may incorrectly lead people to believe this is an important check that is actually required
- Opens the possibility for bugs or behaviour reliant on this (unnecessary) check existing
---
This PR makes two tests go from pass->ICE (`generic_const_exprs/ice-125520-layout-mismatch-mulwithoverflow.rs` and `tests/crashes/121858.rs`). This is caused by the fact that we evaluate anon consts even if their where clauses do not hold and is a pre-existing issue and only affects `generic_const_exprs`. I am comfortable exposing the brokenness of `generic_const_exprs` more with this PR
This PR makes a test go from ICE->pass (`const-generics/issues/issue-105821.rs`). I have no idea why this PR affects that but I believe that ICE is an unrelated issue to do with the fact that under `generic_const_exprs`/`adt_const_params` we do not handle lifetimes in const parameter types correctly. This PR is likely just masking this bug.
Note: this PR doesn't re-introduce the assertion that the two consts' tys are equal. I'm not really sure how I feel about this but tbh it has caused more ICEs than its found lately so 🤷♀️
r? `@oli-obk` `@compiler-errors`
When a lazy logical operator (`&&` or `||`) occurs outside of an `if`
condition, it normally doesn't have any associated control-flow branch, so we
don't have an existing way to track whether it was true or false.
This patch adds special code to handle this case, by inserting extra MIR blocks
in a diamond shape after evaluating the RHS. This gives us a place to insert
the appropriate marker statements, which can then be given their own counters.
Add lang items for `AsyncFn*`, `Future`, `AsyncFnKindHelper`'s associated types
Adds lang items for `AsyncFnOnce::Output`, `AsyncFnOnce::CallOnceFuture`, `AsyncFnMut::CallRefFuture`, and uses them in the new solver. I'm mostly interested in doing this to help accelerate uplifting the new trait solver into a separate crate.
The old solver is kind of spaghetti, so I haven't moved that to use these lang items (i.e. it still uses `item_name`-based comparisons).
update: Also adds lang items for `Future::Output` and `AsyncFnKindHelper::Upvars`.
cc ``@lcnr``
Always use the `Fn(T) -> R` format when printing closure traits instead of `Fn<(T,), Output = R>`.
Fix#67100:
```
error[E0277]: expected a `Fn()` closure, found `F`
--> file.rs:6:13
|
6 | call_fn(f)
| ------- ^ expected an `Fn()` closure, found `F`
| |
| required by a bound introduced by this call
|
= note: wrap the `F` in a closure with no arguments: `|| { /* code */ }`
note: required by a bound in `call_fn`
--> file.rs:1:15
|
1 | fn call_fn<F: Fn() -> ()>(f: &F) {
| ^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `call_fn`
help: consider further restricting this bound
|
5 | fn call_any<F: std::any::Any + Fn()>(f: &F) {
| ++++++
```
Allow calling these functions without `unsafe` blocks in editions up
until 2021, but don't trigger the `unused_unsafe` lint for `unsafe`
blocks containing these functions.
Fixes#27970.
Fixes#90308.
CC #124866.
This commit refactors the `#[do_not_recommend]` support in the old
parser to also apply to projection errors and not only to selection
errors. This allows the attribute to be used more widely.
Reintroduce name resolution check for trying to access locals from an inline const
fixes#125676
I removed this without replacement in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124650 without considering the consequences
coverage: Avoid overflow when the MC/DC condition limit is exceeded
Fix for the test failure seen in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124571#issuecomment-2099620869.
If we perform this subtraction first, it can sometimes overflow to -1 before the addition can bring its value back to 0.
That behaviour seems to be benign, but it nevertheless causes test failures in compiler configurations that check for overflow.
``@rustbot`` label +A-code-coverage
Make lint: `lint_dropping_references` `lint_forgetting_copy_types` `lint_forgetting_references` give suggestion if possible.
This is a follow-up PR of #125433. When it's merged, I want change lint `dropping_copy_types` to use the same `Subdiagnostic` struct `UseLetUnderscoreIgnoreSuggestion` which is added in this PR.
Hi, Thank you(`@Urgau` ) again for your help in the previous PR. If your time permits, please also take a look at this one.
r? compiler
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don't inhibit random field reordering on repr(packed(1))
`inhibit_struct_field_reordering_opt` being false means we exclude this type from random field shuffling. However, `packed(1)` types can still be shuffled! The logic was added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/48528 since it's pointless to reorder fields in packed(1) types (there's no padding that could be saved) -- but that shouldn't inhibit `-Zrandomize-layout` (which did not exist at the time).
We could add an optimization elsewhere to not bother sorting the fields for `repr(packed)` types, but I don't think that's worth the effort.
This *does* change the behavior in that we may now reorder fields of `packed(1)` structs (e.g. if there are niches, we'll try to move them to the start/end, according to `NicheBias`). We were always allowed to do that but so far we didn't. Quoting the [reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/type-layout.html):
> On their own, align and packed do not provide guarantees about the order of fields in the layout of a struct or the layout of an enum variant, although they may be combined with representations (such as C) which do provide such guarantees.
If we perform this subtraction and then add 1, the subtraction can sometimes
overflow to -1 before the addition can bring its value back to 0. That
behaviour seems to be benign, but it nevertheless causes test failures in
compiler configurations that check for overflow.
We can avoid the overflow by instead subtracting (N - 1), which is
algebraically equivalent, and more closely matches what the code is actually
trying to do.
A small diagnostic improvement for dropping_copy_types
For a value `m` which implements `Copy` trait, `drop(m);` does nothing.
We now suggest user to ignore it by a abstract and general note: `let _ = ...`.
I think we can give a clearer note here: `let _ = m;`
fixes#125189
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Tweak relations to no longer rely on `TypeTrace`
Remove `At::trace`, and inline all of the `Trace::equate`,etc methods into `At`.
The only nontrivial change is that we use `AliasTerm` to relate two unevaluated consts in the old-solver impl of `ConstEquate`, since `AliasTerm` does implement `ToTrace` and will relate the args structurally (shallowly).
r? lcnr
Silence some resolve errors when there have been glob import errors
When encountering `use foo::*;` where `foo` fails to be found, and we later encounter resolution errors, we silence those later errors.
A single case of the above, for an *existing* import on a big codebase would otherwise have a huge number of knock-down spurious errors.
Ideally, instead of a global flag to silence all subsequent resolve errors, we'd want to introduce an unnameable binding in the appropriate rib as a sentinel when there's a failed glob import, so when we encounter a resolve error we can search for that sentinel and if found, and only then, silence that error. The current approach is just a quick proof of concept to iterate over.
Partially address #96799.
Add `--print=check-cfg` to get the expected configs
This PR adds a new `--print` variant `check-cfg` to get the expected configs.
Details and rational can be found on the MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/743
``@rustbot`` label +F-check-cfg +S-waiting-on-MCP
r? ``@petrochenkov``
When we encounter a situation where we'd suggest `pin!()`, we now account for that expression exising as part of an assignment and provide an appropriate suggestion:
```
error[E0599]: no method named `poll` found for type parameter `F` in the current scope
--> $DIR/pin-needed-to-poll-3.rs:19:28
|
LL | impl<F> Future for FutureWrapper<F>
| - method `poll` not found for this type parameter
...
LL | let res = self.fut.poll(cx);
| ^^^^ method not found in `F`
|
help: consider pinning the expression
|
LL ~ let mut pinned = std::pin::pin!(self.fut);
LL ~ let res = pinned.as_mut().poll(cx);
|
```
Fix#125661.
rustfmt fixes
The `rmake.rs` entries in `rustfmt.toml` are causing major problems for `x fmt`. This PR removes them and does some minor related cleanups.
r? ``@GuillaumeGomez``
NVPTX: Avoid PassMode::Direct for args in C abi
Fixes#117480
I must admit that I'm confused about `PassMode` altogether, is there a good sum-up threads for this anywhere? I'm especially confused about how "indirect" and "byval" goes together. To me it seems like "indirect" basically means "use a indirection through a pointer", while "byval" basically means "do not use indirection through a pointer".
The return used to keep `PassMode::Direct` for small aggregates. It turns out that `make_indirect` messes up the tests and one way to fix it is to keep `PassMode::Direct` for all aggregates. I have mostly seen this PassMode mentioned for args. Is it also a problem for returns? When experimenting with `byval` as an alternative i ran into [this assert](61a3eea804/compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/abi.rs (L463C22-L463C22))
I have added tests for the same kind of types that is already tested for the "ptx-kernel" abi. The tests cannot be enabled until something like #117458 is completed and merged.
CC: ``@RalfJung`` since you seem to be the expert on this and have already helped me out tremendously
CC: ``@RDambrosio016`` in case this influence your work on `rustc_codegen_nvvm`
``@rustbot`` label +O-NVPTX
Omit non-needs_drop drop_in_place in vtables
This replaces the drop_in_place reference with null in vtables. On librustc_driver.so, this drops about ~17k (11%) dynamic relocations from the output, since many vtables can now be placed in read-only memory, rather than having a relocated pointer included.
This makes a tradeoff by adding a null check at vtable call sites. I'm not sure that's readily avoidable without changing the vtable format (e.g., so that we can use a pc-relative relocation instead of an absolute address, and avoid the dynamic relocation that way). But it seems likely that the check is cheap at runtime.
Accepted MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/730
When encountering `use foo::*;` where `foo` fails to be found, and we later
encounter resolution errors, we silence those later errors.
A single case of the above, for an *existing* import on a big codebase would
otherwise have a huge number of knock-down spurious errors.
Ideally, instead of a global flag to silence all subsequent resolve errors,
we'd want to introduce an unameable binding in the appropriate rib as a
sentinel when there's a failed glob import, so when we encounter a resolve
error we can search for that sentinel and if found, and only then, silence
that error. The current approach is just a quick proof of concept to
iterate over.
Partially address #96799.
This shunts all the complexity of siphoning off the drop-use facts
into `LivenessResults::add_extra_drop_facts()`, which may or may
not be a good approach.
The guarded call will ICE on its own.
While this improved diagnostics in the presence of bugs somewhat, it is also a blocker to query feeding of constants. If this case is hit again, we should instead improve diagnostics of the root ICE
It's reasonable to want to, but in the current implementation this
causes multiple problems.
- All the `rmake.rs` files are formatted every time even when they
haven't changed. This is because they get whitelisted unconditionally
in the `OverrideBuilder`, before the changed files get added.
- The way `OverrideBuilder` works, if any files gets whitelisted then no
unmentioned files will get traversed. This is surprising, and means
that the `rmake.rs` entries broke the use of explicit paths to `x
fmt`, and also broke `GITHUB_ACTIONS=true git check --fmt`.
The commit removes the `rmake.rs` entries, fixes the formatting of a
couple of files that were misformatted (not previously caught due to the
`GITHUB_ACTIONS` breakage), and bans `!`-prefixed entries in
`rustfmt.toml` because they cause all these problems.
`-Znext-solver`: eagerly normalize when adding goals
fixes#125269. I am not totally with this fix and going to keep this open until we have a more general discussion about how to handle hangs caused by lazy norm in the new solver.
We still check for the `rental`/`allsorts-rental` crates. But now if
they are detected we just emit a fatal error, instead of emitting a
warning and providing alternative behaviour.
The original "hack" implementing alternative behaviour was added
in #73345.
The lint was added in #83127.
The tracking issue is #83125.
The direct motivation for the change is that providing the alternative
behaviour is interfering with #125174 and follow-on work.
This replaces the drop_in_place reference with null in vtables. On
librustc_driver.so, this drops about ~17k dynamic relocations from the
output, since many vtables can now be placed in read-only memory, rather
than having a relocated pointer included.
This makes a tradeoff by adding a null check at vtable call sites.
That's hard to avoid without changing the vtable format (e.g., to use a
pc-relative relocation instead of an absolute address, and avoid the
dynamic relocation that way). But it seems likely that the check is
cheap at runtime.
drop region constraints for ambiguous goals
See the comment in `compute_external_query_constraints`. While the underlying issue is preexisting, this fixes a bug introduced by #125343.
It slightly weakens the leak chec, even if we didn't have any test which was affected. I want to write such a test before merging this PR.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Uplift `EarlyBinder` into `rustc_type_ir`
We also need to give `EarlyBinder` a `'tcx` param, so that we can carry the `Interner` in the `EarlyBinder` too. This is necessary because otherwise we have an unconstrained `I: Interner` parameter in many of the `EarlyBinder`'s inherent impls.
I also generally think that this is desirable to have, in case we later want to track some state in the `EarlyBinder`.
r? lcnr
cleanup dependence of `ExtCtxt` in transcribe when macro expansion
part of #125356
We can remove `transcribe`’s dependence on `ExtCtxt` to facilitate subsequent work (such as moving macro expansion into the incremental compilation system)
r? ```@petrochenkov```
Thanks for the reviewing!
interpret: get rid of 'mir lifetime
I realized our MIR bodies are actually at lifetime `'tcx`, so we don't need to carry around this other lifetime everywhere.
r? `@oli-obk`
[perf] Delay the construction of early lint diag structs
Attacks some of the perf regressions from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124417#issuecomment-2123700666.
See individual commits for details. The first three commits are not strictly necessary.
However, the 2nd one (06bc4fc671, *Remove `LintDiagnostic::msg`*) makes the main change way nicer to implement.
It's also pretty sweet on its own if I may say so myself.
Remove `DefId` from `EarlyParamRegion`
Currently we represent usages of `Region` parameters via the `ReEarlyParam` or `ReLateParam` variants. The `ReEarlyParam` is effectively equivalent to `TyKind::Param` and `ConstKind::Param` (i.e. it stores a `Symbol` and a `u32` index) however it also stores a `DefId` for the definition of the lifetime parameter.
This was used in roughly two places:
- Borrowck diagnostics instead of threading the appropriate `body_id` down to relevant locations. Interestingly there were already some places that had to pass down a `DefId` manually.
- Some opaque type checking logic was using the `DefId` field to track captured lifetimes
I've split this PR up into a commit for generate rote changes to diagnostics code to pass around a `DefId` manually everywhere, and another commit for the opaque type related changes which likely require more careful review as they might change the semantics of lints/errors.
Instead of manually passing the `DefId` around everywhere I previously tried to bundle it in with `TypeErrCtxt` but ran into issues with some call sites of `infcx.err_ctxt` being unable to provide a `DefId`, particularly places involved with trait solving and normalization. It might be worth investigating adding some new wrapper type to pass this around everywhere but I think this might be acceptable for now.
This pr also has the effect of reducing the size of `EarlyParamRegion` from 16 bytes -> 8 bytes. I wouldn't expect this to have any direct performance improvement however, other variants of `RegionKind` over `8` bytes are all because they contain a `BoundRegionKind` which is, as far as I know, mostly there for diagnostics. If we're ever able to remove this it would shrink the `RegionKind` type from `24` bytes to `12` (and with clever bit packing we might be able to get it to `8` bytes). I am curious what the performance impact would be of removing interning of `Region`'s if we ever manage to shrink `RegionKind` that much.
Sidenote: by removing the `DefId` the `Debug` output for `Region` has gotten significantly nicer. As an example see this opaque type debug print before vs after this PR:
`Opaque(DefId(0:13 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::{opaque#0}), [DefId(0:9 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::'a)_'a/#0, T, DefId(0:9 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::'a)_'a/#0])`
`Opaque(DefId(0:13 ~ impl_trait_captures[aeb9]::foo::{opaque#0}), ['a/#0, T, 'a/#0])`
r? `@compiler-errors` (I would like someone who understands the opaque type setup to atleast review the type system commit, but the rest is likely reviewable by anyone)
Don't skip out of inner const when looking for body for suggestion
Self-explanatory title, I'll point out the important logic in an inline comment.
Fixes#125370
Don't continue probing for method if in suggestion and autoderef hits ambiguity
The title is somewhat self-explanatory. When we hit ambiguity in method autoderef steps, we previously would continue to probe for methods if we were giving a suggestion. This seems useless, and causes an ICE when we are not able to unify the receiver later on in confirmation.
Fixes#125432
Support C23's Variadics Without a Named Parameter
Fixes#123773
This PR removes the static check that disallowed extern functions
with ellipsis (varargs) as the only parameter since this is now
valid in C23.
This will not break any existing code as mentioned in the proposal
document: https://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg14/www/docs/n2975.pdf.
Also, adds a doc comment for `check_decl_cvariadic_pos()` and
fixes the name of the function (`varadic` -> `variadic`).
Turn remaining non-structural-const-in-pattern lints into hard errors
This completes the implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120362 by turning our remaining future-compat lints into hard errors: indirect_structural_match and pointer_structural_match.
They have been future-compat lints for a while (indirect_structural_match for many years, pointer_structural_match since Rust 1.75 (released Dec 28, 2023)), and have shown up in dependency breakage reports since Rust 1.78 (just released on May 2, 2024). I don't expect a lot of code will still depend on them, but we will of course do a crater run.
A lot of cleanup is now possible in const_to_pat, but that is deferred to a later PR.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70861
Warn (or error) when `Self` ctor from outer item is referenced in inner nested item
This implements a warning `SELF_CONSTRUCTOR_FROM_OUTER_ITEM` when a self constructor from an outer impl is referenced in an inner nested item. This is a proper fix mentioned https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117246#discussion_r1374648388.
This warning is additionally bumped to a hard error when the self type references generic parameters, since it's almost always going to ICE, and is basically *never* correct to do.
This also reverts part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117246, since I believe this is the proper fix and we shouldn't need the helper functions (`opt_param_at`/`opt_type_param`) any longer, since they shouldn't really ever be used in cases where we don't have this problem.
Resolve anon const's parent predicates to direct parent instead of opaque's parent
When an anon const is inside of an opaque, #99801 added a hack to resolve the anon const's parent predicates *not* to the opaque's predicates, but to the opaque's *parent's* predicates. This is insufficient when considering nested opaques.
This means that the `predicates_of` an anon const might reference duplicated lifetimes (installed by `compute_bidirectional_outlives_predicates`) when computing known outlives in MIR borrowck, leading to these ICEs:
Fixes#121574Fixes#118403
~~Instead, we should be using the `OpaqueTypeOrigin` to acquire the owner item (fn/type alias/etc) of the opaque, whose predicates we're fine to mention.~~
~~I think it's a bit sketchy that we're doing this at all, tbh; I think it *should* be fine for the anon const to inherit the predicates of the opaque it's located inside. However, that would also mean that we need to make sure the `generics_of` that anon const line up in the same way.~~
~~None of this is important to solve right now; I just want to fix these ICEs so we can land #125468, which accidentally fixes these issues in a different and unrelated way.~~
edit: We don't need this special case anyways because we install the right parent item in `generics_of` anyways:
213ad10c8f/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/collect/generics_of.rs (L150)
r? `@BoxyUwU`
compiler: validate.rs belongs next to what it validates
It's hard to find code that is deeply nested and far away from its callsites, so let's move `rustc_const_eval::transform::validate` into `rustc_mir_transform`, where all of its callers are. As `rustc_mir_transform` already depends on `rustc_const_eval`, the added visible dependency edge doesn't mean the dependency tree got any worse.
This also lets us unnest the `check_consts` module.
I did look into moving everything inside `rustc_const_eval::transform` into `rustc_mir_transform`. It turned out to be a much more complex operation, with more concerns and real edges into the `const_eval` crate, whereas this was both faster and more obvious.
Only suppress binop error in favor of semicolon suggestion if we're in an assignment statement
Similar to #123722, we are currently too aggressive when delaying a binop error with the expectation that we'll emit another error elsewhere. This adjusts that heuristic to be more accurate, at the cost of some possibly poorer suggestions.
Fixes#125458
Run rustfmt on files that need it.
Somehow these files aren't properly formatted. By default `x fmt` and `x tidy` only check files that have changed against master, so if an ill-formatted file somehow slips in it can stay that way as long as it doesn't get modified(?)
I found these when I ran `x fmt` explicitly on every `.rs` file in the repo, while working on
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/750.