Rescope temp lifetime in if-let into IfElse with migration lint
Tracking issue #124085
This PR shortens the temporary lifetime to cover only the pattern matching and consequent branch of a `if let`.
At the expression location, means that the lifetime is shortened from previously the deepest enclosing block or statement in Edition 2021. This warrants an Edition change.
Coming with the Edition change, this patch also implements an edition lint to warn about the change and a safe rewrite suggestion to preserve the 2021 semantics in most cases.
Related to #103108.
Related crater runs: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129466.
Fix anon const def-creation when macros are involved
Fixes#128016.
Ever since #125915, some `ast::AnonConst`s turn into `hir::ConstArgKind::Path`s,
which don't have associated `DefId`s. To deal with the fact that we don't have
resolution information in `DefCollector`, we decided to implement a process
where if the anon const *appeared* to be trivial (i.e., `N` or `{ N }`), we
would avoid creating a def for it in `DefCollector`. If later, in AST lowering,
we realized it turned out to be a unit struct literal, or we were lowering it
to something that didn't use `hir::ConstArg`, we'd create its def there.
However, let's say we have a macro `m!()` that expands to a reference to a free
constant `FOO`. If we use `m!()` in the body of an anon const (e.g., `Foo<{ m!() }>`),
then in def collection, it appears to be a nontrivial anon const and we create
a def. But the macro expands to something that looks like a trivial const arg,
but is not, so in AST lowering we "fix" the mistake we assumed def collection
made and create a def for it. This causes a duplicate definition ICE.
The long-term fix for this is to delay the creation of defs for all expression-like
nodes until AST lowering (see #128844 for an incomplete attempt at this). This
would avoid issues like this one that are caused by hacky workarounds. However,
doing this uncovers a pre-existing bug with opaque types that is quite involved
to fix (see #129023).
In the meantime, this PR fixes the bug by delaying def creation for anon consts
whose bodies are macro invocations until after we expand the macro and know
what is inside it. This is accomplished by adding information to create the
anon const's def to the data in `Resolver.invocation_parents`.
r? `@BoxyUwU`
...and remove the `const_arg_path` feature gate as a result. It was only
a stopgap measure to fix the regression that the new lowering introduced
(which should now be fixed by this PR).
more eagerly discard constraints on overflow
We always discard the results of overflowing goals inside of the trait solver. We previously did so when instantiating the response in `evaluate_goal`. Canonicalizing results only to later discard them is also inefficient 🤷
It's simpler and nicer to debug to eagerly discard constraints inside of the query itself.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
some const cleanup: remove unnecessary attributes, add const-hack indications
I learned that we use `FIXME(const-hack)` on top of the "const-hack" label. That seems much better since it marks the right place in the code and moves around with the code. So I went through the PRs with that label and added appropriate FIXMEs in the code. IMO this means we can then remove the label -- Cc ``@rust-lang/wg-const-eval.``
I also noticed some const stability attributes that don't do anything useful, and removed them.
r? ``@fee1-dead``
Properly report error on `const gen fn`
Fixes#130232
Also removes some (what I thought were unused) functions, and fixes a bug in clippy where we considered `gen fn` to be the same as `fn` because it was only built to consider asyncness.
enable const-float-classify test, and test_next_up/down on 32bit x86
The test_next_up/down tests have been disabled on all 32bit x86 targets, which goes too far -- they should definitely work on our (tier 1) i686 target, it is only without SSE that we might run into trouble due to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114479. However, I cannot reproduce that trouble any more -- maybe that got fixed by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123351?
The const-float-classify test relied on const traits "because we can", and got disabled when const traits got removed. That's an unfortunate reduction in test coverage of our float functionality, so let's restore the test in a way that does not rely on const traits.
The const-float tests are actually testing runtime behavior as well, and I don't think that runtime behavior is covered anywhere else. Probably they shouldn't be called "const-float", but we don't have a `tests/ui/float` folder... should I create one and move them there? Are there any other ui tests that should be moved there?
I also removed some FIXME referring to not use x87 for Rust-to-Rust-calls -- that has happened in #123351 so this got fixed indeed. Does that mean we can simplify all that float code again? I am not sure how to test it. Is running the test suite with an i586 target enough?
Cc ```@tgross35``` ```@workingjubilee```
Don't warn empty branches unreachable for now
The [stabilization](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122792) of `min_exhaustive_patterns` updated the `unreachable_pattern` lint to trigger on empty arms too. This has caused some amount of churn, and imposes an unjoyful `#[allow(unreachable_patterns)]` onto library authors who want to stay backwards-compatible.
While I think the lint should eventually cover these cases, for transition's sake I'd prefer to revert linting to what it was prior to stabilization, at least for now.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129031.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Fix false positive with `missing_docs` and `#[test]`
Since #130025, the compiler don't ignore missing_docs when compiling the tests. But there is now a false positive warning for every `#[test]`
For example, this code
```rust
//! Crate docs
fn just_a_test() {}
```
Would emit this warning when running `cargo test`
```
warning: missing documentation for a constant
--> src/lib.rs:5:1
|
4 | #[test]
| ------- in this procedural macro expansion
5 | fn just_a_test() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
Report the `note` when specified in `diagnostic::on_unimplemented`
Before this PR the `note` field was completely ignored for some reason, now it is shown (I think) correctly during the hir typechecking phase.
1. Report the `note` when specified in `diagnostic::on_unimplemented`
2. Added a test for unimplemented trait diagnostic
3. Added a test for custom unimplemented trait diagnostic
Close#130084
P.S. This is my first PR to rustc.
Suggest the correct pattern syntax on usage of unit variant pattern for a struct variant
Closes#126243
I add a suggestion on usage of unit variant pattern for a struct variant.
Since #130025, the compiler don't ignore missing_docs when compiling the tests.
But there is now a false positive warning for every `#[test]`
For example, this code
```rust
//! Crate docs
fn just_a_test() {}
```
Would emit this warning when running `cargo test`
```
warning: missing documentation for a constant
--> src/lib.rs:5:1
|
4 | #[test]
| ------- in this procedural macro expansion
5 | fn just_a_test() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
generalize: track relevant info in cache key
This was previously theoretically incomplete as we could incorrectly generalize as if the type was in an invariant context even though we're in a covariant one. Similar with the `in_alias` flag.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Enumerate lint expectations using AttrId
This PR implements the idea I outlined in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127884#issuecomment-2240338547
We can uniquely identify a lint expectation `#[expect(lint0, lint1...)]` using the `AttrId` and the index of the lint inside the attribute. This PR uses this property in `check_expectations`.
In addition, this PR stops stashing expected diagnostics to wait for the unstable -> stable `LintExpectationId` mapping: if the lint is emitted with an unstable attribute, it must have been emitted by an `eval_always` query (like inside the resolver), so won't be loaded from cache. Decoding an `AttrId` from the on-disk cache ICEs, so we have no risk of accidentally checking an expectation.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127884
cc `@xFrednet`
abi/compatibility test: remove tests inside repr(C) wrappers
When I wrote the test I assumed we'd guarantee ABI compatibility to be "structural" wrt `repr(C)` types, i.e. if two `repr(C)` types have all their fields be pairwise ABI-compatible then the types are ABI-compatible. That got removed from the ABI compatibility docs before they landed, though, so let's also remove it from this test.
Also emit `missing_docs` lint with `--test` to fulfil expectations
This PR removes the "test harness" suppression of the `missing_docs` lint to be able to fulfil `#[expect]` (expectations) as it is now "relevant".
I think the goal was to maybe avoid false-positive while linting on public items under `#[cfg(test)]` but with effective visibility we should no longer have any false-positive.
Another possibility would be to query the lint level and only emit the lint if it's of expect level, but that is even more hacky.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130021
try-job: x86_64-gnu-aux
bootstrap `naked_asm!` for `compiler-builtins`
tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90957
parent PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128651
in this PR, `naked_asm!` is added as an alias for `asm!` with one difference: `options(noreturn)` is always enabled by `naked_asm!`. That makes it future-compatible for when `naked_asm!` starts disallowing `options(noreturn)` later.
The `naked_asm!` macro must be introduced first so that we can upgrade `compiler-builtins` to use it, and can then change the implementation of `naked_asm!` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128651
I've added some usages for `naked_asm!` in the tests, so we can be confident that it works, but I've left upgrading the whole test suite to the parent PR.
r? ``@Amanieu``
Inform the solver if evaluation is concurrent
Parallel compilation of a program can cause unexpected event sequencing. Inform the solver when this is true so it can skip invalid asserts.
Parallel compilation of a program can cause unexpected event sequencing.
Inform the solver when this is true so it can skip invalid asserts, then
assert replaced solutions are equal if Some
in this commit, `naked_asm!` is an alias for `asm!` with one difference: `options(noreturn)` is always enabled by `naked_asm!`. That makes it future-compatible for when `naked_asm!` starts disallowing `options(noreturn)` later.