Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #96763 (Fix maintainer validation message)
- #106540 (Insert whitespace to avoid ident concatenation in suggestion)
- #106763 (print why a test was ignored if its the only test specified)
- #106769 (libtest: Print why a test was ignored if it's the only test specified.)
- #106798 (Implement `signum` with `Ord`)
- #107006 (Output tree representation on thir-tree)
- #107078 (Update wording of invalid_doc_attributes docs.)
- #107169 (Pass `--locked` to the x test tidy call)
- #107431 (docs: remove colon from time header)
- #107432 (rustdoc: remove unused class `has-srclink`)
- #107448 (When stamp doesn't exist, should say Error, and print path to stamp file)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Output tree representation on thir-tree
The current output of `-Zunpretty=thir-tree` is really cumbersome to work with, using an actual tree representation should make it easier to see what the thir looks like.
Insert whitespace to avoid ident concatenation in suggestion
This PR tweaks the suggestion of removing misplaced parentheses around trait bounds so as to avoid concatenating two identifiers. Although subtle, this should make outputs less surprising especially when applying the `MachineApplicable` suggestions automatically.
Implement simple CopyPropagation based on SSA analysis
This PR extracts the "copy propagation" logic from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106285.
MIR may produce chains of assignment between locals, like `_x = move? _y`.
This PR attempts to remove such chains by unifying locals.
The current implementation is a bit overzealous in turning moves into copies, and in removing storage statements.
Skip possible where_clause_object_safety lints when checking `multiple_supertrait_upcastable`
Fix#106247
To achieve this, I lifted the `WhereClauseReferencesSelf` out from `object_safety_violations` and move it into `is_object_safe` (which is changed to a new query).
cc `@dtolnay`
r? `@compiler-errors`
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #106618 (Disable `linux_ext` in wasm32 and fortanix rustdoc builds.)
- #107097 (Fix def-use dominance check)
- #107154 (library/std/sys_common: Define MIN_ALIGN for m68k-unknown-linux-gnu)
- #107397 (Gracefully exit if --keep-stage flag is used on a clean source tree)
- #107401 (remove the usize field from CandidateSource::AliasBound)
- #107413 (make more pleasant to read)
- #107422 (Also erase substs for new infcx in pin move error)
- #107425 (Check for missing space between fat arrow and range pattern)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Check for missing space between fat arrow and range pattern
Fixes#107420
Ideally we wouldn't emit an error about expecting `=>` etc., but I'm not sure how to recover from this.
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics
Also erase substs for new infcx in pin move error
The code originally correctly erased the regions of the type it passed to the newly created infcx. But after the `fn_sig` query was made to return an `EarlyBinder<T>`, some substs that were around were substituted there without erasing their regions. They were then passed into the newly cerated infcx, which caused the ICE.
Fixes#107419
r? compiler-errors who reviewed the original PR adding this diagnostic
Fix def-use dominance check
A definition does not dominate a use in the same statement. For example
in MIR generated for compound assignment x += a (when overflow checks
are disabled).
Use stable metric for const eval limit instead of current terminator-based logic
This patch adds a `MirPass` that inserts a new MIR instruction `ConstEvalCounter` to any loops and function calls in the CFG. This instruction is used during Const Eval to count against the `const_eval_limit`, and emit the `StepLimitReached` error, replacing the current logic which uses Terminators only.
The new method of counting loops and function calls should be more stable across compiler versions (i.e., not cause crates that compiled successfully before, to no longer compile when changes to the MIR generation/optimization are made).
Also see: #103877
Special-case deriving `PartialOrd` for enums with dataless variants
I was able to get slightly better codegen by flipping the derived `PartialOrd` logic for two-variant enums. I also tried to document the implementation of the derive macro to make the special-case logic a little clearer.
```rs
#[derive(PartialEq, PartialOrd)]
pub enum A<T> {
A,
B(T)
}
```
```diff
impl<T: ::core::cmp::PartialOrd> ::core::cmp::PartialOrd for A<T> {
#[inline]
fn partial_cmp(
&self,
other: &A<T>,
) -> ::core::option::Option<::core::cmp::Ordering> {
let __self_tag = ::core::intrinsics::discriminant_value(self);
let __arg1_tag = ::core::intrinsics::discriminant_value(other);
- match ::core::cmp::PartialOrd::partial_cmp(&__self_tag, &__arg1_tag) {
- ::core::option::Option::Some(::core::cmp::Ordering::Equal) => {
- match (self, other) {
- (A::B(__self_0), A::B(__arg1_0)) => {
- ::core::cmp::PartialOrd::partial_cmp(__self_0, __arg1_0)
- }
- _ => ::core::option::Option::Some(::core::cmp::Ordering::Equal),
- }
+ match (self, other) {
+ (A::B(__self_0), A::B(__arg1_0)) => {
+ ::core::cmp::PartialOrd::partial_cmp(__self_0, __arg1_0)
}
- cmp => cmp,
+ _ => ::core::cmp::PartialOrd::partial_cmp(&__self_tag, &__arg1_tag),
}
}
}
```
Godbolt: [Current](https://godbolt.org/z/GYjEzG1T8), [New](https://godbolt.org/z/GoK78qx15)
I'm not sure how common a case comparing two enums like this (such as `Option`) is, and if it's worth the slowdown of adding a special case to the derive. If it causes overall regressions it might be worth just manually implementing this for `Option`.
The code originally correctly erased the regions of the type it passed
to the newly created infcx. But after the `fn_sig` query was made to
return an `EarlyBinder<T>`, some substs that were around were
substituted there without erasing their regions. They were then passed
into the newly cerated infcx, which caused the ICE.
Remove HirId -> LocalDefId map from HIR.
Having this map in HIR prevents the creating of new definitions after HIR has been built.
Thankfully, we do not need it.
Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103902
Detect references to non-existant messages in Fluent resources
Should help with cases like #107091, where `{variable}` (a message reference) is accidentally typed, rather than `{$variable}` (a variable reference)
Fixes#107370
```@rustbot``` label +A-translation
Improve unexpected close and mismatch delimiter hint in TokenTreesReader
Fixes#103882Fixes#68987Fixes#69259
The inner indentation mismatching will be covered by outer block, the new added function `report_error_prone_delim_block` will find out the error prone candidates for reporting.
Remove overlapping parts of multipart suggestions
This PR adds a debug assertion that the parts of a single substitution cannot overlap, fixes a overlapping substitution from the testsuite, and fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106870.
Note that a single suggestion can still have multiple overlapping substitutions / possible edits, we just don't suggest overlapping replacements in a single edit anymore.
I've also included a fix for an unrelated bug where rustfix for `explicit_outlives_requirements` would produce multiple trailing commas for a where clause.
Don't merge vtables when full debuginfo is enabled.
This PR makes the compiler not emit the `unnamed_addr` attribute for vtables when full debuginfo is enabled, so that they don't get merged even if they have the same contents. This allows debuggers to more reliably map from a dyn pointer to the self-type of a trait object by looking at the vtable's debuginfo.
The PR only changes the behavior of the LLVM backend as other backends don't emit vtable debuginfo (as far as I can tell).
The performance impact of this change should be small as [measured](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103514#issuecomment-1290833854) in a previous PR.
internally change regions to be covariant
Surprisingly, we consider the reference type `&'a T` to be contravaraint in its lifetime parameter. This is confusing and conflicts with the documentation we have in the reference, rustnomicon, and rustc-dev-guide. This also arguably not the correct use of terminology since we can use `&'static u8` in a place where `&' a u8` is expected, this implies that `&'static u8 <: &' a u8` and consequently `'static <: ' a`, hence covariance.
Because of this, when relating two types, we used to switch the argument positions in a confusing way:
`Subtype(&'a u8 <: &'b u8) => Subtype('b <: 'a) => Outlives('a: 'b) => RegionSubRegion('b <= 'a)`
The reason for the current behavior is probably that we wanted `Subtype('b <: 'a)` and `RegionSubRegion('b <= 'a)` to be equivalent, but I don' t think this is a good reason since these relations are sufficiently different in that the first is a relation in the subtyping lattice and is intrinsic to the type-systems, while the the second relation is an implementation detail of regionck.
This PR changes this behavior to use covariance, so..
`Subtype(&'a u8 <: &'b u8) => Subtype('a <: 'b) => Outlives('a: 'b) => RegionSubRegion('b <= 'a) `
Resolves#103676
r? `@lcnr`
Correct suggestions for closure arguments that need a borrow
Fixes#107301 by dealing with binders correctly
Fixes another issue where we were suggesting adding just `&` when we expected `&mut _` in a closure arg
Recover from more const arguments that are not wrapped in curly braces
Recover from some array, borrow, tuple & arithmetic expressions in const argument positions that lack curly braces and provide a suggestion to fix the issue continuing where #92884 left off. Examples of such expressions: `[]`, `[0]`, `[1, 2]`, `[0; 0xff]`, `&9`, `("", 0)` and `(1 + 2) * 3` (we previously did not recover from them).
I am not entirely happy with my current solution because the code that recovers from `[0]` (coinciding with a malformed slice type) and `[0; 0]` (coinciding with a malformed array type) is quite fragile as the aforementioned snippets are actually successfully parsed as types by `parse_ty` since it itself already recovers from them (returning `[⟨error⟩]` and `[⟨error⟩; 0]` respectively) meaning I have to manually look for `TyKind::Err`s and construct a separate diagnostic for the suggestion to attach to (thereby emitting two diagnostics in total).
Fixes#81698.
`@rustbot` label A-diagnostics
r? diagnostics
Compute generator saved locals on MIR
Generators are currently type-checked by introducing a `witness` type variable, which is unified with a `GeneratorWitness(captured types)` whose purpose is to ensure that the auto traits correctly migrate from the captured types to the `witness` type. This requires computing the captured types on HIR during type-checking, only to re-do it on MIR later.
This PR proposes to drop the HIR-based computation, and only keep the MIR one. This is done in 3 steps.
1. During type-checking, the `witness` type variable is never unified. This allows to stall all the obligations that depend on it until the end of type-checking. Then, the stalled obligations are marked as successful, and saved into the typeck results for later verification.
2. At type-checking writeback, `witness` is replaced by `GeneratorWitnessMIR(def_id, substs)`. From this point on, all trait selection involving `GeneratorWitnessMIR` will fetch the MIR-computed locals, similar to what opaque types do. There is no lifetime to be preserved here: we consider all the lifetimes appearing in this witness type to be higher-ranked.
3. After borrowck, the stashed obligations are verified against the actually computed types, in the `check_generator_obligations` query. If any obligation was wrongly marked as fulfilled in step 1, it should be reported here.
There are still many issues:
- ~I am not too happy having to filter out some locals from the checked bounds, I think this is MIR building that introduces raw pointers polluting the analysis;~ solved by a check specific to static variables.
- the diagnostics for captured types don't show where they are used/dropped;
- I do not attempt to support chalk.
cc `@eholk` `@jyn514` for the drop-tracking work
r? `@oli-obk` as you warned me of potential unsoundness
rustdoc: use smarter encoding for playground URL
The old way would compress okay with DEFLATE, but this version makes uncompressed docs smaller, which matters for memory usage and stuff like `cargo doc`.
Try it out: <https://play.rust-lang.org/?code=fn+main()+{%0Alet+mut+v+=+Vec::new();%0Av.push(1+/+1);%0Aprintln!(%22{}%22,+v[0]);%0A}>
In local testing, this change shrinks sample pages by anywhere between 4.0% and 0.031%
$ du -b after.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html before.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
759235 after.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
781842 before.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
100*((759235-781842)/781842)=-2.8
$ du -b after.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html before.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html
3194173 after.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html
3204351 before.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html
100*((3194173-3204351)/3204351)=-0.031
$ du -b after.dir/std/keyword.match.html before.dir/std/keyword.match.html
8151 after.dir/std/keyword.match.html
8495 before.dir/std/keyword.match.html
100*((8151-8495)/8495)=-4.0
Gzipped tarball sizes seem shrunk, but not by much.
du -s before.tar.gz after.tar.gz
69600 before.tar.gz
69480 after.tar.gz
100*((69480-69600)/69600)=-0.17
A definition does not dominate a use in the same statement. For example
in MIR generated for compound assignment x += a (when overflow checks
are disabled).
make `output_filenames` a real query
part of #105462
This may be a perf regression and is not obviously the right way forward. We may store this information in the resolver after freezing it for example.
The old way would compress okay with DEFLATE, but this version makes
uncompressed docs smaller, which matters for memory usage and stuff
like `cargo doc`.
Try it out: <https://play.rust-lang.org/?code=fn+main()+{%0Alet+mut+v+=+Vec::new();%0Av.push(1+/+1);%0Aprintln!(%22{}%22,+v[0]);%0A}>
In local testing, this change shrinks sample pages by anywhere between
4.0% and 0.031%
$ du -b after.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html before.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
759235 after.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
781842 before.dir/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
100*((759235-781842)/781842)=-2.8
$ du -b after.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html before.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html
3194173 after.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html
3204351 before.dir/std/num/struct.Wrapping.html
100*((3194173-3204351)/3204351)=-0.031
$ du -b after.dir/std/keyword.match.html before.dir/std/keyword.match.html
8151 after.dir/std/keyword.match.html
8495 before.dir/std/keyword.match.html
100*((8151-8495)/8495)=-4.0
Gzipped tarball sizes seem shrunk, but not by much.
du -s before.tar.gz after.tar.gz
69600 before.tar.gz
69480 after.tar.gz
100*((69480-69600)/69600)=-0.17
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #106904 (Preserve split DWARF files when building archives.)
- #106971 (Handle diagnostics customization on the fluent side (for one specific diagnostic))
- #106978 (Migrate mir_build's borrow conflicts)
- #107150 (`ty::tls` cleanups)
- #107168 (Use a type-alias-impl-trait in `ObligationForest`)
- #107189 (Encode info for Adt in a single place.)
- #107322 (Custom mir: Add support for some remaining, easy to support constructs)
- #107323 (Disable ConstGoto opt in cleanup blocks)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Custom mir: Add support for some remaining, easy to support constructs
Some documentation for previous changes and support for `Deinit`, checked binops, len, and array repetition
r? ```@oli-obk``` or ```@tmiasko```
Migrate mir_build's borrow conflicts
This also changes the error message slightly, for two reasons:
- I'm not a fan of saying "value borrowed, by `x`, here"
- it simplifies the error implementation significantly.
Move format_args!() into AST (and expand it during AST lowering)
Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/541
This moves FormatArgs from rustc_builtin_macros to rustc_ast_lowering. For now, the end result is the same. But this allows for future changes to do smarter things with format_args!(). It also allows Clippy to directly access the ast::FormatArgs, making things a lot easier.
This change turns the format args types into lang items. The builtin macro used to refer to them by their path. After this change, the path is no longer relevant, making it easier to make changes in `core`.
This updates clippy to use the new language items, but this doesn't yet make clippy use the ast::FormatArgs structure that's now available. That should be done after this is merged.
Use `can_eq` to compare types for default assoc type error
This correctly handles inference variables like `{integer}`. I had to move all of this `note_and_explain` code to `rustc_infer`, it made no sense for it to be in `rustc_middle` anyways.
The commits are reviewed separately.
Fixes#106968
impl DispatchFromDyn for Cell and UnsafeCell
After some fruitful discussion on [Internals](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/impl-dispatchfromdyn-for-cell-2/16520) here's my first PR to rust-lang/rust 🎉
Please let me know if there's something I missed.
This adds `DispatchFromDyn` impls for `Cell`, `UnsafeCell` and `SyncUnsafeCell`.
An existing test is also expanded to test the `Cell` impl (which requires the `UnsafeCell` impl)
The different `RefCell` types can not implement `DispatchFromDyn` since they have more than one (non ZST) field.
**Edit:**
### What:
These changes allow one to make types like `MyRc`(code below), to be object safe method receivers after implementing `DispatchFromDyn` and `Deref` for them.
This allows for code like this:
```rust
struct MyRc<T: ?Sized>(Cell<NonNull<RcBox<T>>>);
/* impls for DispatchFromDyn, CoerceUnsized and Deref for MyRc*/
trait Trait {
fn foo(self: MyRc<Self>);
}
let impls_trait = ...;
let rc = MyRc::new(impls_trait) as MyRc<dyn Trait>;
rc.foo();
```
Note: `Cell` and `UnsafeCell` won't directly become valid method receivers since they don't implement `Deref`. Making use of these changes requires a wrapper type and nightly features.
### Why:
A custom pointer type with interior mutability allows one to store extra information in the pointer itself.
These changes allow for such a type to be a method receiver.
### Examples:
My use case is a cycle aware custom `Rc` implementation that when dropping a cycle marks some references dangling.
On the [forum](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/impl-dispatchfromdyn-for-cell/14762/8) andersk mentioned that they track if a `Gc` reference is rooted with an extra bit in the reference itself.
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #106407 (Improve proc macro attribute diagnostics)
- #106960 (Teach parser to understand fake anonymous enum syntax)
- #107085 (Custom MIR: Support binary and unary operations)
- #107086 (Print PID holding bootstrap build lock on Linux)
- #107175 (Fix escaping inference var ICE in `point_at_expr_source_of_inferred_type`)
- #107204 (suggest qualifying bare associated constants)
- #107248 (abi: add AddressSpace field to Primitive::Pointer )
- #107272 (Implement ObjectSafe and WF in the new solver)
- #107285 (Implement `Generator` and `Future` in the new solver)
- #107286 (ICE in new solver if we see an inference variable)
- #107313 (Add Style Team Triagebot config)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
abi: add AddressSpace field to Primitive::Pointer
...and remove it from `PointeeInfo`, which isn't meant for this.
There are still various places (marked with FIXMEs) that assume all pointers
have the same size and alignment. Fixing this requires parsing non-default
address spaces in the data layout string (and various other changes),
which will be done in a followup.
(That is, if it's actually worth it to support multiple different pointer sizes.
There is a lot of code that would be affected by that.)
Fixes#106367
r? ``@oli-obk``
cc ``@Patryk27``
Fix escaping inference var ICE in `point_at_expr_source_of_inferred_type`
Fixes#107158
`point_at_expr_source_of_inferred_type` uses `lookup_probe` to adjust the self type of a method receiver -- but that method returns inference variables from inside a probe. That means that the ty vars are no longer valid, so we can't use any infcx methods on them.
Also, pass some extra span info to hack a quick solution to bad labels, resulting in this diagnostic improvement:
```rust
fn example2() {
let mut x = vec![1];
x.push("");
}
```
```diff
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/main.rs:5:12
|
5 | x.push("");
| ---- ^^
| | |
| | expected integer, found `&str`
- | | this is of type `&'static str`, which causes `x` to be inferred as `Vec<{integer}>`
| arguments to this method are incorrect
```
(since that "which causes `x` to be inferred as `Vec<{integer}>` part is wrong)
r? `@estebank`
(we really should make this code better in general, cc #106590, but that's a bit bigger issue that needs some more thinking about)
Custom MIR: Support binary and unary operations
Lower binary and unary operations directly to corresponding unchecked MIR
operations. Ultimately this might not be syntax we want, but it allows for
experimentation in the meantime.
r? ````@oli-obk```` ````@JakobDegen````
Teach parser to understand fake anonymous enum syntax
Parse `Ty | OtherTy` in function argument and return types.
Parse type ascription in top level patterns.
Minimally address #100741.
InstCombine away intrinsic validity assertions
This optimization (currently) fires 246 times on the standard library. It seems to fire hardly at all on the big crates in the benchmark suite. Interesting.
Delete `SimplifyArmIdentity` and `SimplifyBranchSame` mir opts
I had attempted to fix the first of these opts in #94177 . However, despite that PR already being a full re-write, it still did not fix some of the core soundness issues. The optimizations that are attempted here are likely to be desirable, but I do not expect any of the currently written code to survive into a sound implementation. Deleting the code keeps us from having to maintain the passes in the meantime.
Closes#77359 , closes#72800 , closes#78628
r? ```@cjgillot```
rustdoc: rearrange HTML in primitive reference links
This patch avoids hard-to-click single character links by making the generic part of the link:
Before: <a href="#">&</a>T
After: <a href="#">&T</a>
Suggest using a lock for `*Cell: Sync` bounds
I mostly did this for `OnceCell<T>` at first because users will be confused to see that the `OnceCell<T>` in `std` isn't `Sync` but then extended it to `Cell<T>` and `RefCell<T>` as well.
Add hint for missing lifetime bound on trait object when type alias is used
Fix issue #103582.
The problem: When a type alias is used to specify the return type of the method in a trait impl, the suggestion for fixing the problem of "missing lifetime bound on trait object" of the trait impl will not be created. The issue caused by the code which searches for the return trait objects when constructing the hint suggestion is not able to find the trait objects since they are specified in the type alias path instead of the return path of the trait impl.
The solution: Trace the trait objects in the type alias path and provide them along with the alias span to generate the suggestion in case the type alias is used in return type of the method in the trait impl.