The discussion seems to have resolved that this lint is a bit "noisy" in
that applying it in all places would result in a reduction in
readability.
A few of the trivial functions (like `Path::new`) are fine to leave
outside of closures.
The general rule seems to be that anything that is obviously an
allocation (`Box`, `Vec`, `vec![]`) should be in a closure, even if it
is a 0-sized allocation.
with an eye on merging `TargetOptions` into `Target`.
`TargetOptions` as a separate structure is mostly an implementation detail of `Target` construction, all its fields logically belong to `Target` and available from `Target` through `Deref` impls.
foreign_modules query hash table lookups
When compiling a large monolithic crate we're seeing huge times in the `foreign_modules` query due to repeated iteration over foreign modules (in order to find a module by its id). This implements hash table lookups so that which massively reduces time spent in that query in this particular case. We'll need to see if the overhead of creating the hash table has a negative impact on performance in more normal compilation scenarios.
I'm working with `@wesleywiser` on this.
$ touch empty.rs
$ env RUSTC_LOG=debug rustc +stage1 --crate-type=lib empty.rs
Fails with a `BorrowMutError` because source map files are already
borrowed while `features_query` attempts to format a log message
containing a span.
Release the borrow before the query to avoid the issue.
Fixes#75982
The direct parent of a module may not be a module
(e.g. `const _: () = { #[path = "foo.rs"] mod foo; };`).
To find the parent of a module for purposes of resolution, we need to
walk up the tree until we hit a module or a crate root.
Preparation for a subsequent change that replaces
rustc_target::config::Config with its wrapped Target.
On its own, this commit breaks the build. I don't like making
build-breaking commits, but in this instance I believe that it
makes review easier, as the "real" changes of this PR can be
seen much more easily.
Result of running:
find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target\.target\([)\.,; ]\)/target\1/g' {} \;
find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target\.target$/target/g' {} \;
find compiler/ -type f -exec sed -i -e 's/target.ptr_width/target.pointer_width/g' {} \;
./x.py fmt
Fixes#77523
Now that hygiene serialization is implemented, we also need to record
`expansion_that_defined` so that we properly handle a foreign
`SyntaxContext`.
Currently, we serialize the same crate metadata for proc-macro crates as
we do for normal crates. This is quite wasteful - almost none of this
metadata is ever used, and much of it can't even be deserialized (if it
contains a foreign `CrateNum`).
This PR changes metadata encoding to skip encoding the majority of crate
metadata for proc-macro crates. Most of the `Lazy<[T]>` fields are left
completetly empty, while the non-lazy fields are left as-is.
Additionally, proc-macros now have a def span that does not include
their body. This was done for normal functions in #75465, but was missed
for proc-macros.
As a result of this PR, we should only ever encode local `CrateNum`s
when encoding proc-macro crates. I've added a specialized serialization
impl for `CrateNum` to assert this.
emit errors during AbstractConst building
There changes are currently still untested, so I don't expect this to pass CI 😆
It seems to me like this is the direction we want to go in, though we didn't have too much of a discussion about this.
r? @oli-obk
Don't query stability data when `staged_api` is off
This data only needs to be encoded when `#![feature(staged_api)]` or `-Zforce-unstable-if-unmarked` is on. Running these queries takes measurable time on large crates with many items, so skip it when the unstable flags have not been enabled.
Previously, we would throw away the `SyntaxContext` of any span with a
dummy location during metadata encoding. This commit makes metadata Span
encoding consistent with incr-cache Span encoding - an 'invalid span'
tag is only used when it doesn't lose any information.