When encountering an E0277, if the type and the trait both come from a crate with the same name but different crate number, we explain that there are multiple crate versions in the dependency tree.
If there's a type that fulfills the bound, and it has the same name as the passed in type and has the same crate name, we explain that the same type in two different versions of the same crate *are different*.
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `Type: dependency::Trait` is not satisfied
--> src/main.rs:4:18
|
4 | do_something(Type);
| ------------ ^^^^ the trait `dependency::Trait` is not implemented for `Type`
| |
| required by a bound introduced by this call
|
help: you have multiple different versions of crate `dependency` in your dependency graph
--> src/main.rs:1:5
|
1 | use bar::do_something;
| ^^^ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a dependency of crate `bar`
2 | use dependency::Type;
| ^^^^^^^^^^ one version of crate `dependency` is used here, as a direct dependency of the current crate
note: two types coming from two different versions of the same crate are different types even if they look the same
--> /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz-2/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct Type;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this type doesn't implement the required trait
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz/src/lib.rs:1:1
|
1 | pub struct Type;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this type implements the required trait
2 | pub trait Trait {}
| --------------- this is the required trait
note: required by a bound in `bar::do_something`
--> /home/gh-estebank/crate_versions/baz/src/lib.rs:4:24
|
4 | pub fn do_something<X: Trait>(_: X) {}
| ^^^^^ required by this bound in `do_something`
```
Address #22750.
On short error format, append primary span label to message
The `error-format=short` output only displays the path, error code and main error message all in the same line. We now add the primary span label as well after the error message, to provide more context.
The `error-format=short` output only displays the path, error code and
main error message all in the same line. We now add the primary span label
as well after the error message, to provide more context.
Change output normalization logic to be linear against size of output
Modify the rendered output normalization routine to scan each character *once* and construct a `String` to be printed out to the terminal *once*, instead of using `String::replace` in a loop multiple times. The output doesn't change, but the time spent to prepare a diagnostic is now faster (or rather, closer to what it was before #127528).
Tweak type inference for `const` operands in inline asm
Previously these would be treated like integer literals and default to `i32` if a type could not be determined. To allow for forward-compatibility with `str` constants in the future, this PR changes type inference to use an unbound type variable instead.
The actual type checking is deferred until after typeck where we still ensure that the final type for the `const` operand is an integer type.
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interpret: move nullary-op evaluation into operator.rs
We call it an operator, so we might as well treat it like one. :)
Also use more consistent naming for the "evaluate intrinsic" functions. "emulate" is really the wrong term, this *is* a genuine implementation of the intrinsic semantics after all.
Use `ParamEnv::reveal_all` in CFI
I left a huge comment for why this ICEs in the test I committed.
`typeid_for_instance` should only be called on monomorphic instances during codegen, and we should just be using `ParamEnv::reveal_all()` rather than the param-env of the instance itself. I added an assertion to ensure that we only do this for fully substituted instances (this may break with polymorphization, but I kinda don't care lol).
Fixes#114160
cc `@rcvalle`
Add `Debug` impls to API types in `rustc_codegen_ssa`
Some types used in `rustc_codegen_ssa`'s interface traits are missing `Debug` impls. Though I did not smear `#[derive(Debug)]` all over the crate (some structs are quite large).
Don't re-elaborated already elaborated caller bounds in method probe
Caller bounds are already elaborated. Only elaborate object candidates' principals.
Also removes the only usage of `transitive_bounds`.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #128026 (std:🧵 available_parallelism implementation for vxWorks proposal.)
- #128471 (rustdoc: Fix handling of `Self` type in search index and refactor its representation)
- #128607 (Use `object` in `run-make/symbols-visibility`)
- #128609 (Remove unnecessary constants from flt2dec dragon)
- #128611 (run-make: Remove cygpath)
- #128619 (Correct the const stabilization of `<[T]>::last_chunk`)
- #128630 (docs(resolve): more explain about `target`)
- #128660 (tests: more crashes)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do not fire unhandled attribute assertion on multi-segment `AttributeType::Normal` attributes with builtin attribute as first segment
### The Problem
In #128581 I introduced an assertion to check that all builtin attributes are actually checked via
`CheckAttrVisitor` and aren't accidentally usable on completely unrelated HIR nodes.
Unfortunately, the assertion had correctness problems as revealed in #128622.
The match on attribute path segments looked like
```rs,ignore
// Normal handler
[sym::should_panic] => /* check is implemented */
// Fallback handler
[name, ..] => match BUILTIN_ATTRIBUTE_MAP.get(name) {
// checked below
Some(BuiltinAttribute { type_: AttributeType::CrateLevel, .. }) => {}
Some(_) => {
if !name.as_str().starts_with("rustc_") {
span_bug!(
attr.span,
"builtin attribute {name:?} not handled by `CheckAttrVisitor`"
)
}
}
None => (),
}
```
However, it failed to account for edge cases such as an attribute whose:
1. path segments *starts* with a segment matching the name of a builtin attribute such as `should_panic`, and
2. the first segment's symbol does not start with `rustc_`, and
3. the matched builtin attribute is also of `AttributeType::Normal` attribute type upon registration with the builtin attribute map.
These conditions when all satisfied cause the span bug to be issued for e.g.
`#[should_panic::skip]` because the `[sym::should_panic]` arm is not matched (since it's
`[sym::should_panic, sym::skip]`).
### Proposed Solution
This PR tries to remedy that by adjusting all normal/specific handlers to not match exactly on a single segment, but instead match a prefix segment.
i.e.
```rs,ignore
// Normal handler, notice the `, ..` rest pattern
[sym::should_panic, ..] => /* check is implemented */
// Fallback handler
[name, ..] => match BUILTIN_ATTRIBUTE_MAP.get(name) {
// checked below
Some(BuiltinAttribute { type_: AttributeType::CrateLevel, .. }) => {}
Some(_) => {
if !name.as_str().starts_with("rustc_") {
span_bug!(
attr.span,
"builtin attribute {name:?} not handled by `CheckAttrVisitor`"
)
}
}
None => (),
}
```
### Review Remarks
This PR contains 2 commits:
1. The first commit adds a regression test. This will ICE without the `CheckAttrVisitor` changes.
2. The second commit adjusts `CheckAttrVisitor` assertion logic. Once this commit is applied, the test should no longer ICE and produce the expected bless stderr.
Fixes#128622.
r? ``@nnethercote`` (since you reviewed #128581)
turn `invalid_type_param_default` into a `FutureReleaseErrorReportInDeps`
`````@rust-lang/types````` I assume the plan is still to disallow this? It has been a future-compat lint for a long time, seems ripe to go for hard error.
However, turns out that outright removing it right now would lead to [tons of crater regressions](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127655#issuecomment-2228285460), so for now this PR just makes this future-compat lint show up in cargo's reports, so people are warned when they use a dependency that is affected by this.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/27336 by removing the feature gate (so there's no way to silence the lint even on nightly)
CC https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/36887
Check divergence value first before doing span operations in `warn_if_unreachable`
It's more expensive to extract the span's desugaring first rather than check the value of the divergence enum. For some reason I inverted these checks, probably for readability, but as a consequence I regressed perf:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128443#issuecomment-2265425016
r? fmease
improve error message when `global_asm!` uses `asm!` operands
follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128207
what was
```
error: expected expression, found keyword `in`
--> src/lib.rs:1:31
|
1 | core::arch::global_asm!("{}", in(reg));
| ^^ expected expression
```
becomes
```
error: the `in` operand cannot be used with `global_asm!`
--> $DIR/parse-error.rs:150:19
|
LL | global_asm!("{}", in(reg));
| ^^ the `in` operand is not meaningful for global-scoped inline assembly, remove it
```
the span of the error is just the keyword, which means that we can't create a machine-applicable suggestion here. The alternative would be to attempt to parse the full operand, but then if there are syntax errors in the operand those would be presented to the user, even though the parser already knows that the output won't be valid. Also that would require more complexity in the parser.
So I think this is a nice improvement at very low cost.
PR #128581 introduced an assertion that all builtin attributes are
actually checked via `CheckAttrVisitor` and aren't accidentally usable
on completely unrelated HIR nodes. Unfortunately, the check had
correctness problems.
The match on attribute path segments looked like
```rust,ignore
[sym::should_panic] => /* check is implemented */
match BUILTIN_ATTRIBUTE_MAP.get(name) {
// checked below
Some(BuiltinAttribute { type_: AttributeType::CrateLevel, .. }) => {}
Some(_) => {
if !name.as_str().starts_with("rustc_") {
span_bug!(
attr.span,
"builtin attribute {name:?} not handled by `CheckAttrVisitor`"
)
}
}
None => (),
}
```
However, it failed to account for edge cases such as an attribute whose:
1. path segments *starts* with a builtin attribute such as
`should_panic`
2. which does not start with `rustc_`, and
3. is also an `AttributeType::Normal` attribute upon registration with
the builtin attribute map
These conditions when all satisfied cause the span bug to be issued for e.g.
`#[should_panic::skip]` because the `[sym::should_panic]` arm is not matched (since it's
`[sym::should_panic, sym::skip]`).
See <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128622>.
Assert that all attributes are actually checked via `CheckAttrVisitor` and aren't accidentally usable on completely unrelated HIR nodes
``@oli-obk's`` #128444 with unreachable case removed to avoid that PR bitrotting away.
Based on #128402.
This PR will make adding a new attribute ICE on any use of that attribute unless it gets a handler added in `rustc_passes::CheckAttrVisitor`.
r? ``@nnethercote`` (since you were the reviewer of the original PR)
Simplify match based on the cast result of `IntToInt`
Continue to complete #124150. The condition in #120614 is wrong, e.g. `-1i8` cannot be converted to `255i16`. I've rethought the issue and simplified the conditional judgment for a more straightforward approach. The new approach is to check **if the case value after the `IntToInt` conversion equals the target value**.
In different types, `IntToInt` uses different casting methods. This rule is as follows:
- `i8`/`u8` to `i8`/`u8`: do nothing.
- `i8` to `i16`/`u16`: sign extension.
- `u8` to `i16`/`u16`: zero extension.
- `i16`/`u16` to `i8`/`u8`: truncate to the target size.
The previous error was a mix of zext and sext.
r? mir-opt
linker: Pass fewer search directories to the linker
- The logic for passing `-L` directories to the linker is consolidated in a single function, so the search priorities are immediately clear.
- Only `-Lnative=`, `-Lframework=` `-Lall=` directories are passed to linker, but not `-Lcrate=` and others. That's because only native libraries are looked up by name by linker, all Rust crates are passed using full paths, and their directories should not interfere with linker search paths.
- The main sysroot library directory shouldn't generally be passed because it shouldn't contain native libraries, except for one case which is now marked with a FIXME.
- This also helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123436, in which we need to walk the same list of directories manually.
The next step is to migrate `find_native_static_library` to exactly the same set and order of search directories (which may be a bit annoying for the `iOSSupport` directories https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121430#issuecomment-2256372341).
Revert recent changes to dead code analysis
This is a revert to recent changes to dead code analysis, namely:
* efdf219 Rollup merge of #128104 - mu001999-contrib:fix/128053, r=petrochenkov
* a70dc297a8 Rollup merge of #127017 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance, r=pnkfelix
* 31fe9628cf Rollup merge of #127107 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance-2, r=pnkfelix
* 2724aeaaeb Rollup merge of #126618 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance, r=pnkfelix
* 977c5fd419 Rollup merge of #126315 - mu001999-contrib:fix/126289, r=petrochenkov
* 13314df21b Rollup merge of #125572 - mu001999-contrib:dead/enhance, r=pnkfelix
There is an additional change stacked on top, which suppresses false-negatives that were masked by this work. I believe the functions that are touched in that code are legitimately unused functions and the types are not reachable since this `AnonPipe` type is not publically reachable -- please correct me if I'm wrong cc `@NobodyXu` who added these in ##127153.
Some of these reverts (#126315 and #126618) are only included because it makes the revert apply cleanly, and I think these changes were only done to fix follow-ups from the other PRs?
I apologize for the size of the PR and the churn that it has on the codebase (and for reverting `@mu001999's` work here), but I'm putting this PR up because I am concerned that we're making ad-hoc changes to fix bugs that are fallout of these PRs, and I'd like to see these changes reimplemented in a way that's more separable from the existing dead code pass. I am happy to review any code to reapply these changes in a more separable way.
cc `@mu001999`
r? `@pnkfelix`
Fixes#128272Fixes#126169
Added SHA512, SM3, SM4 target-features and `sha512_sm_x86` feature gate
This is an effort towards #126624. This adds support for these 3 target-features and introduces the feature flag `sha512_sm_x86`, which would gate these target-features and the yet-to-be-implemented detection and intrinsics in stdarch.
MIR required_consts, mentioned_items: ensure we do not forget to fill these lists
Bodies initially get created with empty required_consts and mentioned_items, but at some point those should be filled. Make sure we notice when that is forgotten.
raw_eq: using it on bytes with provenance is not UB (outside const-eval)
The current behavior of raw_eq violates provenance monotonicity. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124921 for an explanation of provenance monotonicity. It is violated in raw_eq because comparing bytes without provenance is well-defined, but adding provenance makes the operation UB.
So remove the no-provenance requirement from raw_eq. However, the requirement stays in-place for compile-time invocations of raw_eq, that indeed cannot deal with provenance.
Cc `@rust-lang/opsem`
Better handle suggestions for the already present code and fix some suggestions
When a suggestion part is for code that is already present, skip it. If all the suggestion parts for a suggestion are for code that is already there, do not emit the suggestion.
Fix two suggestions that treat `span_suggestion` as if it were `span_help`.
```
error[E0790]: cannot call associated function on trait without specifying the corresponding `impl` type
--> $DIR/E0283.rs:30:21
|
LL | fn create() -> u32;
| ------------------- `Coroutine::create` defined here
...
LL | let cont: u32 = Coroutine::create();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ cannot call associated function of trait
|
help: use a fully-qualified path to a specific available implementation
|
LL | let cont: u32 = <Impl as Coroutine>::create();
| ++++++++ +
LL | let cont: u32 = <AnotherImpl as Coroutine>::create();
| +++++++++++++++ +
```
Since LLVM <https://reviews.llvm.org/D99439> (4c7f820b2b20, "Update
@llvm.powi to handle different int sizes for the exponent"), the size of
the integer can be specified for the `powi` intrinsic. Make use of this
so it is more obvious that integer size is consistent across all float
types.
This feature is available since LLVM 13 (October 2021). Based on
bootstrap we currently support >= 17.0, so there should be no support
problems.
When a suggestion part is for already present code, do not highlight it. If after that there are no highlights left, do not show the suggestion at all.
Fix clippy lint suggestion incorrectly treated as `span_help`.
interpret: on a signed deref check, mention the right pointer in the error
When a negative offset (like `ptr.offset(-10)`) goes out-of-bounds, we currently show an error saying that we expect the *resulting* pointer to be inbounds for 10 bytes. That's confusing, so this PR makes it so that instead we say that we expect the *original* pointer `ptr` to have 10 bytes *to the left*.
I also realized I can simplify the pointer arithmetic logic and handling of "staying inbounds of a target `usize`" quite a bit; the second commit does that.
More unsafe attr verification
This code denies unsafe on attributes such as `#[test]` and `#[ignore]`, while also changing the `MetaItem` parsing so `unsafe` in args like `#[allow(unsafe(dead_code))]` is not accidentally allowed.
Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123757
When collecting tokens there are two kinds of range:
- a range relative to the parser's full token stream (which we get when
we are parsing);
- a range relative to a single AST node's token stream (which we use
within `LazyAttrTokenStreamImpl` when replacing tokens).
These are currently both represented with `Range<u32>` and it's easy to
mix them up -- until now I hadn't properly understood the difference.
This commit introduces `ParserRange` and `NodeRange` to distinguish
them. This also requires splitting `ReplaceRange` in two, giving the new
types `ParserReplacement` and `NodeReplacement`. (These latter two names
reduce the overloading of the word "range".)
The commit also rewrites some comments to be clearer.
The end result is a little more verbose, but much clearer.
Emit an error if `#[optimize]` is applied to an incompatible item
#54882
The RFC specifies that this should emit a lint. I used the same allow logic as the `coverage` attribute (also allowing modules and impl blocks) - this should possibly be changed depending on if it's decided to allow 'propogation' of the attribute.
Create COFF archives for non-LLVM backends
`ar_archive_writer` now supports creating COFF archives, so enable them for the non-LLVM backends when requested.
r? ``@bjorn3``
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123813 (Add `REDUNDANT_IMPORTS` lint for new redundant import detection)
- #126697 ([RFC] mbe: consider the `_` in 2024 an expression)
- #127159 (match lowering: Hide `Candidate` from outside the lowering algorithm)
- #128244 (Peel off explicit (or implicit) deref before suggesting clone on move error in borrowck, remove some hacks)
- #128431 (Add myself as VxWorks target maintainer for reference)
- #128438 (Add special-case for [T, 0] in dropck_outlives)
- #128457 (Fix docs for OnceLock::get_mut_or_init)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
derive(SmartPointer): require pointee to be maybe sized
cc ``@Darksonn``
So `#[pointee]` has to be `?Sized` in order for deriving `SmartPointer` to be meaningful.
cc ``@compiler-errors`` for suggestions in #127681
Properly mark loop as diverging if it has no breaks
Due to specifics about the desugaring of the `.await` operator, HIR typeck doesn't recognize that `.await`ing an `impl Future<Output = !>` will diverge in the same way as calling a `fn() -> !`.
This is because the await operator desugars to approximately:
```rust
loop {
match future.poll(...) {
Poll::Ready(x) => break x,
Poll::Pending => {}
}
}
```
We know that the value of `x` is `!`, however since `break` is a coercion site, we coerce `!` to some `?0` (the type of the loop expression). Then since the type of the `loop {...}` expression is `?0`, we will not detect the loop as diverging like we do with other expressions that evaluate to `!`:
0b5eb7ba7b/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/expr.rs (L240-L243)
We can technically fix this in two ways:
1. Make coercion of loop exprs more eagerly result in a type of `!` when the only break expressions have type `!`.
2. Make loops understand that all of that if they have only diverging break values, then the loop diverges as well.
(1.) likely has negative effects on inference, and seems like a weird special case to drill into coercion. However, it turns out that (2.) is very easy to implement, we already record whether a loop has any break expressions, and when we do so, we actually skip over any break expressions with diverging values!:
0b5eb7ba7b/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/expr.rs (L713-L716)
Thus, we can consider the loop as diverging if we see that it has no breaks, which is the change implemented in this PR.
This is not usually a problem in regular code for two reasons:
1. In regular code, we already mark `break diverging()` as unreachable if `diverging()` is unreachable. We don't do this for `.await`, since we suppress unreachable errors within `.await` (#64930). Un-suppressing this code will result in spurious unreachable expression errors pointing to internal await machinery.
3. In loops that truly have no breaks (e.g. `loop {}`), we already evaluate the type of the loop to `!`, so this special case is kinda moot. This only affects loops that have `break`s with values of type `!`.
Thus, this seems like a change that may affect more code than just `.await`, but it likely does not in meaningful ways; if it does, it's certainly correct to apply.
Fixes#128434