Commit Graph

44121 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
72535fec55
Rollup merge of #137183 - compiler-errors:dead-regionck-code, r=lcnr
Prune dead regionck code

We never encounter `ObligationCauseCode`s that correspond to region obligations that originate from "within" a body, since we don't do HIR regionck anymore on bodies. So prune some dead code.
2025-02-22 11:36:42 +01:00
bors
b6d3be4948 Auto merge of #133436 - nnethercote:rm-NtVis-NtTy, r=petrochenkov
Remove `NtVis` and `NtTy`

The next part of #124141. The first actual remove of `Nonterminal` variants. `NtVis` is a simple case that doesn't get much use, but `NtTy` is more complex.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2025-02-22 06:09:14 +00:00
bors
b87eda7fdf Auto merge of #137406 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-9nknrsb, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #136458 (Do not deduplicate list of associated types provided by dyn principal)
 - #136474 ([`compiletest`-related cleanups 3/7] Make the distinction between sources root vs test suite sources root in compiletest less confusing)
 - #136592 (Make sure we don't overrun the stack in canonicalizer)
 - #136787 (Remove `lifetime_capture_rules_2024` feature)
 - #137207 (Add #[track_caller] to Duration Div impl)
 - #137245 (Tweak E0277 when predicate comes indirectly from ?)
 - #137257 (Ignore fake borrows for packed field check)
 - #137399 (fix ICE in layout computation with unnormalizable const)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-22 03:05:26 +00:00
Michael Goulet
b2b2e53916 Even more dead code -- we don't HIR regionck anymore 2025-02-22 00:02:56 +00:00
Michael Goulet
9001e55302 More dead code 2025-02-22 00:02:11 +00:00
Michael Goulet
681c95c55c Remove UnifyReceiver cause code 2025-02-22 00:02:11 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
6352044269
Rollup merge of #137399 - lukas-code:oopsie-woopsie, r=compiler-errors
fix ICE in layout computation with unnormalizable const

The first commit reverts half of 7a667d206c, where I removed a case from `layout_of` for handling non-generic unevaluated consts in array length, that I incorrectly assumed to be unreachable. This can actually happen with the combination of `feature(generic_const_exprs)` and `feature(trivial_bounds)`, because GCE makes anon consts inherit their parent's predicates and with an impossible predicate like `u8: A` it's possible to have an array whose length is an associated const like `<u8 as A>::B` that is not generic, but also can't be normalized:

```rust
#![feature(generic_const_exprs)]
#![feature(trivial_bounds)]

trait A {
    const B: usize;
}

// With GCE + trivial bounds this definition is not a compile error.
// Computing the layout of this type shouldn't ICE.
struct S([u8; <u8 as A>::B])
where
    u8: A;
```

---

The first commit also incidentally fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137308, which also managed to get an unnormalizable assoc const into an array length:

```rust
trait A {
    const B: usize;
}

impl<C: ?Sized> A for u8 { //~ ERROR: the type parameter `C` is not constrained
    const B: usize = 42;
}

// Computing the layout of this type shouldn't ICE, even with the compile error above.
struct S([u8; <u8 as A>::B]);
```

This happens, because we bail out from `codegen_select_candidate` with an error if the selected impl has unconstrained params to avoid leaking infer vars out of a query. `Instance::try_resolve` will then return `Ok(None)`, which for assoc consts roughly means "this const can't be evaluated in a generic context" and is treated as such: 71e06b9c59/compiler/rustc_middle/src/mir/interpret/queries.rs (L84) (and this can ICE if the const isn't generic: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135617).

However, here `<u8 as A>::B` is definitely not "too generic" and also not unresolvable due to an unsatisfiable `u8: A` bound, so I've included the second commit to change the result of `Instance::try_resolve` from `Ok(None)` to `Err(ErrorGuaranteed)` when resolving an assoc item to an impl with unconstrained generic params. This has the effect that `<u8 as A>::B` will now be normalized to `ConstKind::Error` in the example above.

This properly fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137308, by no longer treating `<u8 as A>::B` as unresolvable even though it clearly has a unique impl that it resolves to. It also has the effect of changing the layout error from `Unknown` ("the type may be valid but has no sensible layout") to `ReferencesError` ("a non-layout error is reported elsewhere") which seems more appropriate.

r? ```@compiler-errors```
2025-02-22 01:01:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fa62fbe4b8
Rollup merge of #137257 - compiler-errors:fake-borrow-of-packed-field, r=oli-obk
Ignore fake borrows for packed field check

We should not emit unaligned packed field reference errors for the fake borrows that we generate during match lowering.

These fake borrows are there to ensure in *borrow-checking* that we don't modify the value being matched (which is why this only occurs when there's a match guard, in this case `if true`), but they are removed after the MIR is processed by `CleanupPostBorrowck`, since they're really just there to cause borrowck errors if necessary.

I modified `PlaceContext::is_borrow` since that's used by the packed field check:
17c1c329a5/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/check_packed_ref.rs (L40)

It's only used in one other place, in the SROA optimization (by which fake borrows are removed, so it doesn't matter):
17c1c329a5/compiler/rustc_mir_dataflow/src/value_analysis.rs (L922)

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137250
2025-02-22 01:01:41 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
890c4d2e26
Rollup merge of #137245 - estebank:from-residual-note-2, r=oli-obk
Tweak E0277 when predicate comes indirectly from ?

When a `?` operation requires an `Into` conversion with additional bounds (like having a concrete error but wanting to convert to a trait object), we handle it speficically and provide the same kind of information we give other `?` related errors.

```
error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error: `E: std::error::Error` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:7:13
   |
LL | fn foo() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
   |             -------------------------------------- required `E: std::error::Error` because of this
LL |     Ok(bar()?)
   |        -----^ the trait `std::error::Error` is not implemented for `E`
   |        |
   |        this has type `Result<_, E>`
   |
note: `E` needs to implement `std::error::Error`
  --> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:1:1
   |
LL | struct E;
   | ^^^^^^^^
   = note: the question mark operation (`?`) implicitly performs a conversion on the error value using the `From` trait
   = note: required for `Box<dyn std::error::Error>` to implement `From<E>`
```

Avoid talking about `FromResidual` when other more relevant information is being given, particularly from `rust_on_unimplemented`.

Fix #137238.

-----

CC #137232, which was a smaller step related to this.
2025-02-22 01:01:41 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
085adfda3c
Rollup merge of #136787 - compiler-errors:lt2024feat, r=oli-obk
Remove `lifetime_capture_rules_2024` feature

Just use edition 2024 instead
2025-02-22 01:01:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7f1089efdf
Rollup merge of #136592 - compiler-errors:ensure-stack-in-canonical, r=lcnr
Make sure we don't overrun the stack in canonicalizer

r? lcnr

Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/160
2025-02-22 01:01:39 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
326072ac20
Rollup merge of #136458 - compiler-errors:fix-3, r=lcnr
Do not deduplicate list of associated types provided by dyn principal

## Background

The way that we handle a dyn trait type's projection bounds is very *structural* today. A dyn trait is represented as a list of `PolyExistentialPredicate`s, which in most cases will be a principal trait (like `Iterator`) and a list of projections (like `Item = u32`). Importantly, the list of projections comes from user-written associated type bounds on the type *and* from elaborating the projections from the principal's supertraits.

For example, given a set of traits like:

```rust
trait Foo<T> {
    type Assoc;
}

trait Bar<A, B>: Foo<A, Assoc = A> + Foo<B, Assoc = B> {}
```

For the type `dyn Bar<i32, u32>`, the list of projections will be something like `[Foo<i32>::Assoc = i32, Foo<u32>::Assoc = u32]`. We deduplicate these projections when they're identical, so for `dyn Bar<(), ()>` would be something like `[Foo<()>::Assoc = ()]`.

## Shortcomings 1: inference

We face problems when we begin to mix this structural notion of projection bounds with inference and associated type normalization. For example, let's try calling a generic function that takes `dyn Bar<A, B>` with a value of type `dyn Bar<(), ()>`:

```rust
trait Foo<T> {
    type Assoc;
}

trait Bar<A, B>: Foo<A, Assoc = A> + Foo<B, Assoc = B> {}

fn call_bar<A, B>(_: &dyn Bar<A, B>) {}

fn test(x: &dyn Bar<(), ()>) {
    call_bar(x);
    // ^ ERROR mismatched types
}
```

```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
  --> /home/mgx/test.rs:10:14
   |
10 |     call_bar(x);
   |     -------- ^ expected trait `Bar<_, _>`, found trait `Bar<(), ()>`
```

What's going on here? Well, when calling `call_bar`, the generic signature `&dyn Bar<?A, ?B>` does not unify with `&dyn Bar<(), ()>` because the list of projections differ -- `[Foo<?A>::Assoc = ?A, Foo<?B>::Assoc = ?B]` vs `[Foo<()>::Assoc = ()]`.

A simple solution to this may be to unify the principal traits first, then attempt to deduplicate them after inference. In this case, if we constrain `?A = ?B = ()`, then we would be able to deduplicate those projections in the first list.

However, this idea is still pretty fragile, and it's not a complete solution.

## Shortcomings 2: normalization

Consider a slightly modified example:

```rust
//@ compile-flags: -Znext-solver

trait Mirror {
    type Assoc;
}
impl<T> Mirror for T {
    type Assoc = T;
}

fn call_bar(_: &dyn Bar<(), <() as Mirror>::Assoc>) {}

fn test(x: &dyn Bar<(), ()>) {
    call_bar(x);
}
```

This fails in the new solver. In this example, we try to unify `dyn Bar<(), ()>` and `dyn Bar<(), <() as Mirror>::Assoc>`. We are faced with the same problem even though there are no inference variables, and making this work relies on eagerly and deeply normalizing all projections so that they can be structurally deduplicated.

This is incompatible with how we handle associated types in the new trait solver, and while we could perhaps support it with some major gymnastics in the new solver, it suggests more fundamental shortcomings with how we deal with projection bounds in the new solver.

## Shortcomings 3: redundant projections

Consider a final example:

```rust
trait Foo {
    type Assoc;
}

trait Bar: Foo<Assoc = ()> {}

fn call_bar1(_: &dyn Bar) {}

fn call_bar2(_: &dyn Bar<Assoc = ()>) {}

fn main() {
    let x: &dyn Bar<Assoc = _> = todo!();
    call_bar1(x);
    //~^ ERROR mismatched types
    call_bar2(x);
    //~^ ERROR mismatched types
}
```

In this case, we have a user-written associated type bound (`Assoc = _`) which overlaps the bound that comes from the supertrait projection of `Bar` (namely, `Foo<Assoc = ()>`). In a similar way to the two examples above, this causes us to have a projection list mismatch that the compiler is not able to deduplicate.

## Solution

### Do not deduplicate after elaborating projections when lowering `dyn` types

The root cause of this issue has to do with mismatches of the deduplicated projection list before and after substitution or inference. This PR aims to avoid these issues by *never* deduplicating the projection list after elaborating the list of projections from the *identity* substituted principal trait ref.

For example,

```rust
trait Foo<T> {
    type Assoc;
}

trait Bar<A, B>: Foo<A, Assoc = A> + Foo<B, Assoc = B> {}
```

When computing the projections for `dyn Bar<(), ()>`, before this PR we'd elaborate `Bar<(), ()>` to find a (deduplicated) projection list of `[Foo<()>::Assoc = ()]`.

After this PR, we take the principal trait and use its *identity* substitutions `Bar<A, B>` during elaboration, giving us projections `[Foo<A>::Assoc = A, Foo<B>::Assoc = B]`. Only after this elaboration do we substitute `A = (), B = ()` to get `[Foo<()>::Assoc = (), Foo<()>::Assoc = ()]`. This allows the type to be unified with the projections for `dyn Bar<?A, ?B>`, which are `[Foo<?A>::Assoc = ?A, Foo<?B>::Assoc = ?B]`.

This helps us avoid shorcomings 1 noted above.

### Do not deduplicate projections when relating `dyn` types

Similarly, we also do not call deduplicate when relating dyn types. This means that the list of projections does not differ depending on if the type has been normalized or not, which should avoid shortcomings 2 noted above.

Following from the example above, when relating projection lists like `[Foo<()>::Assoc = (), Foo<()>::Assoc = ()]` and `[Foo<?A>::Assoc = ?A, Foo<?B>::Assoc = ?B]`, the latter won't be deduplicated to a list of length 1 which would immediately fail to relate to the latter which is a list of length 2.

### Implement proper precedence between supertrait and user-written projection bounds when lowering `dyn` types

```rust
trait Foo {
    type Assoc;
}

trait Bar: Foo<Assoc = ()> {}
```

Given a type like `dyn Foo<Assoc = _>`, we used to previously include *both* the supertrait and user-written associated type bounds in the projection list, giving us `[Foo::Assoc = (), Foo::Assoc = _]`. This would never unify with `dyn Foo`. However, this PR implements a strategy which overwrites the supertrait associated type bound with the one provided by the user, giving us a projection list of `[Foo::Assoc = _]`.

Why is this OK? Well, if a user wrote an associated type bound that is unsatisfiable (e.g. `dyn Bar<Assoc = i32>`) then the dyn type would never implement `Bar` or `Foo` anyways. If the user wrote something that is either structurally equal or equal modulo normalization to the supertrait bound, then it should be unaffected. And if the user wrote something that needs inference guidance (e.g. `dyn Bar<Assoc = _>`), then it'll be constrained when proving `dyn Bar<Assoc = _>: Bar`.

Importantly, this differs from the strategy in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133397, which preferred the *supertrait* bound and ignored the user-written bound. While that's also theoretically justifiable in its own way, it does lead to code which does not (and probably should not) compile either today or after this PR, like:

```rust
trait IteratorOfUnit: Iterator<Item = ()> {}
impl<T> IteratorOfUnit for T where T: Iterator<Item = ()> {}

fn main() {
    let iter = [()].into_iter();
    let iter: &dyn IteratorOfUnit<Item = i32> = &iter;
}
```

### Conclusion

This is a far less invasive change compared to #133397, and doesn't necessarily necessitate the addition of new lints or any breakage of existing code. While we could (and possibly should) eventually introduce lints to warn users of redundant or mismatched associated type bounds, we don't *need* to do so as part of fixing this unsoundness, which leads me to believe this is a much safer solution.
2025-02-22 01:01:38 +01:00
bors
dc37ff82e8 Auto merge of #137348 - compiler-errors:span-trim, r=estebank
More sophisticated span trimming for suggestions

Previously #136958 only cared about prefixes or suffixes. Now it detects more cases where a suggestion is "sandwiched" by unchanged code on the left or the right. Would be cool if we could detect several insertions, like `ACE` going to `ABCDE`, extracting `B` and `D`, but that seems unwieldy.

r? `@estebank`
2025-02-21 23:59:08 +00:00
bors
794c12416b Auto merge of #137397 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-ls2pilo, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 10 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #132876 (rustdoc book: acknowledge --document-hidden-items)
 - #136148 (Optionally add type names to `TypeId`s.)
 - #136609 (libcore/net: `IpAddr::as_octets()`)
 - #137336 (Stabilise `os_str_display`)
 - #137350 (Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 3.)
 - #137353 (Implement `read_buf` for WASI stdin)
 - #137361 (Refactor `OperandRef::extract_field` to prep for MCP838)
 - #137367 (Do not exempt nonexistent platforms from platform policy)
 - #137374 (Stacker now handles miri using a noop impl itself)
 - #137392 (remove few unused fields)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-21 19:57:50 +00:00
Michael Goulet
a2a0cfe825 Assert that we always construct dyn types with the right number of projections 2025-02-21 19:32:45 +00:00
Michael Goulet
72bd174c43 Do not deduplicate list of associated types provided by dyn principal 2025-02-21 19:32:45 +00:00
Lukas Markeffsky
7fea935ec5 don't leave assoc const unnormalized due to unconstrained params 2025-02-21 20:32:37 +01:00
Lukas Markeffsky
a825e37fe4 layout_of: put back not-so-unreachable case 2025-02-21 20:32:34 +01:00
Esteban Küber
31febc684b Point at type that doesn't implement needed trait
```
error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error: `E: std::error::Error` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:7:13
   |
LL | fn foo() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
   |             -------------------------------------- required `E: std::error::Error` because of this
LL |     Ok(bar()?)
   |        -----^ the trait `std::error::Error` is not implemented for `E`
   |        |
   |        this has type `Result<_, E>`
   |
note: `E` needs to implement `std::error::Error`
  --> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:1:1
   |
LL | struct E;
   | ^^^^^^^^
   = note: the question mark operation (`?`) implicitly performs a conversion on the error value using the `From` trait
   = note: required for `Box<dyn std::error::Error>` to implement `From<E>`

error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error to `X`
  --> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:18:13
   |
LL | fn bat() -> Result<(), X> {
   |             ------------- expected `X` because of this
LL |     Ok(bar()?)
   |        -----^ the trait `From<E>` is not implemented for `X`
   |        |
   |        this can't be annotated with `?` because it has type `Result<_, E>`
   |
note: `X` needs to implement `From<E>`
  --> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:4:1
   |
LL | struct X;
   | ^^^^^^^^
note: alternatively, `E` needs to implement `Into<X>`
  --> $DIR/bad-question-mark-on-trait-object.rs:1:1
   |
LL | struct E;
   | ^^^^^^^^
   = note: the question mark operation (`?`) implicitly performs a conversion on the error value using the `From` trait
```
2025-02-21 18:30:07 +00:00
Michael Goulet
241a602d27 Make sure we don't overrun the stack in canonicalizer 2025-02-21 18:24:05 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
cfc2d111ed
Rollup merge of #137392 - klensy:unused, r=compiler-errors
remove few unused fields

Remove unused field and convert hashmap to hashset in second commit.
2025-02-21 19:01:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
45b4314a82
Rollup merge of #137374 - bjorn3:remove_stacker_miri_special_case, r=compiler-errors
Stacker now handles miri using a noop impl itself

Reverts a no longer necessary change from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136580.
2025-02-21 19:01:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b012356475
Rollup merge of #137361 - scottmcm:mcp-838-prep, r=compiler-errors
Refactor `OperandRef::extract_field` to prep for MCP838

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/838

This still supports exactly the same cases as it did before, just rearranged a bit to better emphasize what doesn't work.
2025-02-21 19:01:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
a24eb0bae9
Rollup merge of #137350 - nnethercote:remove-Map-3, r=Zalathar
Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 3.

A follow-up to #137162.

r? `@Zalathar`
2025-02-21 19:01:15 +01:00
Michael Goulet
0713bbcdfa Ignore fake borrows for packed field check 2025-02-21 17:50:11 +00:00
bjorn3
7b74920388 Stacker now handles miri using a noop impl itself 2025-02-21 13:54:45 +00:00
klensy
8d2de634ec convert all_macro_rules from hashmap to hashset 2025-02-21 15:29:17 +03:00
klensy
918b5c391f remove unused pred_rcache 2025-02-21 15:06:26 +03:00
Matthias Krüger
636f4f19d8
Rollup merge of #137313 - oli-obk:push-ywvuqkxuqyom, r=petrochenkov
Some codegen_llvm cleanups

Using some more safe wrappers and thus being able to remove a large unsafe block.

As a next step we should probably look into safe extern fns
2025-02-21 12:45:26 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1f6c75e682
Rollup merge of #137305 - nnethercote:rustc_middle-2, r=lcnr
Tweaks in and around `rustc_middle`

A bunch of tiny improvements I found while working on bigger things.

r? ```@lcnr```
2025-02-21 12:45:25 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3a04ec8c56
Rollup merge of #137302 - compiler-errors:stray-drop-regions, r=matthewjasper
Use a probe to avoid registering stray region obligations when re-checking drops in MIR typeck

Fixes #137288.

See the comment I left on the probe. I'm not totally sure why this depends on *both* an unconstrained type parameter in the impl and a type error for the self type, but I think the fix is at least theoretically well motivated.

r? ```@matthewjasper```
2025-02-21 12:45:24 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
72861ea7e2
Rollup merge of #137299 - nnethercote:simplify-PostOrder-customization, r=compiler-errors
Simplify `Postorder` customization.

`Postorder` has a `C: Customization<'tcx>` parameter, that gives it flexibility about how it computes successors. But in practice, there are only two `impls` of `Customization`, and one is for the unit type.

This commit simplifies things by removing the generic parameter and replacing it with an `Option`.

r? ````@saethlin````
2025-02-21 12:45:24 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
15a0403ecf
Rollup merge of #137204 - nnethercote:clarify-MIR-dialects-and-phases, r=RalfJung
Clarify MIR dialects and phases

I found the existing code and docs hard to understand.

r? `@Zalathar`
2025-02-21 12:45:23 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e67d4499a6
Rollup merge of #135630 - folkertdev:s390x-target-features, r=Amanieu
add more `s390x` target features

Closes #88937

tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130869

The target feature names are, right now, just the llvm target feature names. These mostly line up well with the names of [Facility Indications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) names. The linux kernel (and `/proc/cpuinfo`) uses shorter, more cryptic names. (e.g. "vector" is `vx`). We can deviate from the llvm names, but the CPU vendor (IBM) does not appear to use e.g. `vx` for what they call `vector`.

There are a number of implied target features between the vector facilities (based on the [Facility Indications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) table):

- 129 The vector facility for z/Architecture is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 134 The vector packed decimal facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 134 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 135 The vector enhancements facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 135 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 148 The vector-enhancements facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 148 is one, bits 129 and 135 are also one.
- 152 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 152 is one, bits 129 and 134 are also one.
- 165 The neural-network-processing-assist facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 165 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 192 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 192 is one, bits 129, 134, and 152 are also one.

The remaining facilities do not have any implied target features (that we provide):

- 45 The distinct-operands, fast-BCR-serialization, high-word, and population-count facilities, the interlocked-access facility 1, and the load/store-oncondition facility 1 are installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 73 The transactional-execution facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. Bit 49 is one when bit 73 is one.
- 133 The guarded-storage facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 150 The enhanced-sort facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 151 The DEFLATE-conversion facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.

The added target features are those that have ISA implications, can be queried at runtime, and have LLVM support. LLVM [defines more target features](d49a2d2bc9/llvm/lib/Target/SystemZ/SystemZFeatures.td), but I'm not sure those are useful. They can always be added later, and can already be set globally using `-Ctarget-feature`.

I'll also update the `is_s390x_feature_supported` macro (added in https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1699, not yet on nightly, that needs an stdarch sync) to include these target features.

``@Amanieu`` you had some reservations about the `"vector"` target feature name. It does appear to be the most "official" name we have. On the one hand the name is very generic, and some of the other names are rather long. For the `neural-network-processing-assist` even LLVM thought that was a bit much and shortened it to `nnp-assist`. Also for `vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 1` the llvm naming is inconsistent. On the other hand, the cpuinfo names are very cryptic, and aren't found in the IBM documentation.

r? ``@Amanieu``

cc ``@uweigand`` ``@taiki-e``
2025-02-21 12:45:22 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
12e6b4897c
Rollup merge of #128080 - estebank:out-of-scope-macro, r=petrochenkov
Specify scope in `out_of_scope_macro_calls` lint

```
warning: cannot find macro `in_root` in the crate root
  --> $DIR/key-value-expansion-scope.rs:1:10
   |
LL | #![doc = in_root!()]
   |          ^^^^^^^ not found in the crate root
   |
   = warning: this was previously accepted by the compiler but is being phased out; it will become a hard error in a future release!
   = note: for more information, see issue #124535 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124535>
   = help: import `macro_rules` with `use` to make it callable above its definition
   = note: `#[warn(out_of_scope_macro_calls)]` on by default
```

r? ```@petrochenkov```
2025-02-21 12:45:21 +01:00
Scott McMurray
da77b39f05 Refactor OperandRef::extract_field to prep for 838 2025-02-20 22:26:24 -08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0f490b040a Avoid snapshotting the parser in parse_path_inner. 2025-02-21 16:48:01 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
76b04437be Remove NtTy.
Notes about tests:

- tests/ui/parser/macro/trait-object-macro-matcher.rs: the syntax error
  is duplicated, because it occurs now when parsing the decl macro
  input, and also when parsing the expanded decl macro. But this won't
  show up for normal users due to error de-duplication.

- tests/ui/associated-consts/issue-93835.rs: similar, plus there are
  some additional errors about this very broken code.

- The changes to metavariable descriptions in #132629 are now visible in
  error message for several tests.
2025-02-21 15:49:46 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
c7981d6411 Remove NtVis.
We now use invisible delimiters for expanded `vis` fragments, instead of
`Token::Interpolated`.
2025-02-21 15:49:44 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
806be25fc9 Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 3.
Continuing the work from #137162.

Every method gains a `hir_` prefix.
2025-02-21 14:31:09 +11:00
Michael Goulet
160905b625 Trim suggestion part before generating highlights 2025-02-21 00:54:01 +00:00
Michael Goulet
0a7ab1d6df More sophisticated span trimming 2025-02-21 00:41:17 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
43c2b0086a Store TyCtxt instead of Map in some iterators. 2025-02-21 11:01:13 +11:00
Folkert de Vries
69c7e1d02f
add more s390x target features
The target feature names are, right now, based on the llvm target feature names. These mostly line up well with the names of [Facility Inidications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) names. The linux kernel uses shorter, more cryptic names. (e.g. "vector" is `vx`). We can deviate from the llvm names, but the CPU vendor (IBM) does not appear to use e.g. `vx` for what they call `vector`.

There are a number of implied target features between the vector facilities (based on the [Facility Inidications](https://publibfp.dhe.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/a227832d.pdf#page=301) table):

- 129 The vector facility for z/Architecture is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 134 The vector packed decimal facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 134 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 135 The vector enhancements facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 135 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 148 The vector-enhancements facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 148 is one, bits 129 and 135 are also one.
- 152 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 1 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 152 is one, bits 129 and 134 are also one.
- 165 The neural-network-processing-assist facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 165 is one, bit 129 is also one.
- 192 The vector-packed-decimal-enhancement facility 2 is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. When bit 192 is one, bits 129, 134, and 152 are also one.

And then there are a number of facilities without any implied target features

- 45 The distinct-operands, fast-BCR-serialization, high-word, and population-count facilities, the interlocked-access facility 1, and the load/store-oncondition facility 1 are installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 73 The transactional-execution facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode. Bit 49 is one when bit 73 is one.
- 133 The guarded-storage facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 150 The enhanced-sort facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.
- 151 The DEFLATE-conversion facility is installed in the z/Architecture architectural mode.

The added target features are those that have ISA implications, can be queried at runtime, and have LLVM support. LLVM [defines more target features](d49a2d2bc9/llvm/lib/Target/SystemZ/SystemZFeatures.td), but I'm not sure those are useful. They can always be added later, and can already be set globally using `-Ctarget-feature`.
2025-02-21 00:26:30 +01:00
Jubilee
8aa75f5ec6
Rollup merge of #137324 - flba-eb:rename_qnx_target_name_i586, r=workingjubilee
Make x86 QNX target name consistent with other Rust targets

Rename target to be consistent with other Rust targets: Use `i686` instead of `i586`
See also
- #136495
- #109173

CC: `@jonathanpallant` `@japaric` `@gh-tr` `@samkearney`
2025-02-20 14:58:21 -08:00
Jubilee
8d5eb73ea6
Rollup merge of #137318 - bjorn3:cg_clif_abi_workaround, r=workingjubilee
Workaround Cranelift not yet properly supporting vectors smaller than 128bit

While it would technically be possible to workaround this in cg_clif, it quickly becomes very messy and would likely cause correctness issues. Working around it in rustc instead is much simper and won't have any negative impact for code running on stable as vectors smaller than 128bit can only be made on nightly using core::simd or #[repr(simd)].
2025-02-20 14:58:19 -08:00
Jubilee
8c9e3749a1
Rollup merge of #136985 - zachs18:backend-repr-remove-uninhabited, r=workingjubilee
Do not ignore uninhabited types for function-call ABI purposes. (Remove BackendRepr::Uninhabited)

Accepted MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/832

Fixes #135802

Do not consider the inhabitedness of a type for function call ABI purposes.

* Remove the [`rustc_abi::BackendRepr::Uninhabited`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_abi/enum.BackendRepr.html) variant
  * Instead calculate the `BackendRepr` of uninhabited types "normally" (as though they were not uninhabited "at the top level", but still considering inhabitedness of variants to determine enum layout, etc)
* Add an `uninhabited: bool` field to [`rustc_abi::LayoutData`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_abi/struct.LayoutData.html) so inhabitedness of a `LayoutData` can still be queried when necessary (e.g. when determining if an enum variant needs a tag value allocated to it).

This should not affect type layouts (size/align/field offset); this should only affect function call ABI, and only of uninhabited types.

cc ``@RalfJung``
2025-02-20 14:58:18 -08:00
Jubilee
6d74563b20
Rollup merge of #136608 - kulst:ptx_target_features, r=bjorn3
Pass through of target features to llvm-bitcode-linker and handling them

When using the llvm-bitcode-linker (`linker-flavor=llbc`) target-features are not passed through and are not handled by it.
The llvm-bitcode-linker is mainly used as a self contained linker to link llvm bitcode for the nvptx64 target. It uses `llvm-link`, `opt` and `llc` internally. To produce a `.ptx` file of a specific ptx-version it is necessary to pass the version to llc with the `--mattr` option. Without explicitly setting it, the emitted `.ptx`-version is the minimum supported version of the `--target-cpu`.

I would like to be able to explicitly set the ptx version as [some llvm problems only occur in earlier `.ptx`-versions](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/112998).

Therefore this pull request adds support for passing target features to llvm-bitcode-linker and handling them.
I was not quite sure if adding these features to `rustc_target/src/target_features.rs` is necessary or not. If so I will gladly add these.

    r? ``@kjetilkjeka``
2025-02-20 14:58:17 -08:00
Jubilee
921ef32467
Rollup merge of #136473 - usamoi:infer_linker_hints, r=petrochenkov
infer linker flavor by linker name if it's sufficiently specific

Fix: `rustc` does not infer `llvm-bitcode-linker` uses `llbc` linker flavor if targeting `nvptx64-nvidia-cuda`.
2025-02-20 14:58:16 -08:00
Jubilee
9de94b4f8f
Rollup merge of #131651 - Patryk27:avr-unknown-unknown, r=tgross35
Create a generic AVR target: avr-none

This commit removes the `avr-unknown-gnu-atmega328` target and replaces it with a more generic `avr-none` variant that must be specialized using `-C target-cpu` (e.g. `-C target-cpu=atmega328p`).

Seizing the day, I'm adding myself as the maintainer of this target - I've been already fixing the bugs anyway, might as well make it official 🙂

Related discussions:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131171
- https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/800

try-job: x86_64-gnu-debug
2025-02-20 14:58:15 -08:00