Commit Graph

9044 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Esteban Küber
731c0e59a4 Account for trait/impl difference when suggesting changing argument from ref to mut ref
Do not ICE when encountering a lifetime error involving an argument with
an immutable reference of a method that differs from the trait definition.

Fix #123414.
2024-04-06 16:23:10 +00:00
bors
76cf07d5df Auto merge of #122225 - DianQK:nits-120268, r=cjgillot
Rename `UninhabitedEnumBranching` to `UnreachableEnumBranching`

Per [#120268](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120268#discussion_r1517492060), I rename `UninhabitedEnumBranching` to `UnreachableEnumBranching` .

I solved some nits to add some comments.

I adjusted the workaround restrictions. This should be useful for `a <= b` and `if let Some/Ok(v)`. For enum with few variants, `early-tailduplication` should not cause compile time overhead.

r? RalfJung
2024-04-03 06:22:23 +00:00
bors
b688d53a17 Auto merge of #123396 - jhpratt:rollup-oa54mh1, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #122865 (Split hir ty lowerer's error reporting code in check functions to mod errors.)
 - #122935 (rename ptr::from_exposed_addr -> ptr::with_exposed_provenance)
 - #123182 (Avoid expanding to unstable internal method)
 - #123203 (Add `Context::ext`)
 - #123380 (Improve bootstrap comments)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-04-03 02:13:07 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
9c1c0bfcb2
Rollup merge of #123203 - jkarneges:context-ext, r=Amanieu
Add `Context::ext`

This change enables `Context` to carry arbitrary extension data via a single `&mut dyn Any` field.

```rust
#![feature(context_ext)]

impl Context {
    fn ext(&mut self) -> &mut dyn Any;
}

impl ContextBuilder {
    fn ext(self, data: &'a mut dyn Any) -> Self;

    fn from(cx: &'a mut Context<'_>) -> Self;
    fn waker(self, waker: &'a Waker) -> Self;
}
```

Basic usage:

```rust
struct MyExtensionData {
    executor_name: String,
}

let mut ext = MyExtensionData {
    executor_name: "foo".to_string(),
};

let mut cx = ContextBuilder::from_waker(&waker).ext(&mut ext).build();

if let Some(ext) = cx.ext().downcast_mut::<MyExtensionData>() {
    println!("{}", ext.executor_name);
}
```

Currently, `Context` only carries a `Waker`, but there is interest in having it carry other kinds of data. Examples include [LocalWaker](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118959), [a reactor interface](https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/347), and [multiple arbitrary values by type](https://docs.rs/context-rs/latest/context_rs/). There is also a general practice in the ecosystem of sharing data between executors and futures via thread-locals or globals that would arguably be better shared via `Context`, if it were possible.

The `ext` field would provide a low friction (to stabilization) solution to enable experimentation. It would enable experimenting with what kinds of data we want to carry as well as with what data structures we may want to use to carry such data.

Dedicated fields for specific kinds of data could still be added directly on `Context` when we have sufficient experience or understanding about the problem they are solving, such as with `LocalWaker`. The `ext` field would be for data for which we don't have such experience or understanding, and that could be graduated to dedicated fields once proven.

Both the provider and consumer of the extension data must be aware of the concrete type behind the `Any`. This means it is not possible for the field to carry an abstract interface. However, the field can carry a concrete type which in turn carries an interface. There are different ways one can imagine an interface-carrying concrete type to work, hence the benefit of being able to experiment with such data structures.

## Passing interfaces

Interfaces can be placed in a concrete type, such as a struct, and then that type can be casted to `Any`. However, one gotcha is `Any` cannot contain non-static references. This means one cannot simply do:

```rust
struct Extensions<'a> {
    interface1: &'a mut dyn Trait1,
    interface2: &'a mut dyn Trait2,
}

let mut ext = Extensions {
    interface1: &mut impl1,
    interface2: &mut impl2,
};

let ext: &mut dyn Any = &mut ext;
```

To work around this without boxing, unsafe code can be used to create a safe projection using accessors. For example:

```rust
pub struct Extensions {
    interface1: *mut dyn Trait1,
    interface2: *mut dyn Trait2,
}

impl Extensions {
    pub fn new<'a>(
        interface1: &'a mut (dyn Trait1 + 'static),
        interface2: &'a mut (dyn Trait2 + 'static),
        scratch: &'a mut MaybeUninit<Self>,
    ) -> &'a mut Self {
        scratch.write(Self {
            interface1,
            interface2,
        })
    }

    pub fn interface1(&mut self) -> &mut dyn Trait1 {
        unsafe { self.interface1.as_mut().unwrap() }
    }

    pub fn interface2(&mut self) -> &mut dyn Trait2 {
        unsafe { self.interface2.as_mut().unwrap() }
    }
}

let mut scratch = MaybeUninit::uninit();
let ext: &mut Extensions = Extensions::new(&mut impl1, &mut impl2, &mut scratch);

// ext can now be casted to `&mut dyn Any` and back, and used safely
let ext: &mut dyn Any = ext;
```

## Context inheritance

Sometimes when futures poll other futures they want to provide their own `Waker` which requires creating their own `Context`. Unfortunately, polling sub-futures with a fresh `Context` means any properties on the original `Context` won't get propagated along to the sub-futures. To help with this, some additional methods are added to `ContextBuilder`.

Here's how to derive a new `Context` from another, overriding only the `Waker`:

```rust
let mut cx = ContextBuilder::from(parent_cx).waker(&new_waker).build();
```
2024-04-02 20:37:40 -04:00
Jacob Pratt
e41d7e7aaf
Rollup merge of #123182 - jhpratt:fix-decodable-derive, r=davidtwco
Avoid expanding to unstable internal method

Fixes #123156

Rather than expanding to `std::rt::begin_panic`, the expansion is now to `unreachable!()`. The resulting behavior is identical. A test that previously triggered the same error as #123156 has been added to ensure it does not regress.

r? compiler
2024-04-02 20:37:40 -04:00
Jacob Pratt
e9ef8e1efa
Rollup merge of #122935 - RalfJung:with-exposed-provenance, r=Amanieu
rename ptr::from_exposed_addr -> ptr::with_exposed_provenance

As discussed on [Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-opsem/topic/To.20expose.20or.20not.20to.20expose/near/427757066).

The old name, `from_exposed_addr`, makes little sense as it's not the address that is exposed, it's the provenance. (`ptr.expose_addr()` stays unchanged as we haven't found a better option yet. The intended interpretation is "expose the provenance and return the address".)

The new name nicely matches `ptr::without_provenance`.
2024-04-02 20:37:39 -04:00
Jacob Pratt
0697ee9af5
Rollup merge of #122865 - surechen:refactor_astconv_error_report_20240321, r=lcnr
Split hir ty lowerer's error reporting code in check functions to mod errors.

Move some error report codes to mod `astconv/errors.rs`

r? `@lcnr`
2024-04-02 20:37:39 -04:00
bors
40f743da23 Auto merge of #122791 - compiler-errors:make-coinductive-always, r=lcnr
Make inductive cycles always ambiguous

 This makes inductive cycles always result in ambiguity rather than be treated like a stack-dependent error.

This has some  interactions with specialization, and so breaks a few UI tests that I don't agree should've ever worked in the first place, and also breaks a handful of crates in a way that I don't believe is a problem.

On the bright side, it puts us in a better spot when it comes to eventually enabling coinduction everywhere.

## Results

This was cratered in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116494#issuecomment-2008657494, which boils down to two regressions:
* `lu_packets` - This code should have never compiled in the first place. More below.
* **ALL** other regressions are due to `commit_verify@0.11.0-beta.1` (edit: and `commit_verify@0.10.x`) - This actually seems to be fixed in version `0.11.0-beta.5`, which is the *most* up to date version, but it's still prerelease on crates.io so I don't think cargo ends up picking `beta.5` when building dependent crates.

### `lu_packets`

Firstly, this crate uses specialization, so I think it's automatically worth breaking. However, I've minimized [the regression](https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-116494-3/try%23d614ed876e31a5f3ad1d0fbf848fcdab3a29d1d8/gh/lcdr.lu_packets/log.txt) to:

```rust
// Upstream crate
pub trait Serialize {}
impl Serialize for &() {}
impl<S> Serialize for &[S] where for<'a> &'a S: Serialize {}

// ----------------------------------------------------------------------- //

// Downstream crate
#![feature(specialization)]
#![allow(incomplete_features, unused)]

use upstream::Serialize;

trait Replica {
    fn serialize();
}

impl<T> Replica for T {
    default fn serialize() {}
}

impl<T> Replica for Option<T>
where
    for<'a> &'a T: Serialize,
{
    fn serialize() {}
}
```

Specifically this fails when computing the specialization graph for the `downstream` crate.

The code ends up cycling on `&[?0]: Serialize` when we equate `&?0 = &[?1]` during impl matching, which ends up needing to prove `&[?1]: Serialize`, which since cycles are treated like ambiguity, ends up in a **fatal overflow**. For some reason this requires two crates, squashing them into one crate doesn't work.

Side-note: This code is subtly order dependent. When minimizing, I ended up having the code start failing on `nightly` very easily after removing and reordering impls. This seems to me all the more reason to remove this behavior altogether.

## Side-note: Item Bounds (edit: this was fixed independently in #121123)

Due to the changes in #120584 where we now consider an alias's item bounds *and* all the item bounds of the alias's nested self type aliases, I've had to add e6b64c6194 which is a hack to make sure we're not eagerly normalizing bounds that have nothing to do with the predicate we're trying to solve, and which result in.

This is fixed in a more principled way in #121123.

---

r? lcnr for an initial review
2024-04-03 00:09:44 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
0fcdf34861
Avoid expanding to unstable internal method 2024-04-02 22:21:16 +00:00
bors
88c2f4f5f5 Auto merge of #123385 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-v69vjbn, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #123198 (Add fn const BuildHasherDefault::new)
 - #123226 (De-LLVM the unchecked shifts [MCP#693])
 - #123302 (Make sure to insert `Sized` bound first into clauses list)
 - #123348 (rustdoc: add a couple of regression tests)
 - #123362 (Check that nested statics in thread locals are duplicated per thread.)
 - #123368 (CFI: Support non-general coroutines)
 - #123375 (rustdoc: synthetic auto trait impls: accept unresolved region vars for now)
 - #123378 (Update sysinfo to 0.30.8)

Failed merges:

 - #123349 (Fix capture analysis for by-move closure bodies)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-04-02 21:23:53 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
8e271d70a2
Rollup merge of #123375 - fmease:rustdoc-sati-re-hotfix, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: synthetic auto trait impls: accept unresolved region vars for now

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123348#issuecomment-2032494255:

> Right, [in #123340] I've intentionally changed a `vid_map.get(vid).unwrap_or(r)` to a `vid_map[vid]` making rustdoc panic if `rustc::AutoTraitFinder` returns a region inference variable that cannot be resolved because that is really fishy.  I can change it back with a `FIXME: investigate` […]. [O]nce I [fully] understand [the arcane] `rustc::AutoTraitFinder` [I] can fix the underlying issue if there's one.
>
> `rustc::AutoTraitFinder` can also return placeholder regions `RePlaceholder` which doesn't seem right either and which makes rustdoc ICE, too (we have a GitHub issue for that already[, namely #120606]).

Fixes #123370.
Fixes #112242.

r? ``@GuillaumeGomez``
2024-04-02 21:22:04 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
9372948889
Rollup merge of #123368 - maurer:cfi-non-general-coroutines, r=compiler-errors
CFI: Support non-general coroutines

Previously, we assumed all `ty::Coroutine` were general coroutines and attempted to generalize them through the `Coroutine` trait. Select appropriate traits for each kind of coroutine.

I have this marked as a draft because it currently only fixes async coroutines, and I think it make sense to try to fix gen/async gen coroutines before this is merged.

If the issue [mentioned](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123106#issuecomment-2030794213) in the original PR is actually affecting someone, we can land this as is to remedy it.
2024-04-02 21:22:03 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
5b717684ff
Rollup merge of #123362 - oli-obk:thread_local_nested_statics, r=estebank
Check that nested statics in thread locals are duplicated per thread.

follow-up to #123310

cc ``@compiler-errors`` ``@RalfJung``

fwiw: I have no idea how thread local statics make that work under LLVM, and miri fails on this example, which I would have expected to be the correct behaviour.

Since the `#[thread_local]` attribute is just an internal implementation detail, I'm just going to start hard erroring on nested mutable statics in thread locals.
2024-04-02 21:22:03 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
464f264387
Rollup merge of #123348 - fmease:add-synth-auto-trait-impls-tests, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: add a couple of regression tests

Fixes #114657.
Fixes #112828.
Fixes #107715.

r? rustdoc
2024-04-02 21:22:02 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
a38dde9289
Rollup merge of #123302 - compiler-errors:sized-bound-first, r=estebank
Make sure to insert `Sized` bound first into clauses list

#120323 made it so that we don't insert an implicit `Sized` bound whenever we see an *explicit* `Sized` bound. However, since the code that inserts implicit sized bounds puts the bound as the *first* in the list, that means that it had the **side-effect** of possibly meaning we check `Sized` *after* checking other trait bounds.

If those trait bounds result in ambiguity or overflow or something, it may change how we winnow candidates. (**edit: SEE** #123303) This is likely the cause for the regression in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123279#issuecomment-2028899598, since the impl...

```rust
impl<T: Job + Sized> AsJob for T { // <----- changing this to `Sized + Job` or just `Job` (which turns into `Sized + Job`) will FIX the issue.
}
```

...looks incredibly suspicious.

Fixes [after beta-backport] #123279.

Alternative is to revert #120323. I don't have a strong opinion about this, but think it may be nice to keep the diagnostic changes around.
2024-04-02 21:22:01 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
1b0e46f8a0
Rollup merge of #123226 - scottmcm:u32-shifts, r=WaffleLapkin
De-LLVM the unchecked shifts [MCP#693]

This is just one part of the MCP (https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/693), but it's the one that IMHO removes the most noise from the standard library code.

Seems net simpler this way, since MIR already supported heterogeneous shifts anyway, and thus it's not more work for backends than before.

r? WaffleLapkin
2024-04-02 21:22:01 +02:00
bors
a77322c16f Auto merge of #118310 - scottmcm:three-way-compare, r=davidtwco
Add `Ord::cmp` for primitives as a `BinOp` in MIR

Update: most of this OP was written months ago.  See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118310#issuecomment-2016940014 below for where we got to recently that made it ready for review.

---

There are dozens of reasonable ways to implement `Ord::cmp` for integers using comparison, bit-ops, and branches.  Those differences are irrelevant at the rust level, however, so we can make things better by adding `BinOp::Cmp` at the MIR level:

1. Exactly how to implement it is left up to the backends, so LLVM can use whatever pattern its optimizer best recognizes and cranelift can use whichever pattern codegens the fastest.
2. By not inlining those details for every use of `cmp`, we drastically reduce the amount of MIR generated for `derive`d `PartialOrd`, while also making it more amenable to MIR-level optimizations.

Having extremely careful `if` ordering to μoptimize resource usage on broadwell (#63767) is great, but it really feels to me like libcore is the wrong place to put that logic.  Similarly, using subtraction [tricks](https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#CopyIntegerSign) (#105840) is arguably even nicer, but depends on the optimizer understanding it (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/73417) to be practical.  Or maybe [bitor is better than add](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/representing-in-ir/67369/2?u=scottmcm)?  But maybe only on a future version that [has `or disjoint` support](https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-add-or-disjoint-flag/75036?u=scottmcm)?  And just because one of those forms happens to be good for LLVM, there's no guarantee that it'd be the same form that GCC or Cranelift would rather see -- especially given their very different optimizers.  Not to mention that if LLVM gets a spaceship intrinsic -- [which it should](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Suboptimal.20inlining.20in.20std.20function.20.60binary_search.60/near/404250586) -- we'll need at least a rustc intrinsic to be able to call it.

As for simplifying it in Rust, we now regularly inline `{integer}::partial_cmp`, but it's quite a large amount of IR.  The best way to see that is with 8811efa88b (diff-d134c32d028fbe2bf835fef2df9aca9d13332dd82284ff21ee7ebf717bfa4765R113) -- I added a new pre-codegen MIR test for a simple 3-tuple struct, and this PR change it from 36 locals and 26 basic blocks down to 24 locals and 8 basic blocks.  Even better, as soon as the construct-`Some`-then-match-it-in-same-BB noise is cleaned up, this'll expose the `Cmp == 0` branches clearly in MIR, so that an InstCombine (#105808) can simplify that to just a `BinOp::Eq` and thus fix some of our generated code perf issues.  (Tracking that through today's `if a < b { Less } else if a == b { Equal } else { Greater }` would be *much* harder.)

---

r? `@ghost`
But first I should check that perf is ok with this
~~...and my true nemesis, tidy.~~
2024-04-02 19:21:44 +00:00
Matthew Maurer
a333b82d04 CFI: Support non-general coroutines
Previously, we assumed all `ty::Coroutine` were general coroutines and
attempted to generalize them through the `Coroutine` trait. Select
appropriate traits for each kind of coroutine.
2024-04-02 17:34:42 +00:00
scottmcm
4626521831
Update tests/mir-opt/inline/unchecked_shifts.rs
Co-authored-by: Waffle Maybe <waffle.lapkin@gmail.com>
2024-04-02 17:21:20 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
70b4ace09d
rustdoc: synthetic auto trait impls: accept unresolved region vars for now 2024-04-02 18:59:17 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
5ee4d13709
rustdoc: add a couple of regression tests 2024-04-02 18:37:01 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
44680680ef
Rollup merge of #123371 - eduardosm:dangling-test-files, r=compiler-errors
Remove dangling `.mir.stderr` and `.thir.stderr` test files

They are not needed since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117673
2024-04-02 18:18:51 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
c3a124e9d6
Rollup merge of #123338 - GuillaumeGomez:update-browser-ui-test, r=notriddle
Update to new browser-ui-test version

This new version brings a lot of new internal improvements (mostly around validating the commands input).

It also improved some command names and arguments.

r? `@notriddle`
2024-04-02 18:18:51 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
3aab05eecb
Rollup merge of #122614 - notriddle:notriddle/search-desc, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc-search: shard the search result descriptions

## Preview

This makes no visual changes to rustdoc search. It's a pure perf improvement.

<details><summary>old</summary>

Preview: <http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-10/doc/std/index.html?search=vec>

WebPageTest Comparison with before branch on a sort of worst case (searching `vec`, winds up downloading most of the shards anyway): <https://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=240317_AiDc61_2EM,240317_AiDcM0_2EN>

Waterfall diagram:
![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/39548f0c-7ad6-411b-abf8-f6668ff4da18)

</details>

Preview: <http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-10/doc2/std/index.html?search=vec>

WebPageTest Comparison with before branch on a sort of worst case (searching `vec`, winds up downloading most of the shards anyway): <https://www.webpagetest.org/video/compare.php?tests=240322_BiDcCH_13R,240322_AiDcJY_104>

![image](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/1593513/4be1f9ff-c3ff-4b96-8f5b-b264df2e662d)

## Description

r? `@GuillaumeGomez`

The descriptions are, on almost all crates[^1], the majority of the size of the search index, even though they aren't really used for searching. This makes it relatively easy to separate them into their own files.

Additionally, this PR pulls out information about whether there's a description into a bitmap. This allows us to sort, truncate, *then* download.

This PR also bumps us to ES8. Out of the browsers we support, all of them support async functions according to caniuse.

https://caniuse.com/async-functions

[^1]:
    <https://microsoft.github.io/windows-docs-rs/>, a crate with
    44MiB of pure names and no descriptions for them, is an outlier
    and should not be counted. But this PR should improve it, by replacing a long line of empty strings with a compressed bitmap with a single Run section. Just not very much.

## Detailed sizes

```console
$ cat test.sh
set -ex
cp ../search-index*.js search-index.js
awk 'FNR==NR {a++;next} FNR<a-3' search-index.js{,} | awk 'NR>1 {gsub(/\],\\$/,""); gsub(/^\["[^"]+",/,""); print} {next}' | sed -E "s:\\\\':':g" > search-index.json
jq -c '.t' search-index.json > t.json
jq -c '.n' search-index.json > n.json
jq -c '.q' search-index.json > q.json
jq -c '.D' search-index.json > D.json
jq -c '.e' search-index.json > e.json
jq -c '.i' search-index.json > i.json
jq -c '.f' search-index.json > f.json
jq -c '.c' search-index.json > c.json
jq -c '.p' search-index.json > p.json
jq -c '.a' search-index.json > a.json
du -hs t.json n.json q.json D.json e.json i.json f.json c.json p.json a.json
$ bash test.sh
+ cp ../search-index1.78.0.js search-index.js
+ awk 'FNR==NR {a++;next} FNR<a-3' search-index.js search-index.js
+ awk 'NR>1 {gsub(/\],\\$/,""); gsub(/^\["[^"]+",/,""); print} {next}'
+ sed -E 's:\\'\'':'\'':g'
+ jq -c .t search-index.json
+ jq -c .n search-index.json
+ jq -c .q search-index.json
+ jq -c .D search-index.json
+ jq -c .e search-index.json
+ jq -c .i search-index.json
+ jq -c .f search-index.json
+ jq -c .c search-index.json
+ jq -c .p search-index.json
+ jq -c .a search-index.json
+ du -hs t.json n.json q.json D.json e.json i.json f.json c.json p.json a.json
64K     t.json
800K    n.json
8.0K    q.json
4.0K    D.json
16K     e.json
192K    i.json
544K    f.json
4.0K    c.json
36K     p.json
20K     a.json
```

These are, roughly, the size of each section in the standard library (this tool actually excludes libtest, for parsing-json-with-awk reasons, but libtest is tiny so it's probably not important).

t = item type, like "struct", "free fn", or "type alias". Since one byte is used for every item, this implies that there are approximately 64 thousand items in the standard library.

n = name, and that's now the largest section of the search index with the descriptions removed from it

q = parent *module* path, stored parallel to the items within

D = the size of each description shard, stored as vlq hex numbers

e = empty description bit flags, stored as a roaring bitmap

i = parent *type* index as a link into `p`, stored as decimal json numbers; used only for associated types; might want to switch to vlq hex, since that's shorter, but that would be a separate pr

f = function signature, stored as lists of lists that index into `p`

c = deprecation flag, stored as a roaring bitmap

p = parent *type*, stored separately and linked into from `i` and `f`

a = alias, as [[key, value]] pairs

## Search performance

http://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-11/perf-shard/index.html

For example, in stm32f4:

<table><thead><tr><th>before<th>after</tr></thead>
<tbody><tr><td>

```
Testing T -> U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 617

Testing T, U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 198

Testing T -> T ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 282

Testing crc32 ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 426

Testing spi::pac ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 673
```

</td><td>

```
Testing T -> U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 716

Testing T, U ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 207

Testing T -> T ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 200
wall time = 289

Testing crc32 ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 418

Testing spi::pac ... in_args = 0, returned = 0, others = 0
wall time = 687
```

</td></tr><tr><td>

```
user: 005.345 s
sys:  002.955 s
wall: 006.899 s
child_RSS_high:     583664 KiB
group_mem_high:     557876 KiB
```

</td><td>

```
user: 004.652 s
sys:  000.565 s
wall: 003.865 s
child_RSS_high:     538696 KiB
group_mem_high:     511724 KiB
```

</td></tr>

</table>

This perf tester is janky and unscientific enough that the apparent differences might just be noise. If it's not an order of magnitude, it's probably not real.

## Future possibilities

* Currently, results are not shown until the descriptions are downloaded. Theoretically, the description-less results could be shown. But actually doing that, and making sure it works properly, would require extra work (we have to be careful to avoid layout jumps).
* More than just descriptions can be sharded this way. But we have to be careful to make sure the size wins are worth the round trips. Ideally, data that’s needed only for display should be sharded while data needed for search isn’t.
* [Full text search](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/full-text-search-for-rustdoc-and-doc-rs/20427) also needs this kind of infrastructure. A good implementation might store a compressed bloom filter in the search index, then download the full keyword in shards. But, we have to be careful not just of the amount readers have to download, but also of the amount that [publishers](https://gist.github.com/notriddle/c289e77f3ed469d1c0238d1d135d49e1) have to store.
2024-04-02 18:18:50 +02:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
858a1dfd5b Remove dangling .mir.stderr and .thir.stderr test files 2024-04-02 18:02:06 +02:00
Oli Scherer
64b75f736d Forbid implicit nested statics in thread local statics 2024-04-02 13:00:46 +00:00
bors
5dbaafdb93 Auto merge of #123340 - fmease:rustdoc-simplify-auto-trait-impl-synth, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: heavily simplify the synthesis of auto trait impls

`gd --numstat HEAD~2 HEAD src/librustdoc/clean/auto_trait.rs`
**+315 -705** 🟩🟥🟥🟥

---

As outlined in issue #113015, there are currently 3[^1] large separate routines that “clean” `rustc_middle::ty` data types related to generics & predicates to rustdoc data types. Every single one has their own kinds of bugs. While I've patched a lot of bugs in each of the routines in the past, it's about time to unify them. This PR is only the first in a series. It completely **yanks** the custom “bounds cleaning” of mod `auto_trait` and reuses the routines found in mod `simplify`. As alluded to, `simplify` is also flawed but it's still more complete than `auto_trait`'s routines. [See also my review comment over at `tests/rustdoc/synthetic_auto/bounds.rs`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123340#discussion_r1546900539).

This is preparatory work for rewriting “bounds cleaning” from scratch in follow-up PRs in order to finally [fix] #113015.

Apart from that, I've eliminated all potential sources of *instability* in the rendered output.
See also #119597. I'm pretty sure this fixes #119597.

This PR does not attempt to fix [any other issues related to synthetic auto trait impls](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues?q=is%3Aissue+is%3Aopen+label%3AA-synthetic-impls%20label%3AA-auto-traits).
However, it's definitely meant to be a *stepping stone* by making `auto_trait` more contributor-friendly.

---

* Replace `FxHash{Map,Set}` with `FxIndex{Map,Set}` to guarantee a stable iteration order
  * Or as a perf opt, `UnordSet` (a thin wrapper around `FxHashSet`) in cases where we never iterate over the set.
  * Yes, we do make use of `swap_remove` but that shouldn't matter since all the callers are deterministic. It does make the output less “predictable” but it's still better than before. Ofc, I rely on `rustc_infer` being deterministic. I hope that holds.
* Utilizing `clean::simplify` over the custom “bounds cleaning” routines wipes out the last reference to `collect_referenced_late_bound_regions` in rustdoc (`simplify` uses `bound_vars`) which was a source of instability / unpredictability (cc #116388)
* Remove the types `RegionTarget` and `RegionDeps` from `librustdoc`. They were duplicates of the identical types found in `rustc`. Just import them from `rustc`. For some reason, they were duplicated when splitting `auto_trait` in two in #49711.
* Get rid of the useless “type namespace” `AutoTraitFinder` in `librustdoc`
  * The struct only held a `DocContext`, it was over-engineered
  * Turn the associated functions into free ones
    * Eliminates rightward drift; increases legibility
  * `rustc` also contains a useless `AutoTraitFinder` struct but I plan on removing that in a follow-up PR
* Rename a bunch of methods to be way more descriptive
* Eliminate `use super::*;`
  * Lead to `clean/mod.rs` accumulating a lot of unnecessary imports
  * Made `auto_traits` less modular
* Eliminate a custom `TypeFolder`: We can just use the rustc helper `fold_regions` which does that for us

I plan on adding extensive documentation to `librustdoc`'s `auto_trait` in follow-up PRs.
I don't want to do that in this PR because further refactoring & bug fix PRs may alter the overall structure of `librustdoc`'s & `rustc`'s `auto_trait` modules to a great degree. I'm slowly digging into the dark details of `rustc`'s `auto_trait` module again and once I have the full picture I will be able to provide proper docs.

---

While this PR does indeed touch `rustc`'s `auto_trait` — mostly tiny refactorings — I argue this PR doesn't need any compiler reviewers next to rustdoc ones since that module falls under the purview of rustdoc — it used to be part of `librustdoc` after all (#49711).

Sorry for not having split this into more commits. If you'd like me to I can try to split it into more atomic commits retroactively. However, I don't know if that would actually make reviewing easier. I think the best way to review this might just be to place the master version of `auto_trait` on the left of your screen and the patched one on the right, not joking.

r? `@GuillaumeGomez`

[^1]: Or even 4 depending on the way you're counting.
2024-04-02 12:13:44 +00:00
surechen
1012218ba8 t plit astconv's error report code in check functions to mod errors.
Move some error report codes to mod `astconv/errors.rs`
2024-04-02 20:10:35 +08:00
Oli Scherer
6c5c48e880 Check that nested statics in thread locals are duplicated per thread. 2024-04-02 12:06:52 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
0bb1ec729f Remove redundant code comments 2024-04-02 10:42:32 +02:00
Michael Goulet
09ea3f93ee Fix obligation param and bless tests 2024-04-01 22:48:23 -04:00
Michael Goulet
5f59b7f763 Instantiate closure-like bounds with placeholders to deal with binders correctly 2024-04-01 22:48:23 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f2fd2d8c70 Make sure to insert Sized bound first into clauses list 2024-04-01 21:41:45 -04:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
069e7f2a76
rustdoc: heavily simplify synthesis of auto trait impls 2024-04-02 01:49:57 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
59120d0ef5 Update to new browser-ui-test version 2024-04-01 22:25:01 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
cbd593ed18
rustdoc: synthetic impls: auto traits: Fx{Hash↦Index}{Map,Set} 2024-04-01 22:15:09 +02:00
bors
c518e5aeec Auto merge of #123265 - joboet:guardians_of_the_unix, r=ChrisDenton
Refactor stack overflow handling

Currently, every platform must implement a `Guard` that protects a thread from stack overflow. However, UNIX is the only platform that actually does so. Windows has a different mechanism for detecting stack overflow, while the other platforms don't detect it at all. Also, the UNIX stack overflow handling is split between `sys::pal::unix::stack_overflow`, which implements the signal handler, and `sys::pal::unix::thread`, which detects/installs guard pages.

This PR cleans this by getting rid of `Guard` and unifying UNIX stack overflow handling inside `stack_overflow` (commit 1). Therefore we can get rid of `sys_common::thread_info`, which stores `Guard` and the current `Thread` handle and move the `thread::current` TLS variable into `thread` (commit 2).

The second commit is not strictly speaking necessary. To keep the implementation clean, I've included it here, but if it causes too much noise, I can split it out without any trouble.
2024-04-01 14:35:38 +00:00
bors
3d5528c287 Auto merge of #123310 - compiler-errors:nested-static-codegen-attrs, r=oli-obk
Don't inherit codegen attrs from parent static

Putting this up partly for discussion and partly for review. Specifically, in #121644, `@oli-obk` designed a system that creates new static items for representing nested allocations in statics. However, in that PR, oli made it so that these statics inherited the codegen attrs from the parent.

This causes problems such as colliding symbols with `#[export_name]` and ICEs with `#[no_mangle]` since these synthetic statics have no `tcx.item_name(..)`.

So the question is, is there any case where we *do* want to inherit codegen attrs from the parent? The only one that seems a bit suspicious is the thread-local attribute. And there may be some interesting interactions with the coverage attributes as well...

Fixes (after backport) #123274. Fixes #123243. cc #121644.

r? `@oli-obk` cc `@nnethercote` `@RalfJung` (reviewers on that pr)
2024-04-01 09:22:01 +00:00
bors
7f84ede33d Auto merge of #122663 - beetrees:non-unicode-env-error, r=TaKO8Ki
Fix error message for `env!` when env var is not valid Unicode

Currently (without this PR) the `env!` macro emits an ```environment variable `name` not defined at compile time``` error when the environment variable is defined, but not a valid Unicode string. This PR introduces a separate more accurate error message, and a test to verify this behaviour.

For reference, before this PR, the new test would have outputted:
```
error: environment variable `NON_UNICODE_VAR` not defined at compile time
 --> non_unicode_env.rs:2:13
  |
2 |     let _ = env!("NON_UNICODE_VAR");
  |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  |
  = help: use `std::env::var("NON_UNICODE_VAR")` to read the variable at run time
  = note: this error originates in the macro `env` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)

error: aborting due to 1 previous error
```

whereas with this PR, the test ouputs:
```
error: environment variable `NON_UNICODE_VAR` is not a valid Unicode string
 --> non_unicode_env.rs:2:13
  |
2 |     let _ = env!("NON_UNICODE_VAR");
  |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  |
  = note: this error originates in the macro `env` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)

error: aborting due to 1 previous error
```
2024-04-01 05:18:51 +00:00
beetrees
0bbaa2505b
Fix error message for env! when env var is not valid Unicode 2024-04-01 05:44:45 +01:00
bors
defef8658e Auto merge of #122972 - beetrees:use-align-type, r=fee1-dead
Use the `Align` type when parsing alignment attributes

Use the `Align` type in `rustc_attr::parse_alignment`, removing the need to call `Align::from_bytes(...).unwrap()` later in the compilation process.
2024-04-01 03:16:45 +00:00
Michael Goulet
4ff8a9bd6b Don't inherit codegen attrs from parent static 2024-03-31 22:34:00 -04:00
beetrees
6e5f1dacf3
Use the Align type when parsing alignment attributes 2024-04-01 03:05:55 +01:00
Michael Goulet
56dbeeb5ac Add regression tests for 123303 2024-03-31 21:03:59 -04:00
Michael Goulet
b8396d10c4 Always make inductive cycles as ambig during typeck 2024-03-31 20:44:30 -04:00
Jubilee
17737bfece
Rollup merge of #123180 - Oneirical:master, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Rewrite `core-no-fp-fmt-parse` test in Rust

Claiming the simple "core-no-fp-fmt-parse" test from #121876. `run_make_support` was altered with `arg_path` written in #121918 by `@abhay-51,` with additional doc comment.

Preliminary GSoC contribution for the project proposal mentored by `@jieyouxu.`
2024-03-31 13:18:16 -07:00
joboet
41434ff4a3
refer to a different module in UI test 2024-03-31 15:38:22 +02:00
bors
5baf1e13f5 Auto merge of #122459 - Nadrieril:sort-eq, r=oli-obk
match lowering: sort `Eq` candidates in the failure case too

This is a slight tweak to MIR gen of matches. Take a match like:
```rust
match (s, flag) {
    ("a", _) if foo() => 1,
    ("b", true) => 2,
    ("a", false) => 3,
    (_, true) => 4,
    _ => 5,
}
```
If we switch on `s == "a"`, the first candidate matches, and we learn almost nothing about the second candidate. So there's a choice:
1. (what we do today) stop sorting candidates, keep the "b" case grouped with everything below. This could allow us to be clever here and test on `flag == true` next.
2. (what this PR does) sort "b" into the failure case. The "b" will be alone (fewer opportunities for picking a good test), but that means the two "a" cases require a single test.

Today, we aren't clever in which tests we pick, so this is an unambiguous win. In a future where we pick tests better, idk. Grouping tests as much as possible feels like a generally good strategy.

This was proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29623 (9 years ago :D)
2024-03-31 02:12:50 +00:00
Oneirical
e477488267 Rewrite core-no-fp-fmt-parse in Rust
Rewrite core-no-fp-fmt-parse in Rust

fix: missing import

fix: tidiness check

more tidy checks

remove tidy line length ignore

new helper functions + arg_path generic

fix: remove unused import

delete arg_path, change arg_path to input
2024-03-30 19:40:18 -04:00
bors
5da1a1b59a Auto merge of #123085 - tgross35:f16-f128-step4.0-libs-basic-impls, r=Amanieu
Add basic trait impls for `f16` and `f128`

Split off part of <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122470> so the compiler doesn't ICE because it expects primitives to have some minimal traits.

Fixes <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123074>
2024-03-30 21:58:49 +00:00