`rustc_borrowck` cleanups, part 2
The code under `do_mir_borrowck` is pretty messy, especially the various types like `MirBorrowckCtxt`, `BorrowckInferCtxt`, `MirTypeckResults`, `MirTypeckRegionConstraints`, `CreateResult`, `TypeChecker`, `TypeVerifier`, `LivenessContext`, `LivenessResults`. This PR does some tidying up, though there's still plenty of mess left afterwards.
A sequel to #132250.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Improve VecCache under parallel frontend
This replaces the single Vec allocation with a series of progressively larger buckets. With the cfg for parallel enabled but with -Zthreads=1, this looks like a slight regression in i-count and cycle counts (~1%).
With the parallel frontend at -Zthreads=4, this is an improvement (-5% wall-time from 5.788 to 5.4688 on libcore) than our current Lock-based approach, likely due to reducing the bouncing of the cache line holding the lock. At -Zthreads=32 it's a huge improvement (-46%: 8.829 -> 4.7319 seconds).
try-job: i686-gnu-nopt
try-job: dist-x86_64-linux
There is an `Rc<UniversalRegions>` within `UniversalRegionRelations`,
and yet the two types get passed around in tandem a lot.
This commit makes `UniversalRegionRelations` own `UniversalRegions`,
removing the `Rc` (which wasn't truly needed) and the tandem-passing.
This requires adding a `universal_relations` method to
`UniversalRegionRelations`, and renaming a couple of existing methods
producing iterators to avoid a name clash.
Use `TypingMode` throughout the compiler instead of `ParamEnv`
Hopefully the biggest single PR as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/types-team/issues/128.
## `infcx.typing_env` while defining opaque types
I don't know how'll be able to correctly handle opaque types when using something taking a `TypingEnv` while defining opaque types. To correctly handle the opaques we need to be able to pass in the current `opaque_type_storage` and return constraints, i.e. we need to use a proper canonical query. We should migrate all the queries used during HIR typeck and borrowck where this matters to proper canonical queries. This is
## `layout_of` and `Reveal::All`
We convert the `ParamEnv` to `Reveal::All` right at the start of the `layout_of` query, so I've changed callers of `layout_of` to already use a post analysis `TypingEnv` when encountering it.
ca87b535a0/compiler/rustc_ty_utils/src/layout.rs (L51)
## `Ty::is_[unpin|sized|whatever]`
I haven't migrated `fn is_item_raw` to use `TypingEnv`, will do so in a followup PR, this should significantly reduce the amount of `typing_env.param_env`. At some point there will probably be zero such uses as using the type system while ignoring the `typing_mode` is incorrect.
## `MirPhase` and phase-transitions
When inside of a MIR-body, we can mostly use its `MirPhase` to figure out the right `typing_mode`. This does not work during phase transitions, most notably when transitioning from `Analysis` to `Runtime`:
dae7ac133b/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/lib.rs (L606-L625)
All these passes still run with `MirPhase::Analysis`, but we should only use `Reveal::All` once we're run the `RevealAll` pass. This required me to manually construct the right `TypingEnv` in all these passes. Given that it feels somewhat easy to accidentally miss this going forward, I would maybe like to change `Body::phase` to an `Option` and replace it at the start of phase transitions. This then makes it clear that the MIR is currently in a weird state.
r? `@ghost`
stability: remove skip_stability_check_due_to_privacy
This was added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/38689 to deal with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/38412. However, even after removing the check, the relevant tests still pass. Let's see if CI finds any other tests that rely on this. If not, it seems like logic elsewhere in the compiler changed so this is not required any more.
the behavior of the type system not only depends on the current
assumptions, but also the currentnphase of the compiler. This is
mostly necessary as we need to decide whether and how to reveal
opaque types. We track this via the `TypingMode`.
rename rustc_const_stable_intrinsic -> rustc_intrinsic_const_stable_indirect
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120370 this name caused confusion as the author thought the intrinsic was stable. So let's try a different name...
If we can land this before the beta cutoff we can avoid needing `cfg(bootstrap)` for this. ;)
Cc `@compiler-errors` `@saethlin`
Overhaul the `-l` option parser (for linking to native libs)
The current parser for `-l` options has accumulated over time, making it hard to follow. This PR tries to clean it up in several ways.
Key changes:
- This code now gets its own submodule, to slightly reduce clutter in `rustc_session::config`.
- Cleaner division between iterating over multiple `-l` options, and processing each individual one.
- Separate “split” step that breaks up the value string into `[KIND[:MODIFIERS]=]NAME[:NEW_NAME]`, but leaves parsing/validating those parts to later steps.
- This step also gets its own (disposable) unit test, to make sure it works as expected.
- A context struct reduces the burden of parameter passing, and makes it easier to write error messages that adapt to nightly/stable compilers.
- Fewer calls to `nightly_options` helper functions, because at this point we can get the same information from `UnstableOptions` and `UnstableFeatures` (which are downstream of earlier calls to those helper functions).
There should be no overall change in compiler behaviour.
Diagnostics for let mut in item context
The diagnostics for `let` at the top level did not account for `let mut`, which [made the error unclear](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/create-a-vector-of-constants-outside-main/121251/1).
I've made the diagnostic always display a link to valid items. I've added dedicated help for `let mut` case that suggests using a `Mutex` (to steer novice users away from the `static mut` trap). Unfortunately, neither the Rust book, nor libstd docs have dedicated section listing all other types for interior-mutable `static`s.
`suggest_borrow_generic_arg`: instantiate clauses properly
This simplifies and fixes the way `suggest_borrow_generic_arg` instantiates callees' predicates when testing them to see if a moved argument can instead be borrowed. Previously, it would ICE if the moved argument's type included a region variable, since it was getting passed to a call of `EarlyBinder::instantiate`. This makes the instantiation much more straightforward, which also fixes the ICE.
Fixes#133118
This also modifies `tests/ui/moves/moved-value-on-as-ref-arg.rs` to have more useful bounds on the tests for suggestions to borrow `Borrow` and `BorrowMut` arguments. With its old tautological `T: BorrowMut<T>` bound, this fix would make it suggest a shared borrow for that argument.
Make rustc consider itself a stable compiler when `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=-1`
Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123404 to allow test writers to specify `//@ rustc-env:RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=-1` to have a given rustc consider itself a stable rustc. This is only intended for testing usages.
I did not use `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=0` because that can be confusing, i.e. one might think that means "not bootstrapping", but "forcing a given rustc to consider itself a stable compiler" is a different use case.
I also added a specific test to check `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP`'s various values and how that interacts with rustc's stability story w.r.t. features and cli flags.
Noticed when trying to write a test for enabling ICE file dumping on stable.
Dunno if this needs a compiler FCP or MCP, but I can file an MCP or ask someone to start an FCP if needed. Note that `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` is a perma-unstable env var and has no stability guarantees (heh) whatsoever. This does not affect bootstrapping because bootstrap never sets `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=-1`. If someone does set that when bootstrapping, it is considered PEBKAC.
Accompanying dev-guide PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/2136
cc `@estebank` and `@rust-lang/wg-diagnostics` for FYI
Check `use<..>` in RPITIT for refinement
`#![feature(precise_capturing_in_traits)]` allows users to write `+ use<>` bounds on RPITITs to control what lifetimes are captured by the RPITIT.
Since RPITITs currently also warn for refinement in implementations, this PR extends that refinement check for cases where we *undercapture* in an implementation, since that may be indirectly "promising" a more relaxed outlives bound than the impl author intended.
For an opaque to be refining, we need to capture *fewer* parameters than those mentioned in the captured params of the trait. For example:
```
trait TypeParam<T> {
fn test() -> impl Sized;
}
// Indirectly capturing a lifetime param through a type param substitution.
impl<'a> TypeParam<&'a ()> for i32 {
fn test() -> impl Sized + use<> {}
//~^ WARN impl trait in impl method captures fewer lifetimes than in trait
}
```
Since the opaque in the method (implicitly) captures `use<Self, T>`, and `Self = i32, T = &'a ()` in the impl, we must mention `'a` in our `use<..>` on the impl.
Tracking:
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130044
Fixes issue 133118.
This also modifies `tests/ui/moves/moved-value-on-as-ref-arg.rs` to have more
useful bounds on the tests for suggestions to borrow `Borrow` and `BorrowMut`
arguments. With its old tautological `T: BorrowMut<T>` bound, this fix would
make it suggest a shared borrow for that argument.
Trim whitespace in RemoveLet primary span
Separate `RemoveLet` span into primary span for `let` and removal suggestion span for `let `, so that primary span does not include whitespace.
Fixes: #133031
Increase accuracy of `if` condition misparse suggestion
Fix#132656.
Look at the expression that was parsed when trying to recover from a bad `if` condition to determine what was likely intended by the user beyond "maybe this was meant to be an `else` body".
```
error: expected `{`, found `map`
--> $DIR/missing-dot-on-if-condition-expression-fixable.rs:4:30
|
LL | for _ in [1, 2, 3].iter()map(|x| x) {}
| ^^^ expected `{`
|
help: you might have meant to write a method call
|
LL | for _ in [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|x| x) {}
| +
```
If a macro statement has been parsed after `else`, suggest a missing `if`:
```
error: expected `{`, found `falsy`
--> $DIR/else-no-if.rs:47:12
|
LL | } else falsy! {} {
| ---- ^^^^^
| |
| expected an `if` or a block after this `else`
|
help: add an `if` if this is the condition of a chained `else if` statement
|
LL | } else if falsy! {} {
| ++
```