Don't pass lint back out of lint decorator
Change the decorator function in the signature of the `emit_lint`/`span_lint`/etc family of methods from `impl for<'a, 'b> FnOnce(&'b mut DiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>) -> &'b mut DiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>` to `impl for<'a, 'b> FnOnce(&'b mut DiagnosticBuilder<'a, ()>)`. I consider it easier to read this way, especially when there's control flow involved.
r? nnethercote though feel free to reassign
Collect lang items from AST, get rid of `GenericBound::LangItemTrait`
r? `@cjgillot`
cc #115178
Looking forward, the work to remove `QPath::LangItem` will also be significantly more difficult, but I plan on doing it as well. Specifically, we have to change:
1. A lot of `rustc_ast_lowering` for things like expr `..`
2. A lot of astconv, since we actually instantiate lang and non-lang paths quite differently.
3. A ton of diagnostics and clippy lints that are special-cased via `QPath::LangItem`
Meanwhile, it was pretty easy to remove `GenericBound::LangItemTrait`, so I just did that here.
cache param env canonicalization
Canonicalize ParamEnv only once and store it. Then whenever we try to canonicalize `ParamEnvAnd<'tcx, T>` we only have to canonicalize `T` and then merge the results.
Prelimiary results show ~3-4% savings in diesel and serde benchmarks.
Best to review commits individually. Some commits have a short description.
Initial implementation had a soundness bug (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117749#issuecomment-1840453387) due to cache invalidation:
- When canonicalizing `Ty<'?0>` we first try to resolve region variables in the current InferCtxt which may have a constraint `?0 == 'static`. This means that we register `Ty<'?0> => Canonical<Ty<'static>>` in the cache, which is obviously incorrect in another inference context.
- This is fixed by not doing region resolution when canonicalizing the query *input* (vs. response), which is the only place where ParamEnv is used, and then in a later commit we *statically* guard against any form of inference variable resolution of the cached canonical ParamEnv's.
r? `@ghost`
dont ICE when ConstKind::Expr for is_const_evaluatable
The problem is that we are not handling ConstKind::Expr inside report_not_const_evaluatable_error
Fixes [#114151]
Renamings:
- find -> opt_hir_node
- get -> hir_node
- find_by_def_id -> opt_hir_node_by_def_id
- get_by_def_id -> hir_node_by_def_id
Fix rebase changes using removed methods
Use `tcx.hir_node_by_def_id()` whenever possible in compiler
Fix clippy errors
Fix compiler
Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Vadim Petrochenkov <vadim.petrochenkov@gmail.com>
Add FIXME for `tcx.hir()` returned type about its removal
Simplify with with `tcx.hir_node_by_def_id`
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.
for #117772 :
In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and
removing redundant imports code into two PR.
temporarily revert "ice on ambguity in mir typeck"
Reverts #116530 as a temporary measure to fix#117577. That issue should be ultimately fixed by checking WF of type annotations prior to normalization, which is implemented in #104098 but this PR is intended to be backported to beta.
r? ``@compiler-errors`` (the reviewer of the reverted PR)
Uplift the (new solver) canonicalizer into `rustc_next_trait_solver`
Uplifts the new trait solver's canonicalizer into a new crate called `rustc_next_trait_solver`.
The crate name is literally a bikeshed-avoidance name, so let's not block this PR on that -- renames are welcome later.
There are a host of other changes that were required to make this possible:
* Expose a `ConstTy` trait to get the `Interner::Ty` from a `Interner::Const`.
* Expose some constructor methods to construct `Bound` variants. These are currently methods defined on the interner themselves, but they could be pulled into traits later.
* Expose a `IntoKind` trait to turn a `Ty`/`Const`/`Region` into their corresponding `*Kind`s.
* Some minor tweaks to other APIs in `rustc_type_ir`.
The canonicalizer code itself is best reviewed **with whitespace ignored.**
r? ``@lcnr``
Only check principal trait ref for object safety
It should make things a bit faster, in case we end up registering a bunch of object safety preds.
r? ```@ghost```
`EvaluatedToUnknown` -> `EvaluatedToAmbigStackDependent`, `EvaluatedToRecur` -> `EvaluatedToErrStackDependent`
Less confusing names, since the only difference between them and their parallel `EvalutedTo..` is that they are stack dependent.
r? lcnr
Remove `PolyGenSig` since it's always a dummy binder
Coroutines are never polymorphic in their signature. This cleans up a FIXME in the code:
```
/// Returns the "coroutine signature", which consists of its yield
/// and return types.
///
/// N.B., some bits of the code prefers to see this wrapped in a
/// binder, but it never contains bound regions. Probably this
/// function should be removed.
```
Provide context when `?` can't be called because of `Result<_, E>`
When a method chain ending in `?` causes an E0277 because the expression's `Result::Err` variant doesn't have a type that can be converted to the `Result<_, E>` type parameter in the return type, provide additional context of which parts of the chain can and can't support the `?` operator.
```
error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error to `String`
--> $DIR/question-mark-result-err-mismatch.rs:27:25
|
LL | fn bar() -> Result<(), String> {
| ------------------ expected `String` because of this
LL | let x = foo();
| ----- this has type `Result<_, String>`
...
LL | .map_err(|_| ())?;
| ---------------^ the trait `From<()>` is not implemented for `String`
| |
| this can't be annotated with `?` because it has type `Result<_, ()>`
|
= note: the question mark operation (`?`) implicitly performs a conversion on the error value using the `From` trait
= help: the following other types implement trait `From<T>`:
<String as From<char>>
<String as From<Box<str>>>
<String as From<Cow<'a, str>>>
<String as From<&str>>
<String as From<&mut str>>
<String as From<&String>>
= note: required for `Result<(), String>` to implement `FromResidual<Result<Infallible, ()>>`
```
Fix#72124.