Commit Graph

16711 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ralf Jung
83fd16f625 vectorcall ABI: error if sse2 is not available 2025-02-20 12:40:58 +01:00
Ralf Jung
79b2360d98 mono-time abi_check: unify error paths for call and definition sites
also move the existing tests to a more sensible location
2025-02-20 11:55:31 +01:00
bors
c62239aeb3 Auto merge of #137058 - scottmcm:trunc-unchecked, r=nikic
Emit `trunc nuw` for unchecked shifts and `to_immediate_scalar`

- For shifts this shrinks the IR by no longer needing an `assume` while still providing the UB information
- Having this on the `i8`→`i1` truncations will hopefully help with some places that have to load `i8`s or pass those in LLVM structs without range information
2025-02-20 09:05:22 +00:00
Peter Jaszkowiak
c293af9b57 add IntoBounds::intersect and RangeBounds::is_empty 2025-02-19 23:04:10 -07:00
Michael Goulet
d4609f8d42 Use a probe to avoid registering stray region obligations when re-checking drops in MIR typeck 2025-02-20 03:37:19 +00:00
bors
6d3c050de8 Auto merge of #137295 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-tdu3t39, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #135296 (interpret: adjust vtable validity check for higher-ranked types)
 - #137106 (Add customized compare for Link in rustdoc)
 - #137253 (Restrict `bevy_ecs` `ParamSet` hack)
 - #137262 (Make fewer crates depend on `rustc_ast_ir`)
 - #137263 (Register `USAGE_OF_TYPE_IR_INHERENT`, remove inherent usages)
 - #137266 (MIR visitor tweaks)
 - #137269 (Pattern Migration 2024: properly label `&` patterns whose subpatterns are from macro expansions)
 - #137277 (stabilize `inherent_str_constructors`)
 - #137281 (Tweak "expected ident" parse error to avoid talking about doc comments)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-20 02:39:28 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
ed45c1187f
Rollup merge of #137281 - estebank:doc-comment-syntax-error, r=compiler-errors
Tweak "expected ident" parse error to avoid talking about doc comments

When encountering a doc comment without an identifier after, we'd unconditionally state "this doc comment doesn't document anything", swallowing the *actual* error which is that the thing *after* the doc comment wasn't expected. Added a check that the found token is something that "conceptually" closes the previous item before emitting that error, otherwise just complain about the missing identifier.

In both of the following cases, the syntax error follows a doc comment:
```
error: expected identifier, found keyword `Self`
  --> $DIR/doc-before-bad-variant.rs:4:5
   |
LL | enum TestEnum {
   |      -------- while parsing this enum
...
LL |     Self,
   |     ^^^^ expected identifier, found keyword
   |
   = help: enum variants can be `Variant`, `Variant = <integer>`, `Variant(Type, ..., TypeN)` or `Variant { fields: Types }`
```
```
error: expected identifier, found `<`
  --> $DIR/doc-before-syntax-error.rs:2:1
   |
LL | <>
   | ^ expected identifier
```

Fix #71982.
2025-02-20 00:55:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
be73ea82ce
Rollup merge of #137277 - m4rch3n1ng:stabilize-inherent-str-constructors, r=tgross35
stabilize `inherent_str_constructors`

fcp done in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131114#issuecomment-2668859969.

tracking issue: #131114
closes: #131114
2025-02-20 00:55:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
704a024688
Rollup merge of #137269 - dianne:fix-ref-pat-label-span, r=davidtwco
Pattern Migration 2024: properly label `&` patterns whose subpatterns are from macro expansions

See the failing test output in the first commit for an example of what this going wrong looks like. The error/lint diagnostic tries to point to just the `&` or `&mut` of reference patterns when labeling the causes, to make the output clearer (#134394). The trimming there wasn't quite right though: it used the interior of the reference pattern as a cutoff and extended backwards to find where to trim the pattern's span, but this breaks if the `&` and the interior are from different sources. This PR instead trims by starting at the start of the pattern and ending at the final character of the `&` (or `&mut`, `ref`, `ref mut`, or `mut`, depending on what the error/lint is labeling); that way, there's no opportunity for failure from mixing sources.

I'm not 100% happy with this approach, but I'm also not sure what the best practices are as far as hacky `SourceMap` munching goes, so please let me know if something else would be preferred.

Since `SourceMap::span_through_char` can't change the syntax context of the span, I've also removed a call to `Span::with_ctxt` (we care about the edition of the span in question since this is a hard error in Rust 2024). If we want to be extra safe in case that changes, I can re-add it or track error hardness separately in the `rust_2024_migration_desugared_pats` table.
2025-02-20 00:55:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4f84ba1a20
Rollup merge of #137253 - compiler-errors:bevy-hack, r=jackh726
Restrict `bevy_ecs` `ParamSet` hack

This limits the bevy WF hack to only apply to ADTs named `ParamSet` that come from crates named `bevy_ecs`, and references to the latter.

Previously, we were applying it to all ADTs that contained the substring `"ParamSet"`. This could show up anywhere in the ADT name, and it could come from any crate. It's a bit concerning since other code could theoretically begin to rely on this behavior too (though I don't expect it to)

This simplifies the logic a bit and turns it into a visitor.

r? `@jackh726`
2025-02-20 00:55:13 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
8ccfd06e46
Rollup merge of #137106 - chenyukang:yukang-fix-sidebar-sort, r=notriddle
Add customized compare for Link in rustdoc

Maybe some other types in sidebar need to be sorted in this way, maybe add this crate `natord` is ok?

r?  clubby789

Fixes #137098
2025-02-20 00:55:12 +01:00
bors
4e1356b959 Auto merge of #137290 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-a7xdbi4, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #120580 (Add `MAX_LEN_UTF8` and `MAX_LEN_UTF16` Constants)
 - #132268 (Impl TryFrom<Vec<u8>> for String)
 - #136093 (Match Ergonomics 2024: update old-edition behavior of feature gates)
 - #136344 (Suggest replacing `.` with `::` in more error diagnostics.)
 - #136690 (Use more explicit and reliable ptr select in sort impls)
 - #136815 (CI: Stop /msys64/bin from being prepended to PATH in msys2 shell)
 - #136923 (Lint `#[must_use]` attributes applied to methods in trait impls)
 - #137155 (Organize `OsString`/`OsStr` shims)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-19 23:29:37 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
c29cc600fd
Rollup merge of #136923 - samueltardieu:push-vxxqvqwspssv, r=davidtwco
Lint `#[must_use]` attributes applied to methods in trait impls

The `#[must_use]` attribute has no effect when applied to methods in trait implementations. This PR adds it to the unused `#[must_use]` lint, and cleans the extra attributes in portable-simd and Clippy.
2025-02-19 21:16:11 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
82279108e1
Rollup merge of #136344 - zachs18:dot_notation_more_defkinds_3, r=davidtwco
Suggest replacing `.` with `::` in more error diagnostics.

First commit makes the existing "help: use the path separator to refer to an item" also work when the base is a type alias, not just a trait/module/struct.

The existing unconditional `DefKind::Mod | DefKind::Trait` match arm is changed to a conditional `DefKind::Mod | DefKind::Trait | DefKind::TyAlias` arm that only matches if the `path_sep` suggestion-adding closure succeeds, so as not to stop the later `DefKind::TyAlias`-specific suggestions if the path-sep suggestion does not apply. This shouldn't change behavior for `Mod` or `Trait` (due to the default arm's `return false` etc).

This commit also updates `tests/ui/resolve/issue-22692.rs` to reflect this, and also renames it to something more meaningful.

This commit also makes the `bad_struct_syntax_suggestion` closure take `err` as a parameter instead of capturing it, since otherwise caused borrowing errors due to the change to using `path_sep` in a pattern guard.

<details> <summary> Type alias diagnostic example </summary>

```rust
type S = String;

fn main() {
    let _ = S.new;
}
```

```diff
 error[E0423]: expected value, found type alias `S`
  --> diag7.rs:4:13
   |
 4 |     let _ = S.new;
   |             ^
   |
-  = note: can't use a type alias as a constructor
+  help: use the path separator to refer to an item
+  |
+4 |     let _ = S::new;
+  |              ~~
```

</details>

Second commit adds some cases for `enum`s, where if there is a field/method expression where the field/method has the name of a unit/tuple variant, we assume the user intended to create that variant[^1] and suggest replacing the `.` from the field/method suggestion with a `::` path separator. If no such variant is found (or if the error is not a field/method expression), we give the existing suggestion that suggests adding `::TupleVariant(/* fields */)` after the enum.

<details> <summary> Enum diagnostic example </summary>

```rust
enum Foo {
    A(u32),
    B,
    C { x: u32 },
}

fn main() {
    let _ = Foo.A(42); // changed
    let _ = Foo.B;     // changed
    let _ = Foo.D(42); // no change
    let _ = Foo.D;     // no change
    let _ = Foo(42);   // no change
}
```

```diff
 error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
  --> diag8.rs:8:13
   |
 8 |     let _ = Foo.A(42); // changed
   |             ^^^
   |
 note: the enum is defined here
  --> diag8.rs:1:1
   |
 1 | / enum Foo {
 2 | |     A(u32),
 3 | |     B,
 4 | |     C { x: u32 },
 5 | | }
   | |_^
-help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
-  |
-8 |     let _ = Foo::B.A(42); // changed
-  |             ~~~~~~
-help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
+help: use the path separator to refer to a variant
   |
-8 |     let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).A(42); // changed
-  |             ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+8 |     let _ = Foo::A(42); // changed
+  |                ~~

 error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
  --> diag8.rs:9:13
   |
 9 |     let _ = Foo.B;     // changed
   |             ^^^
   |
 note: the enum is defined here
  --> diag8.rs:1:1
   |
 1 | / enum Foo {
 2 | |     A(u32),
 3 | |     B,
 4 | |     C { x: u32 },
 5 | | }
   | |_^
-help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
-  |
-9 |     let _ = Foo::B.B;     // changed
-  |             ~~~~~~
-help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
+help: use the path separator to refer to a variant
   |
-9 |     let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).B;     // changed
-  |             ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+9 |     let _ = Foo::B;     // changed
+  |                ~~

 error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
   --> diag8.rs:10:13
    |
 10 |     let _ = Foo.D(42); // no change
    |             ^^^
    |
 note: the enum is defined here
   --> diag8.rs:1:1
    |
 1  | / enum Foo {
 2  | |     A(u32),
 3  | |     B,
 4  | |     C { x: u32 },
 5  | | }
    | |_^
 help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
    |
 10 |     let _ = Foo::B.D(42); // no change
    |             ~~~~~~
 help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
    |
 10 |     let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).D(42); // no change
    |             ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 error[E0423]: expected value, found enum `Foo`
   --> diag8.rs:11:13
    |
 11 |     let _ = Foo.D;     // no change
    |             ^^^
    |
 note: the enum is defined here
   --> diag8.rs:1:1
    |
 1  | / enum Foo {
 2  | |     A(u32),
 3  | |     B,
 4  | |     C { x: u32 },
 5  | | }
    | |_^
 help: you might have meant to use the following enum variant
    |
 11 |     let _ = Foo::B.D;     // no change
    |             ~~~~~~
 help: alternatively, the following enum variant is available
    |
 11 |     let _ = (Foo::A(/* fields */)).D;     // no change
    |             ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 error[E0423]: expected function, tuple struct or tuple variant, found enum `Foo`
   --> diag8.rs:12:13
    |
 12 |     let _ = Foo(42);   // no change
    |             ^^^ help: try to construct one of the enum's variants: `Foo::A`
    |
    = help: you might have meant to construct the enum's non-tuple variant
 note: the enum is defined here
   --> diag8.rs:1:1
    |
 1  | / enum Foo {
 2  | |     A(u32),
 3  | |     B,
 4  | |     C { x: u32 },
 5  | | }
    | |_^

 error: aborting due to 5 previous errors
```

</details>

[^1]: or if it's a field expression and a tuple variant, that they meant to refer the variant constructor.
2025-02-19 21:16:07 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
659838ebfd
Rollup merge of #136093 - dianne:match-2024-for-edition-2021, r=Nadrieril
Match Ergonomics 2024: update old-edition behavior of feature gates

This updates the behavior of the feature gates `ref_pat_eat_one_layer_2024_structural` and `ref_pat_eat_one_layer_2024` in Editions 2021 and earlier to correspond to the left and right typing rules compared [here](https://nadrieril.github.io/typing-rust-patterns/?opts1=AQEBAQIBAQEBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA%3D&style=UserVisible&compare=true&opts2=AQEBAQIBAQABAAAAAQEBAAEBAAABAAA%3D&mode=rules), respectively. Compared to the `stable_rust` rules:
- they both allow reference patterns to match a lone inherited ref,
- they both allow `&` patterns to eat `&mut` reference types (and lone `&mut` inherited refs) as if they're shared,
- they both allow `&mut` patterns to eat `&` reference types when there's a `&mut` inherited reference to also eat,
- and the left ruleset has RFC 3627's Rule 3: after encountering a shared reference type in the scrutinee, the default binding mode will be treated as by-shared-ref when it would otherwise be by-mutable-ref.

I think there's already tests for all of those typing rules, so I've added revisions to use the existing tests with the new rulesets. Additionally, I've added a few tests to make sure we handle mixed-edition patterns appropriately, and I've added references to the unstable book.

Relevant tracking issue: #123076

r? ``@ghost``
2025-02-19 21:16:04 +01:00
Scott McMurray
6f9cfd694d Rework OperandRef::extract_field to stop calling to_immediate_scalar on things which are already immediates
That means it stops trying to truncate things that are already `i1`s.
2025-02-19 12:03:40 -08:00
Scott McMurray
642a705f71 PR feedback 2025-02-19 11:36:52 -08:00
Scott McMurray
511bf307f0 Emit trunc nuw for unchecked shifts and to_immediate_scalar
- For shifts this shrinks the IR by no longer needing an `assume` while still providing the UB information
- Having this on the `i8`→`i1` truncations will hopefully help with some places that have to load `i8`s or pass those in LLVM structs without range information
2025-02-19 11:36:52 -08:00
Esteban Küber
fe7ed278b7 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
```
2025-02-19 18:29:00 +00:00
may
b24f77507f
stabilize inherent_str_constructors 2025-02-19 19:24:49 +01:00
Patryk Wychowaniec
78ddabf31d
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 with
the `-C target-cpu` flag (e.g. `-C target-cpu=atmega328p`).
2025-02-19 19:01:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3fc6dfd5ed
Rollup merge of #137251 - Zalathar:holes-visitor, r=jieyouxu
coverage: Get hole spans from nested items without fully visiting them

This is a small simplification to the code that collects the spans of nested items within a function, so that those spans can be treated as “holes” to be avoided by the current function's coverage mappings.

The old code was using `nested_filter::All` to ensure that the visitor would see nested items. But we don't need the actual items themselves; we just need their spans, which we can obtain via a custom implementation of `visit_nested_item`.

This avoids the more expansive queries required by `nested_filter::All`.
2025-02-19 18:52:10 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
dd60b6ca27
Rollup merge of #137232 - estebank:from-residual-note, r=petrochenkov
Don't mention `FromResidual` on bad `?`

Unless `try_trait_v2` is enabled, don't mention that `FromResidual` isn't implemented for a specific type when the implicit `From` conversion of a `?` fails. For the end user on stable, `?` might as well be a compiler intrinsic, so we remove that note to avoid further confusion and allowing other parts of the error to be more prominent.

```
error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error to `u8`
  --> $DIR/bad-interconversion.rs:4:20
   |
LL | fn result_to_result() -> Result<u64, u8> {
   |                          --------------- expected `u8` because of this
LL |     Ok(Err(123_i32)?)
   |        ------------^ the trait `From<i32>` is not implemented for `u8`
   |        |
   |        this can't be annotated with `?` because it has type `Result<_, i32>`
   |
   = 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>`:
             `u8` implements `From<Char>`
             `u8` implements `From<bool>`
```
2025-02-19 18:52:08 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d8debbdd68
Rollup merge of #137094 - RalfJung:softfloat-means-no-simd, r=tgross35
x86_win64 ABI: do not use xmm0 with softfloat ABI

This adjusts https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134290 to not apply the new logic to targets marked as "softfloat". That fixes most instances of the issue brought up [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116558#issuecomment-2661027437).

r? `@tgross35`
2025-02-19 18:52:07 +01:00
Esteban Küber
a090e76dab Tweak "expected ident" parse error to avoid talking about doc comments
When encountering a doc comment without an identifier after, we'd unconditionally state "this doc comment doesn't document anything", swallowing the *actual* error which is that the thing *after* the doc comment wasn't expected. Added a check that the found token is something that "conceptually" closes the previous item before emitting that error, otherwise just complain about the missing identifier.

In both of the following cases, the syntax error follows a doc comment:
```
error: expected identifier, found keyword `Self`
  --> $DIR/doc-before-bad-variant.rs:4:5
   |
LL | enum TestEnum {
   |      -------- while parsing this enum
...
LL |     Self,
   |     ^^^^ expected identifier, found keyword
   |
   = help: enum variants can be `Variant`, `Variant = <integer>`, `Variant(Type, ..., TypeN)` or `Variant { fields: Types }`
```
```
error: expected identifier, found `<`
  --> $DIR/doc-before-syntax-error.rs:2:1
   |
LL | <>
   | ^ expected identifier
```

Fix #71982.
2025-02-19 17:26:13 +00:00
Nikita Popov
9e7b1847dc Also use gep inbounds nuw for index projections 2025-02-19 15:15:29 +01:00
Nikita Popov
31cc4c074d Emit getelementptr inbounds nuw for pointer::add() 2025-02-19 11:32:32 +01:00
dianne
51a2ee3252 don't get trapped inside of expansions when trimming labels 2025-02-19 01:43:38 -08:00
dianne
ef6df3b713 add a failing test 2025-02-19 00:56:45 -08:00
bors
ed49386d3a Auto merge of #136539 - matthewjasper:late-normalize-errors, r=compiler-errors
Emit dropck normalization errors in borrowck

Borrowck generally assumes that any queries it runs for type checking will succeed, thinking that HIR typeck will have errored first if there was a problem. However as of #98641, dropck isn't run on HIR, so there's no direct guarantee that it doesn't error. While a type being well-formed might be expected to ensure that its fields are well-formed, this is not the case for types containing a type projection:

```rust
pub trait AuthUser {
    type Id;
}

pub trait AuthnBackend {
    type User: AuthUser;
}

pub struct AuthSession<Backend: AuthnBackend> {
    data: Option<<<Backend as AuthnBackend>::User as AuthUser>::Id>,
}

pub trait Authz: Sized {
    type AuthnBackend: AuthnBackend<User = Self>;
}

pub fn run_query<User: Authz>(auth: AuthSession<User::AuthnBackend>) {}
// ^ No User: AuthUser bound is required or inferred.
```

While improvements to trait solving might fix this in the future, for now we go for a pragmatic solution of emitting an error from borrowck (by rerunning dropck outside of a query) and making drop elaboration check if an error has been emitted previously before panicking for a failed normalization.

Closes #103899
Closes #135039

r? `@compiler-errors` (feel free to re-assign)
2025-02-19 07:49:08 +00:00
Ralf Jung
73b6482ead x86_win64 ABI: do not use xmm0 with softfloat ABI 2025-02-19 08:41:19 +01:00
bors
5986ff05d8 Auto merge of #137248 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-s18zjau, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #136936 (Use 'yes' instead of 'while-echo' in tests/ui/process/process-sigpipe.rs except 'nto')
 - #137026 (Stabilize (and const-stabilize) `integer_sign_cast`)
 - #137059 (fix: Alloc new errorcode E0803 for E0495)
 - #137177 (Update `minifier-rs` version to `0.3.5`)
 - #137210 (compiler: Stop reexporting stuff in cg_llvm::abi)
 - #137213 (Remove `rustc_middle::mir::tcx` module.)
 - #137216 (eval_outlives: bail out early if both regions are in the same SCC)
 - #137228 (Fix typo in hidden internal docs of `TrustedRandomAccess`)
 - #137242 (Add reference annotations for the `do_not_recommend` attribute)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-19 04:37:26 +00:00
Michael Goulet
b02eac37ff Restrict bevy hack 2025-02-19 03:58:31 +00:00
Zalathar
d9b91de00c coverage: Add some more cases to tests/coverage/holes.rs 2025-02-19 13:56:20 +11:00
dianne
20149629ba "classic2021" ruleset: experimentally add fallback-to-outer (eat both)
My reasoning: the ruleset implemented by the same feature gate in
Edition 2024 always tries to eat the inherited reference first. For
consistency, it makes sense to me to say across all editions that users
should consider the inherited reference's mutability when wondering if a
`&mut` pattern will type.
2025-02-18 18:00:17 -08:00
dianne
1ed74aaf0c add mixed-edition tests 2025-02-18 18:00:11 -08:00
dianne
443c51d5d6 "structural2021" ruleset: add fallback-to-outer (eat both) deref rule 2025-02-18 17:44:28 -08:00
dianne
8dc64a405d "classic2021" and "structural2021" rulesets: add eat-inherited-ref-alone deref rules 2025-02-18 17:44:28 -08:00
dianne
3e77657312 remove old edition-2021-specific tests
These are superseded by the old-edition revisions on the shared tests.
2025-02-18 17:44:28 -08:00
dianne
e24833a4a8 add test revisions for old-edition behavior of feature gates
This also adds `#[cfg]` attributes to tests for bindings' types,
to make it visually clearer which revisions type successfully.
2025-02-18 17:44:28 -08:00
bors
17c1c329a5 Auto merge of #135408 - RalfJung:x86-sse2, r=workingjubilee
x86: use SSE2 to pass float and SIMD types

This builds on the new X86Sse2 ABI landed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/137037 to actually make it a separate ABI from the default x86 ABI, and use SSE2 registers. Specifically, we use it in two ways: to return `f64` values in a register rather than by-ptr, and to pass vectors of size up to 128bit in a register (or, well, whatever LLVM does when passing `<4 x float>` by-val, I don't actually know if this ends up in a register).

Cc `@workingjubilee`
Fixes #133611

try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: aarch64-gnu
try-job: aarch64-gnu-debug
try-job: test-various
try-job: x86_64-gnu-nopt
try-job: dist-i586-gnu-i586-i686-musl
try-job: x86_64-msvc-1
2025-02-19 01:25:01 +00:00
yukang
a467ecacd4 Add custom sort for link in rustdoc 2025-02-19 08:35:51 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
24ba1ad31c
Rollup merge of #137242 - ehuss:reference-do_not_recommend, r=compiler-errors
Add reference annotations for the `do_not_recommend` attribute

This adds reference rule identifiers for the tests of the `diagnostic::do_not_recommend` attribute.
2025-02-19 01:30:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
960b122136
Rollup merge of #137059 - xizheyin:issue-136827, r=davidtwco
fix: Alloc new errorcode E0803 for E0495

As discussion in #136827, I alloc a new errorcode.
2025-02-19 01:30:11 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
616b6c35a5
Rollup merge of #136936 - xingxue-ibm:sigpipe-test, r=workingjubilee
Use 'yes' instead of 'while-echo' in tests/ui/process/process-sigpipe.rs except 'nto'

The `sh` of AIX prints a message about a broken pipe when using the `while-echo` command. It works as expected when using the `yes` command instead. `yes` was originally used in this test but was later replaced with `while-echo` because QNX Neutrino does not have `yes` ([Replace yes command by while-echo in test tests/ui/process/process-sigpipe.rs](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/109379)). This PR updates the test to use `while-echo` for QNX Neutrino while reverting to `yes` for other platforms.
2025-02-19 01:30:09 +01:00
Urgau
56a850250b Pre-commit unpretty HIR test 2025-02-18 21:34:35 +01:00
Zachary S
2c3725021e Update . -> :: tests for new diff suggestion format. 2025-02-18 13:28:35 -06:00
Samuel Tardieu
e639e886b2 Lint #[must_use] attributes applied to methods in trait impls
The `#[must_use]` attribute has no effect when applied to methods in
trait implementations. This case was not linted before.
2025-02-18 20:23:34 +01:00
Zachary S
ae7b45a6d4 When giving a suggestion to use :: instead of . where the rhs is a macro giving a type,
make it also work when the rhs is a type alias, not just a struct.
2025-02-18 13:11:37 -06:00
Zachary S
bfde43c84b Suggest using :: instead of . for enums in some cases.
Suggest replacing `.` with `::` when encountering "expected value, found enum":
- in a method-call expression and the method has the same name as a tuple variant
- in a field-access expression and the field has the same name as a unit or tuple variant
2025-02-18 13:11:37 -06:00
Zachary S
fe37adab4b Suggest using :: instead of . in more cases.
When `Foo.field` or `Foo.method()` exprs are encountered, suggest `Foo::field` or `Foo::method()` when Foo is a type alias, not just
a struct, trait, or module.

Also rename test for this suggestion from issue-22692.rs to something more meaningful.
2025-02-18 13:11:37 -06:00
Eric Huss
0a094196f3 Add reference annotations for the do_not_recommend attribute 2025-02-18 10:36:53 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
bafff1b3af
Rollup merge of #137218 - lukas-code:layout_of_cleanup, r=compiler-errors
misc `layout_of` cleanup

See individual commits for details.

r? `@oli-obk` but feel free to reassign
2025-02-18 18:40:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
10dd016a80
Rollup merge of #137203 - nnethercote:improve-MIR-modification, r=compiler-errors
Improve MIR modification

A few commits that simplify code that manipulates MIR bodies.

r? `@tmiasko`
2025-02-18 18:40:54 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
54db888355
Rollup merge of #137161 - dianne:pat-migration-bookkeeping-for-macros, r=Nadrieril
Pattern Migration 2024: fix incorrect messages/suggestions when errors arise in macro expansions

See the diff between the two commits for how this affected the error message and suggestion. In order to decide how to format those, the pattern migration diagnostic keeps track of which parts of the user's pattern cause problems in Edition 2024. However, it neglected to do some of this bookkeeping when pointing to macro expansion sites. This fixes that.
2025-02-18 18:40:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c8d904125e
Rollup merge of #137000 - compiler-errors:deeply-normalize-item-bounds, r=lcnr
Deeply normalize item bounds in new solver

Built on #136863.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/142.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/151.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/116

First commit reworks candidate preference for projection bounds to prefer param-env projection clauses even if the corresponding trait ref doesn't come from the param-env.

Second commit adjusts the associated type item bounds check to deeply normalize in the new solver. This causes some test fallout which I will point out.

r? lcnr
2025-02-18 18:40:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7edd17cfbb
Rollup merge of #135711 - estebank:issue-135649, r=davidtwco
Do not ICE on default_field_value const with lifetimes

`#![feature(default_field_values)]` uses a `const` body that should be treated as inline `const`s, but is actually being detected otherwise. This is similar to the situation in #78174, so we take the same solution: we check if the const actually comes from a field, and if it does, we use that logic to get the appropriate lifetimes and not ICE during borrowck.

Fix #135649.
2025-02-18 18:40:49 +01:00
Esteban Küber
6eb48824da Don't mention FromResidual on bad ?
Unless `try_trait_v2` is enabled, don't mention that `FromResidual` isn't implemented for a specific type when the implicit `From` conversion of a `?` fails. For the end user on stable, `?` might as well be a compiler intrinsic, so we remove that note to avoid further confusion and allowing other parts of the error to be more prominent.

```
error[E0277]: `?` couldn't convert the error to `u8`
  --> $DIR/bad-interconversion.rs:4:20
   |
LL | fn result_to_result() -> Result<u64, u8> {
   |                          --------------- expected `u8` because of this
LL |     Ok(Err(123_i32)?)
   |        ------------^ the trait `From<i32>` is not implemented for `u8`
   |        |
   |        this can't be annotated with `?` because it has type `Result<_, i32>`
   |
   = 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>`:
             `u8` implements `From<Char>`
             `u8` implements `From<bool>`
```
2025-02-18 17:34:16 +00:00
Xing Xue
0ffb771607 Use yes except target_os = "nto". 2025-02-18 16:22:16 +00:00
Ralf Jung
803feb5dc6 x86-sse2 ABI: use SSE registers for floats and SIMD 2025-02-18 16:11:41 +01:00
Lukas Markeffsky
802b7abab7 clean up layout error diagnostics
- group the fluent slugs together
- reword (internal-only) "too generic" error to be more in line with
  the other errors
2025-02-18 13:22:45 +01:00
Lukas Markeffsky
d0a5bbbb8e document and test all LayoutError variants 2025-02-18 13:22:45 +01:00
bors
3b022d8cee Auto merge of #133852 - x17jiri:cold_path, r=saethlin
improve cold_path()

#120370 added a new instrinsic `cold_path()` and used it to fix `likely` and `unlikely`

However, in order to limit scope, the information about cold code paths is only used in 2-target switch instructions. This is sufficient for `likely` and `unlikely`, but limits usefulness of `cold_path` for idiomatic rust. For example, code like this:

```
if let Some(x) = y { ... }
```

may generate 3-target switch:

```
switch y.discriminator:
0 => true branch
1 = > false branch
_ => unreachable
```

and therefore marking a branch as cold will have no effect.

This PR improves `cold_path()` to work with arbitrary switch instructions.

Note that for 2-target switches, we can use `llvm.expect`, but for multiple targets we need to manually emit branch weights. I checked Clang and it also emits weights in this situation. The Clang's weight calculation is more complex that this PR, which I believe is mainly because `switch` in `C/C++` can have multiple cases going to the same target.
2025-02-18 07:49:09 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a1daa34ad0 Use MirPatch in EnumSizeOpt.
Instead of `expand_statements`. This makes the code shorter and
consistent with other MIR transform passes.

The tests require updating because there is a slight change in
MIR output:
- the old code replaced the original statement with twelve new
  statements.
- the new code inserts converts the original statement to a `nop` and
  then insert twelve new statements in front of it.

I.e. we now end up with an extra `nop`, which doesn't matter at all.
2025-02-18 12:52:56 +11:00
Scott McMurray
3a3aedee10 Update some comparison tests now that they pass in LLVM20 2025-02-17 16:36:14 -08:00
Michael Goulet
b002b5cc82 Deeply normalize associated type bounds before proving them 2025-02-17 17:21:24 +00:00
makai410
9cd1de573b suggest swapping equality on e0277 2025-02-17 21:19:36 +08:00
Matthew Jasper
87e5969572 Update tests for dropck normalization errors
Takes crash tests from #135039, #103899, #91985 and #105299 and turns them into ui tests
2025-02-17 11:33:07 +00:00
bors
2162e9d4b1 Auto merge of #137164 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-dj5826k, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #137095 (Replace some u64 hashes with Hash64)
 - #137100 (HIR analysis: Remove unnecessary abstraction over list of clauses)
 - #137105 (Restrict DerefPure for Cow<T> impl to T = impl Clone, [impl Clone], str.)
 - #137120 (Enable `relative-path-include-bytes-132203` rustdoc-ui test on Windows)
 - #137125 (Re-add missing empty lines in the releases notes)
 - #137145 (use add-core-stubs / minicore for a few more tests)
 - #137149 (Remove SSE ABI from i586-pc-windows-msvc)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-17 11:18:33 +00:00
Jiri Bobek
7bb5f4dd78 improve cold_path() 2025-02-17 06:39:58 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3293afbef7
Rollup merge of #137145 - RalfJung:minicore, r=jieyouxu
use add-core-stubs / minicore for a few more tests

See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131485 for context. These are some tests I worked on in the past so I figured I'd see if `minicore` works for them. :)
2025-02-17 06:38:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7cae8e1f50
Rollup merge of #137120 - ChrisDenton:its-all-relative, r=GuillaumeGomez
Enable `relative-path-include-bytes-132203` rustdoc-ui test on Windows

The problem with the error message on Windows is:

- The path separators are different
- The OS error message string is different

Normalizing those two things makes the test pass on Windows.
2025-02-17 06:38:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fab38375bc
Rollup merge of #137095 - saethlin:use-hash64-for-hashes, r=workingjubilee
Replace some u64 hashes with Hash64

I introduced the Hash64 and Hash128 types in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110083, essentially as a mechanism to prevent hashes from landing in our leb128 encoding paths. If you just have a u64 or u128 field in a struct then derive Encodable/Decodable, that number gets leb128 encoding. So if you need to store a hash or some other value which behaves very close to a hash, don't store it as a u64.

This reverts part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117603, which turned an encoded Hash64 into a u64.

Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110083, I don't expect this to be perf-sensitive on its own, though I expect that it may help stabilize some of the small rmeta size fluctuations we currently see in perf reports.
2025-02-17 06:38:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f0710999a9
Rollup merge of #137140 - Noratrieb:const-move, r=jieyouxu,compiler-errors
Fix const items not being allowed to be called `r#move` or `r#static`

Because of an ambiguity with const closures, the parser needs to ensure that for a const item, the `const` keyword isn't followed by a `move` or `static` keyword, as that would indicate a const closure:

```rust
fn main() {
  const move // ...
}
```

This check did not take raw identifiers into account, therefore being unable to distinguish between `const move` and `const r#move`. The latter is obviously not a const closure, so it should be allowed as a const item.

This fixes the check in the parser to only treat `const ...` as a const closure if it's followed by the *proper keyword*, and not a raw identifier.

Additionally, this adds a large test that tests for all raw identifiers in all kinds of positions, including `const`, to prevent issues like this one from occurring again.

fixes #137128
2025-02-17 06:37:39 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
86f3d525e0
Rollup merge of #137101 - GrigorenkoPV:str-inherent-lint, r=Urgau
`invalid_from_utf8[_unchecked]`: also lint inherent methods

Addressing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131114#issuecomment-2646663535

Also corrected a typo: "_an_ invalid literal", not "_a_ invalid literal".
2025-02-17 06:37:38 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0c051c8196
Rollup merge of #136671 - nnethercote:middle-limits, r=Nadrieril
Overhaul `rustc_middle::limits`

In particular, to make `pattern_complexity` work more like other limits, which then enables some other simplifications.

r? ``@Nadrieril``
2025-02-17 06:37:35 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f3a4f1a02a
Rollup merge of #136466 - nnethercote:start-removing-Map, r=cjgillot
Start removing `rustc_middle::hir::map::Map`

`rustc_middle::hir::map::Map` is now just a low-value wrapper around `TyCtxt`. This PR starts removing it.

r? `@cjgillot`
2025-02-17 06:37:35 +01:00
dianne
82678df0de bookkeep properly when pointing into macro expansions 2025-02-16 19:27:48 -08:00
dianne
7af4630770 add a failing test 2025-02-16 19:17:52 -08:00
bendn
92fd960ca4
stabilize (const_)ptr_sub_ptr 2025-02-17 10:07:27 +07:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f86f7ad5f2 Move some Map methods onto TyCtxt.
The end goal is to eliminate `Map` altogether.

I added a `hir_` prefix to all of them, that seemed simplest. The
exceptions are `module_items` which became `hir_module_free_items` because
there was already a `hir_module_items`, and `items` which became
`hir_free_items` for consistency with `hir_module_free_items`.
2025-02-17 13:21:02 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7a8c0fc117 Rename pattern_complexity attr as pattern_complexity_limit.
For consistency with `recursion_limit`, `move_size_limit`, and
`type_length_limit`.
2025-02-17 09:30:40 +11:00
Ben Kimock
4cf21866e8 Move hashes from rustc_data_structure to rustc_hashes so they can be shared with rust-analyzer 2025-02-16 16:18:30 -05:00
Yotam Ofek
2c1f48970c fix rustdoc test directives that were accidentally ignored
replace "// @" with "//@ ", and fix the tests so they actually pass, after directives are checked
2025-02-16 19:34:50 +00:00
Ralf Jung
4a4207a650 use add-core-stubs / minicore for a few more tests 2025-02-16 18:37:50 +01:00
Noratrieb
8a02724b9d Fix const items not being allowed to be called r#move or r#static
Because of an ambiguity with const closures, the parser needs to ensure
that for a const item, the `const` keyword isn't followed by a `move` or
`static` keyword, as that would indicate a const closure:

```rust
fn main() {
  const move // ...
}
```

This check did not take raw identifiers into account, therefore being
unable to distinguish between `const move` and `const r#move`. The
latter is obviously not a const closure, so it should be allowed as a
const item.

This fixes the check in the parser to only treat `const ...` as a const
closure if it's followed by the *proper keyword*, and not a raw
identifier.

Additionally, this adds a large test that tests for all raw identifiers in
all kinds of positions, including `const`, to prevent issues like this
one from occurring again.
2025-02-16 18:21:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7374439111
Rollup merge of #137117 - ChrisDenton:error-lang, r=fmease,Noratrieb
Fix test that relies on error language

We shouldn't care about the OS error message text in this test.
2025-02-16 17:14:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b125096821
Rollup merge of #137112 - scottmcm:box-drop-no-nonnull-project, r=oli-obk
Don't project into `NonNull` when dropping a `Box`

Another step towards banning these projections.

Tracking Issue #133652
2025-02-16 17:14:05 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ea9c8d9c17
Rollup merge of #137102 - compiler-errors:name_regions2, r=oli-obk
Rework `name_regions` to not rely on reverse scc graph for non-member-constrain usages

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137015

Splits the `name_regions` into two versions: One meant for member region constraint error reporting (which I've renamed to `name_regions_for_member_constraint`), and one meant *just* to replace region vids with an external region.

Use the latter in the usage sites I added in #136559, since the regions returned by `name_regions_for_member_constraint` are also not *totally* accurate (which is fine for how they're used for member region constraint error reporting -- they're intentionally returning overapproximated universal regions so that we have something to name in `+ use<'a>` suggestions, because opaques can only capture universal regions and since member region constraints don't insert any edges into the region graph, the error region is probably gonna be shorter than a universal region) and because that function requires the reverse scc graph to have been computed which isn't done for our usages in #136559.
2025-02-16 17:14:05 +01:00
Pavel Grigorenko
f53d0f502d invalid_from_utf8[_unchecked]: also lint inherent methods 2025-02-16 16:34:51 +03:00
bors
23032f31c9 Auto merge of #136363 - notriddle:notriddle/unresolved-link-unused-refdef, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: improve refdef handling in the unresolved link lint

This commit takes advantage of a feature in pulldown-cmark that makes the list of link definitions available to the consuming application. It produces unresolved link warnings for refdefs that aren't used, and can now produce exact spans for the dest even when it has escapes.

Closes #133150 since this lint would have caught the mistake in that issue, and, along with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/13707, most mistakes in this class should produce a warning from one of them.
2025-02-16 10:59:42 +00:00
Chris Denton
95a5ecc995
Enable relative-path-include-bytes on Windows 2025-02-16 10:40:04 +00:00
Chris Denton
8ae3ca98e5
Fix test that relies on error language 2025-02-16 09:08:24 +00:00
Scott McMurray
7e35729bfc Don't project into NonNull when dropping a Box 2025-02-15 23:20:52 -08:00
Jacob Pratt
7884e171f7
Rollup merge of #137097 - compiler-errors:sized-bound-self, r=oli-obk
Ignore Self in bounds check for associated types with Self:Sized

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137053

This is morally a fix of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112319, since the `Self: Sized` check was just missing here.

r? oli-obk
2025-02-16 00:51:25 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
f10f0f09c8
Rollup merge of #137092 - RalfJung:abi_unsupported_vector_types-better-error, r=compiler-errors
abi_unsupported_vector_types: say which type is the problem
2025-02-16 00:51:25 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
20004d4bdd
Rollup merge of #135909 - Flakebi:amdgpu-kd, r=jieyouxu,workingjubilee
Export kernel descriptor for amdgpu kernels

The host runtime (HIP or HSA) expects a kernel descriptor object for each kernel in the ELF file. The amdgpu LLVM backend generates the object. It is created as a symbol with the name of the kernel plus a `.kd` suffix.

Add it to the exported symbols in the linker script, so that it can be found.

For reference, the symbol is created here in LLVM: d5457e4c16/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/MCTargetDesc/AMDGPUTargetStreamer.cpp (L966)
I wrote [a test](6a9115b121) for this as well, I’ll add that once the target is merged and working.
With this, all PRs to get working code for amdgpu are open (this + the target + the two patches adding addrspacecasts for alloca and global variables).

Tracking issue: #135024

r? `@workingjubilee`
2025-02-16 00:51:24 -05:00
Michael Goulet
17071ff8a5 Rework name_regions to not rely on reverse scc graph for non-member-constrain usages 2025-02-15 21:49:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
309e371f7b Ignore Self in bounds check for associated types with Self:Sized 2025-02-15 20:38:14 +00:00
Michael Howell
61a97448e5 rustdoc: improve refdef handling in the unresolved link lint
This commit takes advantage of a feature in pulldown-cmark that
makes the list of link definitions available to the consuming
application. It produces unresolved link warnings for refdefs
that aren't used, and can now produce exact spans for the dest
even when it has escapes.
2025-02-15 12:21:35 -07:00
Matthias Krüger
f06b75d86d
Rollup merge of #136808 - chenyukang:yukang-fix-arg-list-error-129273, r=estebank
Try to recover from path sep error in type parsing

Fixes #129273

Error using `:` in the argument list may mess up the parser.

case `tests/ui/suggestions/struct-field-type-including-single-colon` also changed, seems it's  the same meaning, should be OK.

r? `@estebank`
2025-02-15 20:14:59 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
06b2f6208a
Rollup merge of #136490 - Skepfyr:no-field-rest-pattern-attrs, r=compiler-errors
Do not allow attributes on struct field rest patterns

Fixes #81282.

This removes support for attributes on struct field rest patterns (the `..` bit) from the parser. Previously any attributes were being parsed but dropped from the AST, so didn't work and were deleted by rustfmt.

This needs an equivalent change to the reference but I wanted to see how this PR is received first.
The error message it produces isn't great, however it does match the error you get if you try to add attributes to .. in struct expressions atm, although I can understand wanting to do better given this was previously accepted. I think I could move attribute parsing back up to where it was and then emit a specific new error for this case, however I might need some guidance as this is the first time I've messed around inside the compiler.

While this is technically breaking I don't think it's much of an issue: attributes in this position don't currently do anything and rustfmt outright deletes them, meaning it's incredibly unlikely to affect anyone. I have already made the equivalent change to *add* support for attributes (mostly) but the conversation in the linked issue suggested it would be more reasonable to just remove them (and pointed out it's much easier to add support later if we realise we need them).
2025-02-15 20:14:58 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
522c8f7617
Rollup merge of #127581 - fmease:fix-crate_name-validation, r=bjorn3
Fix crate name validation

Reject macro calls inside attribute `#![crate_name]` like in `#![crate_name = concat!("na", "me")]`.

Prior to #117584, the result of the expansion (here: `"name"`) would actually be properly picked up by the compiler and used as the crate name. However since #117584 / on master, we extract the "value" (i.e., the *literal* string literal) of the `#![crate_name]` much earlier in the pipeline way before macro expansion and **skip**/**ignore** any `#![crate_name]`s "assigned to" a macro call. See also #122001.

T-lang has ruled to reject `#![crate_name = MACRO!(...)]` outright very similar to other built-in attributes whose value we need early like `#![crate_type]`. See accepted FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122001#issuecomment-2023203182.

Note that the check as implemented in this PR is even more "aggressive" compared to the one of `#![crate_type]` by running as early as possible in order to reject `#![crate_name = MACRO!(...)]` even in "non-normal" executions of `rustc`, namely on *print requests* (e.g., `--print=crate-name` and `--print=file-names`). If I were to move the validation step a bit further back close to the `#![crate_type]` one, `--print=crate-name` (etc.) would *not* exit fatally with an error in this kind of situation but happily report an incorrect crate name (i.e., the "crate name" as if `#![crate_name]` didn't exist / deduced from other sources like `--crate-name` or the file name) which would match the behavior on master. Again, see also #122001.

I'm mentioning this explicitly because I'm not sure if it was that clear in the FCP'ed issue. I argue that my current approach is the most reasonable one. I know (from reading the code and from past experiments) that various print requests are still quite broken (mostly lack of validation).

To the best of my knowledge, there's no print request whose output references/contains a crate *type*, so there's no "inherent need" to move `#![crate_type]`'s validation to happen earlier.

---

Fixes #122001.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/labels/relnotes: Compatibility. Breaking change.
2025-02-15 20:14:58 +01:00
Ralf Jung
313e8526dc abi_unsupported_vector_types: say which type is the problem 2025-02-15 20:02:16 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
9b6fd35738
Reject macro calls inside of #![crate_name] 2025-02-15 16:47:30 +01:00
Scott McMurray
39118d6181 Go back to Some instead of transmuting to it.
This adds a few more statements to `next`, but optimizes better in the loops (saving 2 blocks in `forward_loop`, for example)
2025-02-14 22:24:27 -08:00
Scott McMurray
3a62c70051 Save another BB by using SubUnchecked instead of a call to arith_offset
Probably reasonable anyway since it more obviously drops provenance.
2025-02-14 22:24:27 -08:00
Scott McMurray
aede8f5fbf Simplify slice::Iter::next enough that it inlines 2025-02-14 22:24:27 -08:00
xizheyin
d22554a996
fix: Alloc new errorcode E0803 for E0495
Signed-off-by: xizheyin <xizheyin@smail.nju.edu.cn>
2025-02-15 12:18:30 +08:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
46d53a68aa
Move #![crate_type] UI tests into attributes directory
Gets rid of two top-level UI tests which is always great.

Furthermore, move `need-crate-arg-ignore-tidy$x.rs`
from `command/` to `invalid-compile-flags/`.
`command/` concerns `std::process::Command` tests, not CLI tests.
2025-02-15 03:41:07 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
3b4ff16bb1
Clean up rustc_session::output::{find,validate}_crate_name 2025-02-15 03:41:07 +01:00
yukang
0aa2e6b606 Try to recover from path sep error in parser 2025-02-15 07:44:20 +08:00
Jubilee
9d659fc2be
Rollup merge of #137038 - maurer:tolerate-captures, r=nikic
llvm: Tolerate captures in tests

llvm/llvm-project@7e3735d1a1 introduces `captures` annotations. Adjust regexes to be tolerant of these.

`@rustbot` label:+llvm-main
2025-02-14 14:05:28 -08:00
Jubilee
db5238a525
Rollup merge of #137037 - RalfJung:x86-sse2-abi, r=workingjubilee
add x86-sse2 (32bit) ABI that requires SSE2 target feature

This is the first commit of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135408:

The primary goal of this is to make SSE2 required for our i686 targets (at least for the ones that use Pentium 4 as their baseline), to ensure they cannot be affected by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/114479. This has been MCPd in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/808, and is tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133611.

We do this by defining a new ABI that these targets select, and making SSE2 required by the ABI (that's the first commit). That's kind of a hack, but it is the easiest way to make a target feature required via the target spec. In a follow-up change (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135408), we can actually make use of SSE2 for the ABI, but that is running into some infrastructure issues.

r? `@workingjubilee`

try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: aarch64-gnu
try-job: aarch64-gnu-debug
try-job: test-various
try-job: x86_64-gnu-nopt
try-job: dist-i586-gnu-i586-i686-musl
2025-02-14 14:05:27 -08:00
Jubilee
baa5a76b97
Rollup merge of #137035 - compiler-errors:eagerly-mono-closures-after-norm, r=saethlin
Normalize closure instance before eagerly monomorphizing it

We were monomorphizing two versions of the closure (or in the original issue, coroutine) -- one with normalized captures and one with unnormalized captures. This led to a symbol collision.

Fixes #137009

r? `@saethlin` or reassign
2025-02-14 14:05:27 -08:00
Jubilee
2ec48fb687
Rollup merge of #136971 - HypheX:patch1, r=WaffleLapkin
Add a new check-pass UI test for returning `impl Fn(T) -> impl Trait`

This PR closes #107883 by adding a ui test.
2025-02-14 14:05:23 -08:00
Michael Goulet
2ada9ccb7d Normalize closure instance before eagerly monomorphizing it 2025-02-14 19:18:43 +00:00
Matthew Maurer
db4c09c4d4 llvm: Tolerate captures in tests
llvm/llvm-project@7e3735d1a1 introduces
`captures` annotations. Adjust regexes to be tolerant of these.
2025-02-14 18:55:50 +00:00
Ralf Jung
2eff2155e5 add x86-sse2 (32bit) ABI that requires SSE2 target feature 2025-02-14 19:47:52 +01:00
bors
d8810e3e2d Auto merge of #137030 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-267aumr, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #135778 (account for `c_enum_min_bits` in `multiple-reprs` UI test)
 - #136052 (Correct comment for FreeBSD and DragonFly BSD in unix/thread)
 - #136886 (Remove the common prelude module)
 - #136956 (add vendor directory to .gitignore)
 - #136958 (Fix presentation of purely "additive" replacement suggestion parts)
 - #136967 (Use `slice::fill` in `io::Repeat` implementation)
 - #136976 (alloc boxed: docs: use MaybeUninit::write instead of as_mut_ptr)
 - #137007 (Emit MIR for each bit with on `dont_reset_cast_kind_without_updating_operand`)
 - #137008 (Move code into `rustc_mir_transform`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-14 17:17:45 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
8bf77a4dfc
Rollup merge of #137007 - pvdrz:fix-aarch64-alloc-layout, r=compiler-errors
Emit MIR for each bit with on `dont_reset_cast_kind_without_updating_operand`

PR #136450 introduced a diff that includes a pointer-sized alloc. This doesn't cause any problems on the compiler test suite but it affects the test suite that ferrocene has for `aarch64-unknown-none` as the snapshot of the diff only includes a 32-bit alloc even though this should be a 64-bit alloc on `aarch64-unknown-none`.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2025-02-14 16:23:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
49fb61c496
Rollup merge of #136958 - compiler-errors:additive-replacmeent, r=estebank
Fix presentation of purely "additive" replacement suggestion parts

#127541 changes replacement suggestions to use the "diff" view always, which I think is really verbose in cases where a replacement snippet is a "superset" of the snippet that is being replaced.

Consider:

```
LL -     Self::Baz: Clone,
LL +     Self::Baz: Clone, T: std::clone::Clone
```

In this code, we suggest replacing `", "` with `", T: std::clone::Clone"`. This is a consequence of how the snippet is constructed. I believe that since the string that is being replaced is a subset of the replacement string, it's not providing much value to present this as a diff. Users should be able to clearly understand what's being suggested here using the `~` underline view we've been suggesting for some time now.

Given that this affects ~100 tests out of the ~1000 UI tests affected, I expect this to be a pretty meaningful improvement of the fallout of #127541.

---

In the last commit, this PR also "trims" replacement parts so that they are turned into their purely additive subset, if possible. See the diff for what this means.

---

r? estebank
2025-02-14 16:23:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c21a76fde0
Rollup merge of #136886 - ehuss:remove-prelude-common, r=jhpratt
Remove the common prelude module

This fixes the issues described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136102. Primarily, this resolves some issues with how the documentation for the prelude is generated:

- It avoids showing "unstable" for macros in the prelude that are actually stable.
- Avoids duplication of some pages due to the previous lack of `doc(no_inline)`.
- Makes the different edition preludes consistent, and sets a pattern that can be used by future editions.

We may need to rearrange these modules in the future if we decide to remove anything from the prelude again. If we do, I think we should look into a different solution that avoids the documentation problems.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136102
2025-02-14 16:23:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
4b13dfd6d5
Rollup merge of #135778 - ferrocene:ja-gh135777, r=workingjubilee
account for `c_enum_min_bits` in `multiple-reprs` UI test

fixes #135777
2025-02-14 16:23:27 +01:00
bors
bdc97d1046 Auto merge of #136575 - scottmcm:nsuw-math, r=nikic
Set both `nuw` and `nsw` in slice size calculation

There's an old note in the code to do this, and now that [LLVM-C has an API for it](f0b8ff1251/llvm/include/llvm-c/Core.h (L4403-L4408)), we might as well.  And it's been there since what looks like LLVM 17 de9b6aa341 so doesn't even need to be conditional.

(There's other places, like `RawVecInner` or `Layout`, that might want to do things like this too, but I'll leave those for a future PR.)
2025-02-14 14:21:29 +00:00
Xelph
7d1262adf2 Add new ui test for returning an Fn trait that returns impl Trait
Change description from compiletest to regression test

Co-authored-by: 许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe) <39484203+jieyouxu@users.noreply.github.com>

Improve test name, location, and description

Update tests/ui/impl-trait/impl-fn-rpit-opaque-107883.rs

Co-authored-by: waffle <waffle.lapkin@gmail.com>
2025-02-14 05:55:30 -07:00
bjorn3
9147b6dd28 Add test 2025-02-14 10:54:56 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
38b5bfce24 Add GUI test for code wrapping 2025-02-14 11:41:28 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
10d666f3d6 Update rustdoc-gui test 2025-02-14 11:41:28 +01:00
bors
d88ffcdb8b Auto merge of #136735 - scottmcm:transmute-nonnull, r=oli-obk
`transmute` should also assume non-null pointers

Previously it only did integer-ABI things, but this way it does data pointers too.  That gives more information in general to the backend, and allows slightly simplifying one of the helpers in slice iterators.
2025-02-14 09:06:17 +00:00
Michael Goulet
6d71251cf9 Trim suggestion parts to the subset that is purely additive 2025-02-14 00:44:10 -08:00
Michael Goulet
f6406dfd4e Consider add-prefix replacements too 2025-02-14 00:27:17 -08:00
Michael Goulet
b480a9214a Use underline suggestions for purely 'additive' replacements 2025-02-14 00:27:13 -08:00
bors
905b1bf1cc Auto merge of #137010 - workingjubilee:rollup-g00c07v, r=workingjubilee
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #135439 (Make `-O` mean `OptLevel::Aggressive`)
 - #136460 (Simplify `rustc_span` `analyze_source_file`)
 - #136904 (add `IntoBounds` trait)
 - #136908 ([AIX] expect `EINVAL` for `pthread_mutex_destroy`)
 - #136924 (Add profiling of bootstrap commands using Chrome events)
 - #136951 (Use the right binder for rebinding `PolyTraitRef`)
 - #136981 (ci: switch loongarch jobs to free runners)
 - #136992 (Update backtrace)
 - #136993 ([cg_llvm] Remove dead error message)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-14 06:13:42 +00:00
Jubilee
3957eaa459
Rollup merge of #136951 - compiler-errors:clause-binder, r=lqd
Use the right binder for rebinding `PolyTraitRef`

Fixes #136940

I committed a slightly different test which still demonstrates the issue.
2025-02-13 21:37:52 -08:00
Scott McMurray
9ad6839f7a Set both nuw and nsw in slice size calculation
There's an old note in the code to do this, and now that LLVM-C has an API for it, we might as well.
2025-02-13 21:26:48 -08:00
Christian Poveda
fb3a363a49
Emit MIR for each bit with on dont_reset_cast_kind_without_updating_operand 2025-02-13 23:36:51 -05:00
Jubilee
d82ec95083
Rollup merge of #136957 - Zalathar:counters, r=oli-obk
coverage: Eliminate more counters by giving them to unreachable nodes

When preparing a function's coverage counters and metadata during codegen, any part of the original coverage graph that was removed by MIR optimizations can be treated as having an execution count of zero.

Somewhat counter-intuitively, if we give those unreachable nodes a _higher_ priority for receiving physical counters (instead of counter expressions), that ends up reducing the total number of physical counters needed.

This works because if a node is unreachable, we don't actually create a physical counter for it. Instead that node gets a fixed zero counter, and any other node that would have relied on that physical counter in its counter expression can just ignore that term completely.
2025-02-13 17:46:11 -08:00
Jubilee
82110ca740
Rollup merge of #136950 - notriddle:notriddle/svg-example-buttons, r=GuillaumeGomez
rustdoc: use better, consistent SVG icons for scraped examples

## Screenshots

![](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f305fb20-5ded-428a-b0d0-04e8b7762769)

![](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/5b9bee5e-74b9-447b-a19a-49f32b6bf218)

![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d855a8c8-dc24-44f9-a067-1e0f0654c28a)

![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/71bca54a-0562-480a-8989-938acc351307)

## Description

This continues two ongoing projects

- Replacing ascii art with real icons that don't look like syntax, are understandable to people who're familiar with desktop computers and smart devices, and aren't ugly.
- Using labels and tooltips to clarify these icons, when the limits of popular iconography hit us. In this case, I've added tooltips, because, unfortunately, there's not room for always-visible labels.

r? ``@GuillaumeGomez``
2025-02-13 17:46:10 -08:00
Jubilee
1b603f959b
Rollup merge of #136928 - lcnr:method-lookup-check-wf, r=compiler-errors
eagerly prove WF when resolving fully qualified paths

fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/161.

This hopefully shouldn't impact perf. I do think we need to deal with at least part of the fallout here, opening for vibes.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2025-02-13 17:46:09 -08:00
Jubilee
864eba9fb1
Rollup merge of #136895 - maurer:fix-enum-discr, r=nikic
debuginfo: Set bitwidth appropriately in enum variant tags

Previously, we unconditionally set the bitwidth to 128-bits, the largest an enum would possibly be. Then, LLVM would cut down the constant by chopping off leading zeroes before emitting the DWARF. LLVM only supported 64-bit enumerators, so this would also have occasionally resulted in truncated data.

LLVM added support for 128-bit enumerators in llvm/llvm-project#125578

That patchset trusts the constant to describe how wide the variant tag is, so the high 64-bits of zeros are considered potentially load-bearing.

As a result, we went from emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value     (0xfe)

(because `dwarf::BestForm` selected `data1`)

to emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value	(<0x10> fe ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 )

This makes the `DW_AT_discr_value` encode at the bitwidth of the tag, which:
1. Is probably closer to our intentions in terms of describing the data.
2. Doesn't invoke the 128-bit support which may not be supported by all debuggers / downstream tools.
3. Will result in smaller debug information.
2025-02-13 17:46:08 -08:00
Jubilee
d784803115
Rollup merge of #136869 - chenyukang:yukang-fix-133713-let-binding, r=estebank
Fix diagnostic when using = instead of : in let binding

Fixes #133713

r? ``@estebank``
2025-02-13 17:46:08 -08:00
lcnr
83a02619d5 fallout :skull_emoji: 2025-02-14 00:37:23 +01:00
lcnr
81c6d5ec9b eagerly prove WF when resolving fully qualified paths 2025-02-14 00:04:22 +01:00
lcnr
059288ed44 adjust derive_error 2025-02-13 23:49:09 +01:00
clubby789
2966256133 Make -O mean -C opt-level=3 2025-02-13 19:47:55 +00:00
bors
54cdc751df Auto merge of #136965 - jhpratt:rollup-bsnqvmf, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #134999 (Add cygwin target.)
 - #136559 (Resolve named regions when reporting type test failures in NLL)
 - #136660 (Use a trait to enforce field validity for union fields + `unsafe` fields + `unsafe<>` binder types)
 - #136858 (Parallel-compiler-related cleanup)
 - #136881 (cg_llvm: Reduce visibility of all functions in the llvm module)
 - #136888 (Always perform discr read for never pattern in EUV)
 - #136948 (Split out the `extern_system_varargs` feature)
 - #136949 (Fix import in bench for wasm)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-13 11:45:11 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
36d37966df
Rollup merge of #136948 - workingjubilee:split-off-extern-system-varargs, r=compiler-errors
Split out the `extern_system_varargs` feature

After the stabilization PR was opened, `extern "system"` functions were added to `extended_varargs_abi_support`. This has a number of questions regarding it that were not discussed and were somewhat surprising. It deserves to be considered as its own feature, separate from `extended_varargs_abi_support`.

Tracking issue:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136946
2025-02-13 03:53:32 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
6fbca25627
Rollup merge of #136888 - compiler-errors:never-read, r=Nadrieril
Always perform discr read for never pattern in EUV

Always perform a read of `!` discriminants to ensure that it's captured by closures in expr use visitor

Fixes #136852

r? Nadrieril or reassign
2025-02-13 03:53:32 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
4ea261018a
Rollup merge of #136660 - compiler-errors:BikeshedGuaranteedNoDrop, r=lcnr
Use a trait to enforce field validity for union fields + `unsafe` fields + `unsafe<>` binder types

This PR introduces a new, internal-only trait called `BikeshedGuaranteedNoDrop`[^1] to faithfully model the field check that used to be implemented manually by `allowed_union_or_unsafe_field`.

942db6782f/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/check/check.rs (L84-L115)

Copying over the doc comment from the trait:

```rust
/// Marker trait for the types that are allowed in union fields, unsafe fields,
/// and unsafe binder types.
///
/// Implemented for:
/// * `&T`, `&mut T` for all `T`,
/// * `ManuallyDrop<T>` for all `T`,
/// * tuples and arrays whose elements implement `BikeshedGuaranteedNoDrop`,
/// * or otherwise, all types that are `Copy`.
///
/// Notably, this doesn't include all trivially-destructible types for semver
/// reasons.
///
/// Bikeshed name for now.
```

As far as I am aware, there's no new behavior being guaranteed by this trait, since it operates the same as the manually implemented check. We could easily rip out this trait and go back to using the manually implemented check for union fields, however using a trait means that this code can be shared by WF for `unsafe<>` binders too. See the last commit.

The only diagnostic changes are that this now fires false-negatives for fields that are ill-formed. I don't consider that to be much of a problem though.

r? oli-obk

[^1]: Please let's not bikeshed this name lol. There's no good name for `ValidForUnsafeFieldsUnsafeBindersAndUnionFields`.
2025-02-13 03:53:30 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
4e6605fb0d
Rollup merge of #136559 - compiler-errors:resolve-regions-for-type-test-failure, r=BoxyUwU
Resolve named regions when reporting type test failures in NLL

Just a improvement tweak to an error message that I broke out of a bigger PR that I had to close lol
2025-02-13 03:53:29 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
6f671ad6c3
Rollup merge of #134999 - Berrysoft:dev/new-cygwin-target, r=chenyukang,workingjubilee
Add cygwin target.

This PR simply adds cygwin target together with msys2 target, based on ````@ookiineko```` 's (the account has been deleted) [work](https://github.com/ookiineko-cygport/rust) on cygwin target. My full work is here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/compare/master...Berrysoft:rust:dev/cygwin

I have succeeded in building a new rustc for cygwin target, and eventually distributed a new version of [fish-shell](https://github.com/Berrysoft/fish-shell/releases) (rewritten by Rust) for MSYS2.

I will open a new PR to fix std if this PR is accepted.
2025-02-13 03:53:28 -05:00
Scott McMurray
0cc14b688d transmute should also assume non-null pointers
Previously it only did integer-ABI things, but this way it does data pointers too.  That gives more information in general to the backend, and allows slightly simplifying one of the helpers in slice iterators.
2025-02-12 23:01:27 -08:00
Michael Goulet
72b4df3772 Implement lint for definition site item shadowing too 2025-02-13 05:45:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
2189908170 Add more tests 2025-02-13 05:45:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
18a3cc5c2c Rework collapse method to work correctly with more complex supertrait graphs 2025-02-13 05:45:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f8c51d3002 Implement shadowing lint 2025-02-13 05:45:53 +00:00
Michael Goulet
0c85044a5d Implement RFC 3624 supertrait_item_shadowing 2025-02-13 05:45:53 +00:00
Jubilee Young
4bb0c3da2c Split out the extern_system_varargs feature
After the stabilization PR was opened, `extern "system"` functions were
added to `extended_varargs_abi_support`. This has a number of questions
regarding it that were not discussed and were somewhat surprising.
It deserves to be considered as its own feature, separate from
`extended_varargs_abi_support`.
2025-02-12 19:57:45 -08:00
Michael Goulet
d0564fda65 Use BikeshedGuaranteedNotDrop in unsafe binder type WF too 2025-02-13 03:45:07 +00:00
Michael Goulet
516afd557c Implement and use BikeshedGuaranteedNoDrop for union/unsafe field validity 2025-02-13 03:45:04 +00:00
Michael Goulet
c72d443cdd Use core stubs in some CMSE tests 2025-02-13 03:43:47 +00:00
Zalathar
ab786d3b98 coverage: Eliminate more counters by giving them to unreachable nodes
When preparing a function's coverage counters and metadata during codegen, any
part of the original coverage graph that was removed by MIR optimizations can
be treated as having an execution count of zero.

Somewhat counter-intuitively, if we give those unreachable nodes a _higher_
priority for receiving physical counters (instead of counter expressions), that
ends up reducing the total number of physical counters needed.

This works because if a node is unreachable, we don't actually create a
physical counter for it. Instead that node gets a fixed zero counter, and any
other node that would have relied on that physical counter in its counter
expression can just ignore that term completely.
2025-02-13 13:45:53 +11:00
bors
9fcc9cf4a2 Auto merge of #136954 - jhpratt:rollup-koefsot, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 12 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #134090 (Stabilize target_feature_11)
 - #135025 (Cast allocas to default address space)
 - #135841 (Reject `?Trait` bounds in various places where we unconditionally warned since 1.0)
 - #136217 (Mark condition/carry bit as clobbered in C-SKY inline assembly)
 - #136699 (std: replace the `FromInner` implementation for addresses with private conversion functions)
 - #136806 (Fix cycle when debug-printing opaque types from RPITIT)
 - #136807 (compiler: internally merge `PtxKernel` into `GpuKernel`)
 - #136818 (Implement `read*_exact` for `std:io::repeat`)
 - #136927 (Correctly escape hashtags when running `invalid_rust_codeblocks` lint)
 - #136937 (Update books)
 - #136945 (Add diagnostic item for `std::io::BufRead`)
 - #136947 (Reinstate nnethercote in the review rotation.)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-13 02:13:24 +00:00
Michael Goulet
d1b35f9fcc Improved named region errors 2025-02-13 01:36:01 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
9fe0d25fcb
Rollup merge of #136927 - GuillaumeGomez:add-missing-hashtag-escape, r=notriddle
Correctly escape hashtags when running `invalid_rust_codeblocks` lint

Fixes #136899.

We forgot to use `map_line` when we wrote this lint.

r? ``@notriddle``
2025-02-12 20:10:01 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
0de2341fef
Rollup merge of #136217 - taiki-e:csky-asm-flags, r=Amanieu
Mark condition/carry bit as clobbered in C-SKY inline assembly

C-SKY's compare and some arithmetic/logical instructions modify condition/carry bit (C) in PSR, but there is currently no way to mark it as clobbered in `asm!`.

This PR marks it as clobbered except when [`options(preserves_flags)`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/inline-assembly.html#r-asm.options.supported-options.preserves_flags) is used.

Refs:
- Section 1.3 "Programming model" and Section 1.3.5 "Condition/carry bit" in CSKY Architecture user_guide:
  9f7121f7d4/CSKY%20Architecture%20user_guide.pdf

  > Under user mode, condition/carry bit (C) is located in the lowest bit of PSR, and it can be
accessed and changed by common user instructions. It is the only data bit that can be visited
under user mode in PSR.

  > Condition or carry bit represents the result after one operation. Condition/carry bit can be
clearly set according to the results of compare instructions or unclearly set as some
high-precision arithmetic or logical instructions. In addition, special instructions such as
DEC[GT,LT,NE] and XTRB[0-3] will influence the value of condition/carry bit.

- Register definition in LLVM:
  https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-19.1.0/llvm/lib/Target/CSKY/CSKYRegisterInfo.td#L88

cc ```@Dirreke``` ([target maintainer](aa6f5ab18e/src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/csky-unknown-linux-gnuabiv2.md (target-maintainers)))

r? ```@Amanieu```

```@rustbot``` label +O-csky +A-inline-assembly
2025-02-12 20:09:58 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
6b9b0a0ce8
Rollup merge of #135841 - oli-obk:push-qxlnokwrkkym, r=compiler-errors
Reject `?Trait` bounds in various places where we unconditionally warned since 1.0

fixes #135730
fixes #135809

Also a breaking change, so let's see what crater says.

This has been an unconditional warning since *before* 1.0
2025-02-12 20:09:57 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
a53cd3c979
Rollup merge of #135025 - Flakebi:alloca-addrspace, r=nikic
Cast allocas to default address space

Pointers for variables all need to be in the same address space for correct compilation. Therefore ensure that even if an `alloca` is created in a different address space, it is casted to the default address space before its value is used.

This is necessary for the amdgpu target and others where the default address space for `alloca`s is not 0.

For example the following code compiles incorrectly when not casting the address space to the default one:

```rust
fn f(p: *const i8 /* addrspace(0) */) -> *const i8 /* addrspace(0) */ {
    let local = 0i8; /* addrspace(5) */
    let res = if cond { p } else { &raw const local };
    res
}
```

results in

```llvm
    %local = alloca addrspace(5) i8
    %res = alloca addrspace(5) ptr

if:
    ; Store 64-bit flat pointer
    store ptr %p, ptr addrspace(5) %res

else:
    ; Store 32-bit scratch pointer
    store ptr addrspace(5) %local, ptr addrspace(5) %res

ret:
    ; Load and return 64-bit flat pointer
    %res.load = load ptr, ptr addrspace(5) %res
    ret ptr %res.load
```

For amdgpu, `addrspace(0)` are 64-bit pointers, `addrspace(5)` are 32-bit pointers.
The above code may store a 32-bit pointer and read it back as a 64-bit pointer, which is obviously wrong and cannot work. Instead, we need to `addrspacecast %local to ptr addrspace(0)`, then we store and load the correct type.

Tracking issue: #135024
2025-02-12 20:09:56 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
575405161f
Rollup merge of #134090 - veluca93:stable-tf11, r=oli-obk
Stabilize target_feature_11

# Stabilization report

This is an updated version of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116114, which is itself a redo of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/99767. Most of this commit and report were copied from those PRs. Thanks ```@LeSeulArtichaut``` and ```@calebzulawski!```

## Summary
Allows for safe functions to be marked with `#[target_feature]` attributes.

Functions marked with `#[target_feature]` are generally considered as unsafe functions: they are unsafe to call, cannot *generally* be assigned to safe function pointers, and don't implement the `Fn*` traits.

However, calling them from other `#[target_feature]` functions with a superset of features is safe.

```rust
// Demonstration function
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn avx2() {}

fn foo() {
    // Calling `avx2` here is unsafe, as we must ensure
    // that AVX is available first.
    unsafe {
        avx2();
    }
}

#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn bar() {
    // Calling `avx2` here is safe.
    avx2();
}
```

Moreover, once https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/135504 is merged, they can be converted to safe function pointers in a context in which calling them is safe:

```rust
// Demonstration function
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn avx2() {}

fn foo() -> fn() {
    // Converting `avx2` to fn() is a compilation error here.
    avx2
}

#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn bar() -> fn() {
    // `avx2` coerces to fn() here
    avx2
}
```

See the section "Closures" below for justification of this behaviour.

## Test cases
Tests for this feature can be found in [`tests/ui/target_feature/`](f6cb952dc1/tests/ui/target-feature).

## Edge cases
### Closures
 * [target-feature 1.1: should closures inherit target-feature annotations? #73631](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73631)

Closures defined inside functions marked with #[target_feature] inherit the target features of their parent function. They can still be assigned to safe function pointers and implement the appropriate `Fn*` traits.

```rust
#[target_feature(enable = "avx2")]
fn qux() {
    let my_closure = || avx2(); // this call to `avx2` is safe
    let f: fn() = my_closure;
}
```
This means that in order to call a function with #[target_feature], you must guarantee that the target-feature is available while the function, any closures defined inside it, as well as any safe function pointers obtained from target-feature functions inside it, execute.

This is usually ensured because target features are assumed to never disappear, and:
- on any unsafe call to a `#[target_feature]` function, presence of the target feature is guaranteed by the programmer through the safety requirements of the unsafe call.
- on any safe call, this is guaranteed recursively by the caller.

If you work in an environment where target features can be disabled, it is your responsibility to ensure that no code inside a target feature function (including inside a closure) runs after this (until the feature is enabled again).

**Note:** this has an effect on existing code, as nowadays closures do not inherit features from the enclosing function, and thus this strengthens a safety requirement. It was originally proposed in #73631 to solve this by adding a new type of UB: “taking a target feature away from your process after having run code that uses that target feature is UB” .
This was motivated by userspace code already assuming in a few places that CPU features never disappear from a program during execution (see i.e. 2e29bdf908/crates/std_detect/src/detect/arch/x86.rs); however, concerns were raised in the context of the Linux kernel; thus, we propose to relax that requirement to "causing the set of usable features to be reduced is unsafe; when doing so, the programmer is required to ensure that no closures or safe fn pointers that use removed features are still in scope".

* [Fix #[inline(always)] on closures with target feature 1.1 #111836](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111836)

Closures accept `#[inline(always)]`, even within functions marked with `#[target_feature]`. Since these attributes conflict, `#[inline(always)]` wins out to maintain compatibility.

### ABI concerns
* [The extern "C" ABI of SIMD vector types depends on target features #116558](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116558)

The ABI of some types can change when compiling a function with different target features. This could have introduced unsoundness with target_feature_11, but recent fixes (#133102, #132173) either make those situations invalid or make the ABI no longer dependent on features. Thus, those issues should no longer occur.

### Special functions
The `#[target_feature]` attribute is forbidden from a variety of special functions, such as main, current and future lang items (e.g. `#[start]`, `#[panic_handler]`), safe default trait implementations and safe trait methods.

This was not disallowed at the time of the first stabilization PR for target_features_11, and resulted in the following issues/PRs:
* [`#[target_feature]` is allowed on `main` #108645](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108645)
* [`#[target_feature]` is allowed on default implementations #108646](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108646)
* [#[target_feature] is allowed on #[panic_handler] with target_feature 1.1 #109411](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109411)
* [Prevent using `#[target_feature]` on lang item functions #115910](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115910)

## Documentation
 * Reference: [Document the `target_feature_11` feature reference#1181](https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1181)
---

cc tracking issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69098
cc ```@workingjubilee```
cc ```@RalfJung```
r? ```@rust-lang/lang```
2025-02-12 20:09:56 -05:00
Michael Goulet
88193aad72 Use the right binder for rebinding PolyTraitRef 2025-02-12 23:55:12 +00:00
bors
6dce9f8c2d Auto merge of #135994 - 1c3t3a:rename-unsafe-ptr, r=oli-obk
Rename rustc_middle::Ty::is_unsafe_ptr to is_raw_ptr

The wording unsafe pointer is less common and not mentioned in a lot of places, instead this is usually called a "raw pointer". For the sake of uniformity, we rename this method.
This came up during the review of
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134424.

r? `@Noratrieb`
2025-02-12 23:18:14 +00:00
Michael Howell
2c4922cf29 rustdoc: use better, consistent SVG icons for scraped examples
This continues two ongoing projects:

- Replacing ascii art with real icons that don't look like
  syntax, are understandable to people who're familiar with
  desktop computers and smart devices, and aren't ugly.
- Using labels and tooltips to clarify these icons, when the
  limits of popular iconography hit us. In this case, I've added
  tooltips, because, unfortunately, there's not room for
  always-visible labels.
2025-02-12 16:07:11 -07:00
Flakebi
99ec64c34c
Export kernel descriptor for amdgpu kernels
The host runtime (HIP or HSA) expects a kernel descriptor object for
each kernel in the ELF file. The amdgpu LLVM backend generates the
object. It is created as a symbol with the name of the kernel plus a
`.kd` suffix.

Add it to the exported symbols in the linker script, so that it can be
found.
2025-02-12 22:44:39 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
27dc222fb4
Rollup merge of #136901 - workingjubilee:stabilize-externabi-hashing-forever, r=compiler-errors
compiler: give `ExternAbi` truly stable `Hash` and `Ord`

Currently, `ExternAbi` has a bunch of code to handle the reality that, as an enum, adding more variants to it will risk it hashing differently. It forces all of those variants to be added in a fixed order, except this means that the order of the variants doesn't correspond to any logical order except "historical accident". This is all to avoid having to rebless two tests. Perhaps there were more, once upon a time? But then we invented normalization in our test suite to handle exactly this sort of issue in a more general way.

There are two options here:
- Get rid of all the logical overhead and shrug, embracing blessing a couple of tests sometimes
- Change `ExternAbi` to have an ordering and hash that doesn't depend on the number of variants

As `ExternAbi` is essentially a strongly-typed string, and thus no two strings can be identical, this implements the second of the two by hand-implementing `Ord` and `Hash` to make the hashing and comparison based on the string! This will diff the current hashes, but they will diff no more after this.
2025-02-12 20:30:55 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
993eb34d84
Rollup merge of #136838 - compiler-errors:escaping-unsize, r=fmease
Check whole `Unsize` predicate for escaping bound vars

Fixes #136799
2025-02-12 20:30:52 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
f0af030ee4
Rollup merge of #136761 - workingjubilee:specify-opt-level-for-codegen-tests, r=saethlin
tests: `-Copt-level=3` instead of `-O` in codegen tests

An effective blocker for redefining the meaning of `-O` is to stop reusing this somewhat ambiguous alias in our own codegen test suite. The choice between `-Copt-level=2` and `-Copt-level=3` is arbitrary for most of our tests. In most cases it makes no difference, so I set most of them to `-Copt-level=3`, as it will lead to slightly more "normalized" codegen.

try-job: test-various
try-job: arm-android
try-job: armhf-gnu
try-job: i686-gnu-1
try-job: i686-gnu-2
try-job: i686-mingw
try-job: i686-msvc-1
try-job: i686-msvc-2
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: aarch64-gnu
2025-02-12 20:30:50 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
a3f76adb81
Rollup merge of #136758 - workingjubilee:specify-opt-level-for-tests, r=saethlin
tests: `-Copt-level=3` instead of `-O` in assembly tests

An effective blocker for redefining the meaning of `-O` is to stop reusing this somewhat ambiguous alias in our own assembly test suite. The choice between `-Copt-level=2` and `-Copt-level=3` is arbitrary for most of our tests. In most cases it makes no difference, so I set most of them to `-Copt-level=3`, as it will lead to slightly more "normalized" assembly.
2025-02-12 20:30:50 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
17cf100f11 Add regression test for #136899 2025-02-12 19:46:07 +01:00
Matthew Maurer
d82219a4fa debuginfo: Set bitwidth appropriately in enum variant tags
Previously, we unconditionally set the bitwidth to 128-bits, the largest
an discrimnator would possibly be. Then, LLVM would cut down the constant by
chopping off leading zeroes before emitting the DWARF. LLVM only
supported 64-bit descriminators, so this would also have occasionally
resulted in truncated data (or an assert) if more than 64-bits were
used.

LLVM added support for 128-bit enumerators in llvm/llvm-project#125578

That patchset also trusts the constant to describe how wide the variant tag is.
As a result, we went from emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value     (0xfe)

(`form1`)

to emitting tags that looked like:
DW_AT_discr_value	(<0x10> fe ff ff ff 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 )

This makes the `DW_AT_discr_value` encode at the bitwidth of the tag,
which:
1. Is probably closer to our intentions in terms of describing the data.
2. Doesn't invoke the 128-bit support which may not be supported by all
   debuggers / downstream tools.
3. Will result in smaller debug information.
2025-02-12 18:01:42 +00:00
bors
ced8e650cd Auto merge of #135336 - tshepang:patch-5, r=jieyouxu
clarify and document needs-dynamic-linking

try-job: test-various
2025-02-12 15:39:48 +00:00
bors
552a959051 Auto merge of #136918 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-f6h21gg, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #134981 ( Explain that in paths generics can't be set on both the enum and the variant)
 - #136698 (Replace i686-unknown-redox target with i586-unknown-redox)
 - #136767 (improve host/cross target checking)
 - #136829 ([rustdoc] Move line numbers into the `<code>` directly)
 - #136875 (Rustc dev guide subtree update)
 - #136900 (compiler: replace `ExternAbi::name` calls with formatters)
 - #136913 (Put kobzol back on review rotation)
 - #136915 (documentation fix: `f16` and `f128` are not double-precision)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-12 12:42:25 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
30bd1b53b3
Rollup merge of #136900 - workingjubilee:format-externabi-directly, r=oli-obk
compiler: replace `ExternAbi::name` calls with formatters

Most of these just format the ABI string, so... just format ExternAbi? This makes it more consistent and less jank when we can do it.
2025-02-12 10:46:40 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
ba32d8bdee
Rollup merge of #136829 - GuillaumeGomez:move-line-numbers-into-code, r=notriddle
[rustdoc] Move line numbers into the `<code>` directly

Fixes #84242.

This is the first for adding support for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127334 and also for another feature I'm working on.

A side-effect of this change is that it also fixes source code pages display in lynx since they're not directly in the source code.

To allow having code wrapping, the grid approach doesn't work as the line numbers are in their own container, so we need to move them into the code. Now with this, it becomes much simpler to do what we want (with CSS mostly). One downside: the highlighting became more complex and slow as we need to generate some extra HTML tags directly into the highlighting process. However that also allows to not have a huge HTML size increase.

You can test the result [here](https://rustdoc.crud.net/imperio/move-line-numbers-into-code/scrape_examples/fn.test_many.html) and [here](https://rustdoc.crud.net/imperio/move-line-numbers-into-code/src/scrape_examples/lib.rs.html#10).

The appearance should have close to no changes.

r? ``@notriddle``
2025-02-12 10:46:39 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
c43a59f597
Rollup merge of #136698 - jackpot51:i586-redox, r=RalfJung
Replace i686-unknown-redox target with i586-unknown-redox

This change is related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136495
2025-02-12 10:46:37 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
262079b52a
Rollup merge of #134981 - estebank:issue-93993, r=BoxyUwU
Explain that in paths generics can't be set on both the enum and the variant

```
error[E0109]: type arguments are not allowed on tuple variant `TSVariant`
  --> $DIR/enum-variant-generic-args.rs:54:29
   |
LL |     Enum::<()>::TSVariant::<()>(());
   |                 ---------   ^^ type argument not allowed
   |                 |
   |                 not allowed on tuple variant `TSVariant`
   |
   = note: generic arguments are not allowed on both an enum and its variant's path segments simultaneously; they are only valid in one place or the other
help: remove the generics arguments from one of the path segments
   |
LL -     Enum::<()>::TSVariant::<()>(());
LL +     Enum::TSVariant::<()>(());
   |
LL -     Enum::<()>::TSVariant::<()>(());
LL +     Enum::<()>::TSVariant(());
   |
```

Fix #93993.
2025-02-12 10:46:36 +01:00
bors
021fb9c09a Auto merge of #136897 - workingjubilee:revert-unfcped-stab, r=WaffleLapkin
Revert "Stabilize `extended_varargs_abi_support`"

I cannot find an FCP for this, despite it being a stabilization PR which normally means we do an FCP of some kind? It would seem reasonable for _either_ compiler or lang to have FCPed it? I am thus opening a revert PR, which mostly-cleanly applies, so that we can later actually land this properly with a stability report and FCP.

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136896
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116161
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/100189
2025-02-12 09:44:30 +00:00
Walnut
d6f5d34744 fix string and tuple struct formatting 2025-02-12 01:30:09 -06:00
bors
33d92df3e6 Auto merge of #136905 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-8zwcgta, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #135549 (Document some safety constraints and use more safe wrappers)
 - #135965 (In "specify type" suggestion, skip type params that are already known)
 - #136193 (Implement pattern type ffi checks)
 - #136646 (Add a TyPat in the AST to reuse the generic arg lowering logic)
 - #136874 (Change the issue number for `likely_unlikely` and `cold_path`)
 - #136884 (Lower fn items as ZST valtrees and delay a bug)
 - #136885 (i686-linux-android: increase CPU baseline to Pentium 4 (without an actual change)
 - #136891 (Check sig for errors before checking for unconstrained anonymous lifetime)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-12 06:54:18 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
77a1d6b266
Rollup merge of #136891 - compiler-errors:unconstrained-anon-lt, r=lqd
Check sig for errors before checking for unconstrained anonymous lifetime

Fixes #136841
2025-02-12 06:07:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
febb367a04
Rollup merge of #136884 - compiler-errors:fn-zst, r=BoxyUwU
Lower fn items as ZST valtrees and delay a bug

Lower it as a ZST instead of a const error, which we can handle mostly fine. Delay a bug so we don't accidentally support it tho.

r? BoxyUwU

Fixes #136855
Fixes #136853
Fixes #136854
Fixes #136337

Only added one test bc that's really the crux of the issue (fn item in array length position).
2025-02-12 06:07:39 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
516dd06a25
Rollup merge of #136646 - oli-obk:pattern-types-ast, r=BoxyUwU
Add a TyPat in the AST to reuse the generic arg lowering logic

This simplifies ast lowering significantly with little cost to the pattern types parser.

Also fixes any problems we've had with generic args (well, pushes any problems onto the `generic_const_exprs` feature gate)

follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136284#discussion_r1939292367

r? ``@BoxyUwU``
2025-02-12 06:07:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2f3f83a4a3
Rollup merge of #136193 - oli-obk:pattern-type-ffi-checks, r=chenyukang
Implement pattern type ffi checks

Previously we just rejected pattern types outright in FFI, but that was never meant to be a permanent situation. We'll need them supported to use them as the building block for `NonZero` and `NonNull` after all (both of which are FFI safe).

best reviewed commit by commit.
2025-02-12 06:07:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5ebacd1b3c
Rollup merge of #135965 - estebank:shorten-ty-sugg, r=lcnr
In "specify type" suggestion, skip type params that are already known

When we suggest specifying a type for an expression or pattern, like in a `let` binding, we previously would print the entire type as the type system knew it. We now look at the params that have *no* inference variables, so they are fully known to the type system which means that they don't need to be specified.

This helps in suggestions for types that are really long, because we can usually skip most of the type params and make the annotation as short as possible:

```
error[E0282]: type annotations needed for `Result<_, ((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)>`
  --> $DIR/really-long-type-in-let-binding-without-sufficient-type-info.rs:7:9
   |
LL |     let y = Err(x);
   |         ^   ------ type must be known at this point
   |
help: consider giving `y` an explicit type, where the type for type parameter `T` is specified
   |
LL |     let y: Result<T, _> = Err(x);
   |          ++++++++++++++
```

Fix #135919.
2025-02-12 06:07:36 +01:00
Jubilee Young
8abff35b41 compiler: compare and hash ExternAbi like its string
Directly map each ExternAbi variant to its string and back again.
This has a few advantages:
- By making the ABIs compare equal to their strings, we can easily
  lexicographically sort them and use that sorted slice at runtime.
- We no longer need a workaround to make sure the hashes remain stable,
  as they already naturally are (by being the hashes of unique strings).
- The compiler can carry around less &str wide pointers
2025-02-11 20:18:01 -08:00
bors
672e3aaf28 Auto merge of #136074 - compiler-errors:deeply-normalize-next-solver, r=lcnr
Properly deeply normalize in the next solver

Turn deep normalization into a `TypeOp`. In the old solver, just dispatch to the `Normalize` type op, but in the new solver call `deeply_normalize`. I chose to separate it into a different type op b/c some normalization is a no-op in the new solver, so this distinguishes just the normalization we need for correctness.

Then use `DeeplyNormalize` in the callsites we used to be using a `CustomTypeOp` (for normalizing known type outlives obligations), and also use it to normalize function args and impl headers in the new solver.

Finally, use it to normalize signatures for WF checks in the new solver as well. This addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/146.
2025-02-12 04:04:32 +00:00
Jubilee Young
32fd1a7b72 compiler: replace ExternAbi::name calls with formatters
Most of these just format the ABI string, so... just format ExternAbi?
This makes it more consistent and less jank when we can do it.
2025-02-11 19:42:47 -08:00
Tshepang Mbambo
d5f645647f clarify
Also, use signular form for consistency/simplicity
2025-02-12 04:41:14 +02:00
Tshepang Mbambo
3e50873aa1 test cli functionality in all targets 2025-02-12 04:38:03 +02:00
yukang
a917fd5f98 Fix diagnostic when using = instead of : in let bindings 2025-02-12 09:56:07 +08:00
Jubilee Young
d97bde059a Revert "Stabilize extended_varargs_abi_support"
This reverts commit 685f189b43.
2025-02-11 17:22:27 -08:00
Esteban Küber
23daa8c724 Remove some the spans pointing at the enum in the path and its generic args
```
error[E0109]: type arguments are not allowed on tuple variant `TSVariant`
  --> $DIR/enum-variant-generic-args.rs:54:29
   |
LL |     Enum::<()>::TSVariant::<()>(());
   |                 ---------   ^^ type argument not allowed
   |                 |
   |                 not allowed on tuple variant `TSVariant`
   |
   = note: generic arguments are not allowed on both an enum and its variant's path segments simultaneously; they are only valid in one place or the other
help: remove the generics arguments from one of the path segments
   |
LL -     Enum::<()>::TSVariant::<()>(());
LL +     Enum::<()>::TSVariant(());
   |
```
2025-02-11 23:47:56 +00:00
Esteban Küber
1b98d0ed13 Explain that in paths generics can't be set on both the enum and the variant
```
error[E0109]: type arguments are not allowed on enum `Enum` and tuple variant `TSVariant`
  --> $DIR/enum-variant-generic-args.rs:54:12
   |
LL |     Enum::<()>::TSVariant::<()>(());
   |     ----   ^^   ---------   ^^ type argument not allowed
   |     |           |
   |     |           not allowed on tuple variant `TSVariant`
   |     not allowed on enum `Enum`
   |
   = note: generic arguments are not allowed on both an enum and its variant's path segments simultaneously; they are only valid in one place or the other
help: remove the generics arguments from one of the path segments
   |
LL -     Enum::<()>::TSVariant::<()>(());
LL +     Enum::<()>::TSVariant(());
   |
```

Fix #93993.
2025-02-11 23:30:07 +00:00
Michael Goulet
6ffe6dd826 Check sig for errors before checking for unconstrained anonymous lifetime 2025-02-11 22:59:57 +00:00
Jubilee Young
3c0c9b6770 tests/codegen: use -Copt-level=3 instead of -O 2025-02-11 13:41:35 -08:00
Jubilee Young
4c17270332 tests: simplify dont-shuffle-bswaps test
This should guarantee it tests what we want it to test and no more.
It should probably also run on 64-bit platforms that are not x86-64,
which will often have the vector registers the opt implies.
2025-02-11 13:41:26 -08:00
Michael Goulet
ffefb13443 Always perform discr read for never pattern in EUV 2025-02-11 21:12:47 +00:00
Eric Huss
8c24c0a023 Remove the common prelude module
This fixes the issues described in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136102. Primarily, this
resolves some issues with how the documentation for the prelude is
generated:

- It avoids showing "unstable" for macros in the prelude that are
  actually stable.
- Avoids duplication of some pages due to the previous lack of
  `doc(no_inline)`.
- Makes the different edition preludes consistent, and sets a pattern
  that can be used by future editions.

We may need to rearrange these modules in the future if we decide to
remove anything from the prelude again. If we do, I think we should look
into a different solution that avoids the documentation problems.
2025-02-11 13:04:27 -08:00
Michael Goulet
d5be3bae51 Deeply normalize signature in new solver 2025-02-11 19:24:07 +00:00
Michael Goulet
ef9d992a0d Deeply normalize in impl header 2025-02-11 19:24:07 +00:00
Michael Goulet
ce0c952e96 Deeply normalize args for implied bounds 2025-02-11 19:24:07 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f0cb746480 Lower fn items as ZST valtrees and delay a bug 2025-02-11 19:16:12 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2cb21fb015
Rollup merge of #136786 - compiler-errors:de-de-duplicate-blocks, r=oli-obk
Remove the deduplicate_blocks pass

I don't think this pass does anything. It's a lot of complexity for 🤷  amount of benefit.

r? oli-obk
2025-02-11 18:04:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
65d20f39f3
Rollup merge of #136239 - folkertdev:show-supported-register-classes, r=SparrowLii,jieyouxu
show supported register classes in error message

a simple diagnostic change that shows the supported register classes when an invalid one is found.

This information can be hard to find (especially for unstable targets), and this message now gives at least something to try or search for. I've followed the pattern for invalid clobber ABIs.

`@rustbot` label +A-inline-assembly
2025-02-11 18:04:34 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
9e0c8b67e9 Add regression test for source line numbers 2025-02-11 14:29:58 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
673fd23dff Update rustdoc tests 2025-02-11 14:29:58 +01:00
bors
69482e8e5a Auto merge of #136851 - jhpratt:rollup-ftijn95, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 11 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #136606 (Fix long lines which rustfmt fails to format)
 - #136663 (Stabilize `NonZero::count_ones`)
 - #136672 (library: doc: core::alloc::Allocator: trivial typo fix)
 - #136704 (Improve examples for file locking)
 - #136721 (cg_llvm: Reduce visibility of some items outside the `llvm` module)
 - #136813 (rustc_target: Add the fp16 target feature for AArch32)
 - #136830 (fix i686-unknown-hurd-gnu x87 footnote)
 - #136832 (Fix platform support table for i686-unknown-uefi)
 - #136835 (Stop using span hack for contracts feature gating)
 - #136837 (Overhaul how contracts are lowered on fn-like bodies)
 - #136839 (fix ensure_monomorphic_enough)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-11 10:17:02 +00:00
Oli Scherer
c294da3310 Reject impl Trait bounds in various places where we unconditionally warned since 1.0 2025-02-11 09:19:37 +00:00
Oli Scherer
f1f996a4d5 Handle pattern types wrapped in Option in FFI checks 2025-02-11 08:52:08 +00:00
Oli Scherer
6d7ce4e893 Add a TyPat in the AST to reuse the generic arg lowering logic 2025-02-11 08:51:05 +00:00
Oli Scherer
5bae8ca77c Correctly handle pattern types in FFI redeclaration lints 2025-02-11 08:30:35 +00:00
Oli Scherer
473352da31 Correctly handle pattern types in FFI safety 2025-02-11 08:30:35 +00:00
Oli Scherer
644c6948d0 Add ffi tests for pattern types 2025-02-11 08:30:35 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
21303103c3
Rollup merge of #136839 - lukas-code:actually-monomorphic-enough, r=compiler-errors
fix ensure_monomorphic_enough

When polymorphization was still a thing, the visitor was used to only recurse into *used generic parameters* of function/closure/coroutine types and allow unused parameters (i.e. the polymorphized parameters) to remain generic.

When polymorphization got removed, this got changed to always treat all parameters as polymorphic and never recurse into them: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133883/files#diff-210c59e321070d0ca4625c04e9fb064bf43ddc34082e7e33a7ee8a6c577e95afL44-L62

This is clearly wrong and can cause MIR opts to misbehave, for example this currently prints "false" in release mode:

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

fn generic<T>() {}

const fn type_id_of_val<T: 'static>(_: &T) -> u128 {
    std::intrinsics::type_id::<T>()
}

fn cursed_is_i32<T: 'static>() -> bool {
    (const { type_id_of_val(&generic::<T>) } == const { type_id_of_val(&generic::<i32>) })
}

fn main() {
    dbg!(cursed_is_i32::<i32>());
}
```

This PR reverts to the old behavior of always treating all types that contain type parameters as too generic, like we used to do without `-Zpolymorphize` before.

~~I'm not including the above as a test case here, because I think there is little value in testing code paths that have been removed and this seems unlikely to regress in a way that would be caught by a regression test, but let me know if you disagree and want me to add a test anyway.~~
2025-02-11 01:02:44 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
4ae214b846
Rollup merge of #136837 - compiler-errors:contracts-body-lowering, r=celinval
Overhaul how contracts are lowered on fn-like bodies

Consolidates all of the contracts lowering logic into `lower_fn_body`, rather than having it be split between `lower_item_kind` and `lower_fn_body`. This should fix #136683.

r? celinval
2025-02-11 01:02:43 -05:00
Jacob Pratt
94bf32e719
Rollup merge of #136835 - compiler-errors:contracts-span-hack, r=celinval
Stop using span hack for contracts feature gating

The contracts machinery is a pretty straightforward case of an *external* feature using a (perma-unstable) *internal* feature within its implementation. There's no reason why it needs to be implemented any differently than other features by using global span tracking hacks to change whether the internals are gated behind the `contracts` or `contracts_internals` feature gate -- for the case of macro expansions we already have `allow_internal_unstable` for exactly this situation.

This PR changes the internal, perma-unstable AST syntax to use the `contracts_internals` gate always, and adjusts the macro expansion to use the right spans so that `allow_internal_unstable` works correctly.

As a follow-up, there's really no reason to have `contracts` be a *compiler feature* since it's at this point fully a *library feature*; the only reason it's a compiler feature today is so we can mark it as incomplete, but that seems like a weak reason. I didn't do anything in this PR for this.

r? ``@celinval``
2025-02-11 01:02:43 -05:00
bors
c182ce9cbc Auto merge of #136845 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-ol4np4z, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #136107 (Introduce CoercePointeeWellformed for coherence checks at typeck stage)
 - #136155 (Enable sanitizers on MSVC CI jobs)
 - #136524 (Delay bug when method confirmation cannot upcast object pick of self)
 - #136584 (Prevent generic pattern types from being used in libstd)
 - #136603 (compiler: gate `extern "{abi}"` in ast_lowering)
 - #136821 (assign marcoieni and jdno to infra-ci PRs)
 - #136825 (Update books)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-11 05:27:49 +00:00
bors
ffa9afef18 Auto merge of #127541 - estebank:diff-suggestions, r=petrochenkov
Show diff suggestion format on verbose replacement

```
error[E0610]: `{integer}` is a primitive type and therefore doesn't have fields
  --> $DIR/attempted-access-non-fatal.rs:7:15
   |
LL |     let _ = 2.l;
   |               ^
   |
help: if intended to be a floating point literal, consider adding a `0` after the period and a `f64` suffix
   |
LL -     let _ = 2.l;
LL +     let _ = 2.0f64;
   |
```

before:
```
error[E0610]: `{integer}` is a primitive type and therefore doesn't have fields
  --> $DIR/attempted-access-non-fatal.rs:7:15
   |
LL |     let _ = 2.l;
   |               ^
   |
help: if intended to be a floating point literal, consider adding a `0` after the period and a `f64` suffix
   |
LL +     let _ = 2.0f64;
   |               ~~~~
```
r? `@oli-obk`
2025-02-11 02:35:06 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
38f4c1f49a
Rollup merge of #136603 - workingjubilee:move-abi-versioning-into-ast, r=compiler-errors
compiler: gate `extern "{abi}"` in ast_lowering

I don't believe low-level crates like `rustc_abi` should have to know or care about higher-level concerns like whether the ABI string is stable for users. These implementation details can be made less open to public inspection. This way the code that governs stability is near the code that enforces stability, and compiled together.

It also abstracts away certain error messages instead of constantly repeating them.

A few error messages are simply deleted outright, instead of made uniform, because they are either too dated to be useful or redundant with other diagnostic improvements we could make. These can be pursued in followups: my first concern was making sure there wasn't unnecessary diagnostics-related code in `rustc_abi`, which is not well-positioned to understand what kind of errors are going to be generated based on how it is used.

r? ``@ghost``
2025-02-11 02:53:44 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
c92aae90e4
Rollup merge of #136584 - oli-obk:pattern-types-generic, r=BoxyUwU
Prevent generic pattern types from being used in libstd

Pattern types should follow the same rules that patterns follow. So a pattern type range must not wrap and not be empty. While we reject such invalid ranges at layout computation time, that only happens during monomorphization in the case of const generics. This is the exact same issue as other const generic math has, and since there's no solution there yet, I put these pattern types behind a separate incomplete feature.

These are not necessary for the pattern types MVP (replacing the layout range attributes in libcore and rustc).

cc #136574 (new tracking issue for the `generic_pattern_types` feature gate)

r? ``@lcnr``

cc ``@scottmcm`` ``@joshtriplett``
2025-02-11 02:53:44 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
66573926f2
Rollup merge of #136524 - compiler-errors:bad-pick, r=BoxyUwU
Delay bug when method confirmation cannot upcast object pick of self

Justification is on the test comment. Simply delays a bug that we were previously ICEing on.

cc ``@adetaylor`` since this is a `arbitrary_self_types` ICE.
2025-02-11 02:53:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
af3c51d849
Rollup merge of #136107 - dingxiangfei2009:coerce-pointee-wellformed, r=compiler-errors
Introduce CoercePointeeWellformed for coherence checks at typeck stage

Fix #135206

This is the first PR to introduce the "wellformedness" check for `derive(CoercePointee)`.

This patch introduces a new error code to cover all the prerequisites of the said macro. The checks that is enforced with this patch is whether the data is indeed `struct` and whether the layout is set to `repr(transparent)`.

A following series of patch will arrive later to address the following concern.
1. #135217 so that we would only admit one single coercion on one type parameter, and leave the rest for future consideration in tandem of development of other coercion rules.
1. Enforcement of data field requirements.

**An open question** is whether there is a good schema to encode the `#[pointee]` as well, so that we could also check if the `#[pointee]` type parameter is indeed `?Sized`.

``@rustbot`` label F-derive_coerce_pointee
2025-02-11 02:53:42 +01:00
Lukas Markeffsky
c1da4f1d3c fix ensure_monomorphic_enough 2025-02-11 01:15:08 +01:00
Lukas Markeffsky
4898753d5d add test for const type_id misoptimization 2025-02-11 01:10:05 +01:00
Michael Goulet
95357c772c Check whole Unsize predicate for escaping bound vars 2025-02-10 21:53:05 +00:00
Michael Goulet
4f18560d06 Don't ICE when failing to lower contracts for associated impl items 2025-02-10 21:38:31 +00:00
bors
6171d944ae Auto merge of #133092 - madsmtm:bootstrap-deployment-target, r=Mark-Simulacrum,jieyouxu
Always set the deployment target when building std

`cc` has [a bug/feature](https://github.com/rust-lang/cc-rs/issues/1171) (I guess depending on how you look at it) where the default deployment target is taken from the SDK instead of from `rustc`. This causes `compiler-builtins` to build `compiler-rt` with the wrong deployment target on iOS.

I've been meaning to change how `cc` works in this regard, but that's a lengthy process, so let's fix it in bootstrap for now.

The behaviour can be seen locally with `./x build library --set build.optimized-compiler-builtins=true` for various target triples, and then inspecting with `otool -l build/host/stage1/lib/rustlib/*/lib/libcompiler_builtins-*.rlib | rg 'minos|version'`. I have added a rmake test that ensures that we now have the same version everywhere.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128419
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/issues/650
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136523
See also https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/13115, https://github.com/rust-lang/cc-rs/issues/1171, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136113
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133092#issuecomment-2626206772 for a description of how the change works.

try-job: i686-gnu-1
try-job: i686-gnu-2
try-job: x86_64-apple-1
try-job: aarch64-apple
try-job: dist-apple-various
try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
try-job: dist-various-2
try-job: x86_64-fuchsia
2025-02-10 21:09:36 +00:00
Flakebi
cde7e805ad
Cast allocas to default address space
Pointers for variables all need to be in the same address space for
correct compilation. Therefore ensure that even if an `alloca` is
created in a different address space, it is casted to the default
address space before its value is used.

This is necessary for the amdgpu target and others where the default
address space for `alloca`s is not 0.

For example the following code compiles incorrectly when not casting the
address space to the default one:

```rust
fn f(p: *const i8 /* addrspace(0) */) -> *const i8 /* addrspace(0) */ {
    let local = 0i8; /* addrspace(5) */
    let res = if cond { p } else { &raw const local };
    res
}
```

results in

```llvm
    %local = alloca addrspace(5) i8
    %res = alloca addrspace(5) ptr

if:
    ; Store 64-bit flat pointer
    store ptr %p, ptr addrspace(5) %res

else:
    ; Store 32-bit scratch pointer
    store ptr addrspace(5) %local, ptr addrspace(5) %res

ret:
    ; Load and return 64-bit flat pointer
    %res.load = load ptr, ptr addrspace(5) %res
    ret ptr %res.load
```

For amdgpu, `addrspace(0)` are 64-bit pointers, `addrspace(5)` are
32-bit pointers.
The above code may store a 32-bit pointer and read it back as a 64-bit
pointer, which is obviously wrong and cannot work. Instead, we need to
`addrspacecast %local to ptr addrspace(0)`, then we store and load the
correct type.
2025-02-10 21:38:44 +01:00
Esteban Küber
f0845adb0c Show diff suggestion format on verbose replacement
```
error[E0610]: `{integer}` is a primitive type and therefore doesn't have fields
  --> $DIR/attempted-access-non-fatal.rs:7:15
   |
LL |     let _ = 2.l;
   |               ^
   |
help: if intended to be a floating point literal, consider adding a `0` after the period and a `f64` suffix
   |
LL -     let _ = 2.l;
LL +     let _ = 2.0f64;
   |
```
2025-02-10 20:21:39 +00:00
Michael Goulet
28164e3c04 Stop using span hack for contracts feature gating 2025-02-10 19:51:26 +00:00
bors
4bb6ec05b0 Auto merge of #136823 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-vp20mk1, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #136419 (adding autodiff tests)
 - #136628 (ci: upgrade to crosstool-ng 1.27.0)
 - #136681 (resolve `llvm-config` path properly on cross builds)
 - #136714 (Update `compiler-builtins` to 0.1.146)
 - #136731 (rustc_middle: parallel: TyCtxt: remove "unsafe impl DynSend/DynSync")
 - #136791 (Disable DWARF in linker options for i686-unknown-uefi)

Failed merges:

 - #136767 (improve host/cross target checking)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-10 18:12:10 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
78f5bddd57
Rollup merge of #136419 - EnzymeAD:autodiff-tests, r=onur-ozkan,jieyouxu
adding autodiff tests

I'd like to get started with upstreaming some tests, even though I'm still waiting for an answer on how to best integrate the enzyme pass. Can we therefore temporarily support the -Z llvm-plugins here without too much effort? And in that case, how would that work? I saw you can do remapping, e.g. `rust-src-base`, but I don't think that will give me the path to libEnzyme.so. Do you have another suggestion?

Other than that this test simply checks that the derivative of `x*x` is `2.0 * x`, which in this case is computed as
`%0 = fadd fast double %x.0.val, %x.0.val`
(I'll add a few more tests and move it to an autodiff folder if we can use the -Z flag)

r? ``@jieyouxu``

Locally at least `-Zllvm-plugins=${PWD}/build/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/enzyme/build/Enzyme/libEnzyme-19.so` seems to work if I copy the command I get from x.py test and run it manually. However, running x.py test itself fails.

Tracking:

- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124509

Zulip discussion: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/326414-t-infra.2Fbootstrap/topic/Enzyme.20build.20changes
2025-02-10 16:38:23 +01:00
bors
4b293d9927 Auto merge of #135701 - calebzulawski:sync-from-portable-simd-2025-01-18, r=workingjubilee
Portable SIMD subtree update

r? `@workingjubilee`
2025-02-10 15:19:51 +00:00
Bastian Kersting
432ff5e559 Extend the renaming to coerce_unsafe_ptr 2025-02-10 13:01:55 +00:00
王宇逸
f94ada13de Add cygwin target.
Co-authored-by: Ookiineko <chiisaineko@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: nora <48135649+Noratrieb@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jubilee <workingjubilee@gmail.com>
2025-02-10 17:13:15 +08:00
Jubilee
7f8108afc8
Rollup merge of #136053 - Zalathar:defer-counters, r=saethlin
coverage: Defer part of counter-creation until codegen

Follow-up to #135481 and #135873.

One of the pleasant properties of the new counter-assignment algorithm is that we can stop partway through the process, store the intermediate state in MIR, and then resume the rest of the algorithm during codegen. This lets it take into account which parts of the control-flow graph were eliminated by MIR opts, resulting in fewer physical counters and simpler counter expressions.

Those improvements end up completely obsoleting much larger chunks of code that were previously responsible for cleaning up the coverage metadata after MIR opts, while also doing a more thorough cleanup job.

(That change also unlocks some further simplifications that I've kept out of this PR to limit its scope.)
2025-02-10 00:51:49 -08:00
Manuel Drehwald
1221cff551 move second opt run to lto phase and cleanup code 2025-02-10 01:35:22 -05:00
bors
c03c38d5c2 Auto merge of #134740 - Flakebi:amdgpu-target, r=workingjubilee
Add amdgpu target

Add amdgpu target to rustc and enable the LLVM target.

Fix compiling `core` with the amdgpu:
The amdgpu backend makes heavy use of different address spaces. This
leads to situations, where a pointer in one addrspace needs to be casted
to a pointer in a different addrspace. `bitcast` is invalid for this
case, `addrspacecast` needs to be used.

Fix compilation failures that created bitcasts for such cases by
creating pointer casts (which creates an `addrspacecast` under the hood)
instead.

MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/823
Tracking issue: #135024
Kinda related to the original amdgpu tracking issue #51575 (though that one has been closed for a while).
2025-02-10 05:18:36 +00:00
Jubilee Young
cd9d39e360 compiler: remove abi-specific extern "{abi}" suggestions
These are either residue of a long-term migration away from something,
or are simply trying too hard to be specifically useful:
nearest-match suggestions for ABI strings should handle this.
2025-02-09 20:45:47 -08:00
Jubilee Young
ca193471b5 tests: error strings for ABI stability now match 2025-02-09 20:45:47 -08:00