Rwlock downgrade
Tracking Issue: #128203
This PR adds a `downgrade` method for `RwLock` / `RwLockWriteGuard` on all currently supported platforms.
Outstanding questions:
- [x] ~~Does the `futex.rs` change affect performance at all? It doesn't seem like it will but we can't be certain until we bench it...~~
- [x] ~~Should the SOLID platform implementation [be ported over](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/128219#discussion_r1693470090) to the `queue.rs` implementation to allow it to support downgrades?~~
Fixup some test directives
- A random comment had somehow been turned into an `//`@`` directive.
- More dubiously I also removed leading spaces from directives in 3 UI tests for consistency. These are the only rustc tests that use that formatting.
r? `@jieyouxu`
Diagnostics for let mut in item context
The diagnostics for `let` at the top level did not account for `let mut`, which [made the error unclear](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/create-a-vector-of-constants-outside-main/121251/1).
I've made the diagnostic always display a link to valid items. I've added dedicated help for `let mut` case that suggests using a `Mutex` (to steer novice users away from the `static mut` trap). Unfortunately, neither the Rust book, nor libstd docs have dedicated section listing all other types for interior-mutable `static`s.
`suggest_borrow_generic_arg`: instantiate clauses properly
This simplifies and fixes the way `suggest_borrow_generic_arg` instantiates callees' predicates when testing them to see if a moved argument can instead be borrowed. Previously, it would ICE if the moved argument's type included a region variable, since it was getting passed to a call of `EarlyBinder::instantiate`. This makes the instantiation much more straightforward, which also fixes the ICE.
Fixes#133118
This also modifies `tests/ui/moves/moved-value-on-as-ref-arg.rs` to have more useful bounds on the tests for suggestions to borrow `Borrow` and `BorrowMut` arguments. With its old tautological `T: BorrowMut<T>` bound, this fix would make it suggest a shared borrow for that argument.
Make rustc consider itself a stable compiler when `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=-1`
Addresses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123404 to allow test writers to specify `//@ rustc-env:RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=-1` to have a given rustc consider itself a stable rustc. This is only intended for testing usages.
I did not use `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=0` because that can be confusing, i.e. one might think that means "not bootstrapping", but "forcing a given rustc to consider itself a stable compiler" is a different use case.
I also added a specific test to check `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP`'s various values and how that interacts with rustc's stability story w.r.t. features and cli flags.
Noticed when trying to write a test for enabling ICE file dumping on stable.
Dunno if this needs a compiler FCP or MCP, but I can file an MCP or ask someone to start an FCP if needed. Note that `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP` is a perma-unstable env var and has no stability guarantees (heh) whatsoever. This does not affect bootstrapping because bootstrap never sets `RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP=-1`. If someone does set that when bootstrapping, it is considered PEBKAC.
Accompanying dev-guide PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/2136
cc `@estebank` and `@rust-lang/wg-diagnostics` for FYI
Check `use<..>` in RPITIT for refinement
`#![feature(precise_capturing_in_traits)]` allows users to write `+ use<>` bounds on RPITITs to control what lifetimes are captured by the RPITIT.
Since RPITITs currently also warn for refinement in implementations, this PR extends that refinement check for cases where we *undercapture* in an implementation, since that may be indirectly "promising" a more relaxed outlives bound than the impl author intended.
For an opaque to be refining, we need to capture *fewer* parameters than those mentioned in the captured params of the trait. For example:
```
trait TypeParam<T> {
fn test() -> impl Sized;
}
// Indirectly capturing a lifetime param through a type param substitution.
impl<'a> TypeParam<&'a ()> for i32 {
fn test() -> impl Sized + use<> {}
//~^ WARN impl trait in impl method captures fewer lifetimes than in trait
}
```
Since the opaque in the method (implicitly) captures `use<Self, T>`, and `Self = i32, T = &'a ()` in the impl, we must mention `'a` in our `use<..>` on the impl.
Tracking:
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130044
Fixes issue 133118.
This also modifies `tests/ui/moves/moved-value-on-as-ref-arg.rs` to have more
useful bounds on the tests for suggestions to borrow `Borrow` and `BorrowMut`
arguments. With its old tautological `T: BorrowMut<T>` bound, this fix would
make it suggest a shared borrow for that argument.
Liberate `aarch64-gnu-debug` from the shackles of `--test-args=clang`
### Changes
- Drop `--test-args=clang` from `aarch64-gnu-debug` so run-make tests that are `//@ needs-force-clang-based-tests` no longer only run if their test name contains `clang` (which is a very cool footgun).
- Reorganize run-make-suport library slightly to accommodate a raw gcc invocation.
- Fix `tests/run-make/mte-ffi/rmake.rs` to use `gcc` instead of *a* c compiler.
try-job: aarch64-gnu
try-job: aarch64-gnu-debug
Let chains tests
Filing this as this marks off two of the open issues in #132833:
* extending the tests for `move-guard-if-let-chain.rs` and `conflicting_bindings.rs` to have chains with multiple let's (one implementation could for example search for the first `let` and then terminate).
* An instance where a temporary lives shorter than with nested ifs, breaking compilation: #103476. This was fixed in the end by the if let rescoping work.
Closes#103476
Trim whitespace in RemoveLet primary span
Separate `RemoveLet` span into primary span for `let` and removal suggestion span for `let `, so that primary span does not include whitespace.
Fixes: #133031
Increase accuracy of `if` condition misparse suggestion
Fix#132656.
Look at the expression that was parsed when trying to recover from a bad `if` condition to determine what was likely intended by the user beyond "maybe this was meant to be an `else` body".
```
error: expected `{`, found `map`
--> $DIR/missing-dot-on-if-condition-expression-fixable.rs:4:30
|
LL | for _ in [1, 2, 3].iter()map(|x| x) {}
| ^^^ expected `{`
|
help: you might have meant to write a method call
|
LL | for _ in [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|x| x) {}
| +
```
If a macro statement has been parsed after `else`, suggest a missing `if`:
```
error: expected `{`, found `falsy`
--> $DIR/else-no-if.rs:47:12
|
LL | } else falsy! {} {
| ---- ^^^^^
| |
| expected an `if` or a block after this `else`
|
help: add an `if` if this is the condition of a chained `else if` statement
|
LL | } else if falsy! {} {
| ++
```
Querify MonoItem collection
Factored out of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131650. These changes are required for post-mono MIR opts, because the previous implementation would load the MIR for every Instance that we traverse (as well as invoke queries on it). The cost of that would grow massively with post-mono MIR opts because we'll need to load new MIR for every Instance, instead of re-using the `optimized_mir` for every Instance with the same DefId.
So the approach here is to add two new queries, `items_of_instance` and `size_estimate`, which contain the specific information about an Instance's MIR that MirUsedCollector and CGU partitioning need, respectively. Caching these significantly increases the size of the query cache, but that's justified by our improved incrementality (I'm sure walking all the MIR for a huge crate scales quite poorly).
This also changes `MonoItems` into a type that will retain the traversal order (otherwise we perturb a bunch of diagnostics), and will also eliminate duplicate findings. Eliminating duplicates removes about a quarter of the query cache size growth.
The perf improvements in this PR are inflated because rustc-perf uses `-Zincremental-verify-ich`, which makes loading MIR a lot slower because MIR contains a lot of Spans and computing the stable hash of a Span is slow. And the primary goal of this PR is to load less MIR. Some squinting at `collector profile_local perf-record +stage1` runs suggests the magnitude of the improvements in this PR would be decreased by between a third and a half if that flag weren't being used. Though this effect may apply to the regressions too since most are incr-full and this change also causes such builds to encode more Spans.
Update cdb annotations for some debuginfo tests with cdb `10.0.26100.2161`
GitHub CI runners [recently updated to Windows Server 2022 (20241113)](https://github.com/actions/runner-images/releases/tag/win22%2F20241113.3) which included Windows Software Development Kit version `10.1.26100.1742`, which transitively shipped a `cdb` version `10.0.26100.2161`.
This changed some cdb output, causing 3 debuginfo tests to fail (see #133107, https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/242791-t-infra/topic/msvc.20update.20causing.20debuginfo.20failures):
```
tests\debuginfo\numeric-types.rs
tests\debuginfo\range-types.rs
tests\debuginfo\unit-type.rs
```
I updated cdb annotations for these 3 tests locally with a matching `cdb` version. However, I am not by any means a cdb expert nor debuginfo expert, I just reblessed the tests to match whatever the new cdb version produces to unblock the tree. It is certainly possible that debuginfo improved/regressed/both with the newer cdb version.
try-job: x86_64-msvc
This is to unblock the tree, a proper fix will need to be investigated.
I think the debuginfo test suite supports revisions, however debugger
directives do not respect such revisions, which is problematic.
It's that 32-bit and 64-bit msvc of course have different integer widths
for `isize` and `usize`, meaning their underlying integer is different
and thus printed differently.
Opt out TaKO8Ki from review rotation for now
Hi `@TaKO8Ki,` I'm opting you out from compiler/diagnostics review rotation for now because I *think* you're very busy recently. Please feel free to re-add yourself (or close this PR) whenever you have more time / feel like it.
Deny capturing late-bound ty/const params in nested opaques
First, this reverts a7f609504c. I can't exactly remember why I approved this specific bit of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132466; specifically, I don't know that the purpose of that commit is, and afaict we will never have an opaque that captures late-bound params through a const because opaques can't be used inside of anon consts. Am I missing something `@cjgillot?` Since I can't see a case where this matters, and no tests seem to fail.
The second commit adds a `deny_late_regions: bool` to distinguish `Scope::LateBoundary` which should deny *any* late-bound params or just ty/consts. Then, when resolving opaques we wrap ourselves in a `Scope::LateBoundary { deny_late_regions: false }` so that we deny late-bound ty/const, which fixes a bunch of ICEs that all vaguely look like `impl for<T> Trait<Assoc = impl OtherTrait<T>>`.
I guess this could be achieved other ways; for example, with a different scope kind, or maybe we could just reuse `Scope::Opaque`. But this seems a bit more verbose. I'm open to feedback anyways.
Fixes#131535Fixes#131637Fixes#132530
I opted to remove those crashes tests ^ without adding them as regular tests, since they're basically triggering uninteresting late-bound ICEs far off in the trait solver, and the reason that existing tests such as `tests/ui/type-alias-impl-trait/non-lifetime-binder-in-constraint.rs` don't ICE are kinda just coincidental (i.e. due to a missing impl block). I don't really feel motivated to add random permutations to tests just to exercise non-lifetime binders.
r? cjgillot
Unify FnKind between AST visitors and make WalkItemKind more straight forward
Unifying `FnKind` requires a bunch of changes to `WalkItemKind::walk` signature so I'll change them in one go
related to #128974
r? `@petrochenkov`
rustdoc search: allow queries to end in an empty path segment
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129707
this can be used to show all items in a module,
or all associated items for a type.
currently sufferes slightly due to case insensitivity, so `Option::` will also show items in the `option::` module.
it disables the checking of the last path element, otherwise only items with short names will be shown
r? `@notriddle`
mark is_val_statically_known intrinsic as stably const-callable
The intrinsic doesn't actually "do" anything in terms of language semantics, and we are already using it in stable const fn. So let's just properly mark it as stably const-callable to avoid needing `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable` (and thus reducing noise and keeping the remaining `rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable` as a more clear signal).
Cc `@rust-lang/lang` usually you have to approve exposing intrinsics in const, but this intrinsic is basically just a compiler implementation detail. So FCP doesn't seem necessary.
Cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`
If a macro statement has been parsed after `else`, suggest a missing `if`:
```
error: expected `{`, found `falsy`
--> $DIR/else-no-if.rs:47:12
|
LL | } else falsy! {} {
| ---- ^^^^^
| |
| expected an `if` or a block after this `else`
|
help: add an `if` if this is the condition of a chained `else if` statement
|
LL | } else if falsy! {} {
| ++
```
Look at the expression that was parsed when trying to recover from a bad `if` condition to determine what was likely intended by the user beyond "maybe this was meant to be an `else` body".
```
error: expected `{`, found `map`
--> $DIR/missing-dot-on-if-condition-expression-fixable.rs:4:30
|
LL | for _ in [1, 2, 3].iter()map(|x| x) {}
| ^^^ expected `{`
|
help: you might have meant to write a method call
|
LL | for _ in [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|x| x) {}
| +
```