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.
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`
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) {}
| +
```
This replaces the single Vec allocation with a series of progressively
larger buckets. With the cfg for parallel enabled but with -Zthreads=1,
this looks like a slight regression in i-count and cycle counts (<0.1%).
With the parallel frontend at -Zthreads=4, this is an improvement (-5%
wall-time from 5.788 to 5.4688 on libcore) than our current Lock-based
approach, likely due to reducing the bouncing of the cache line holding
the lock. At -Zthreads=32 it's a huge improvement (-46%: 8.829 -> 4.7319
seconds).
Fix span edition for 2024 RPIT coming from an external macro
This fixes a problem where code generated by an external macro with an RPIT would end up using the call-site edition instead of the macro's edition for the RPIT. When used from a 2024 crate, this caused the code to change behavior to the 2024 capturing rules, which we don't want.
This was caused by the impl-trait lowering code would replace the span with one marked with `DesugaringKind::OpaqueTy` desugaring. However, it was also overriding the edition of the span with the edition of the local crate. Instead it should be using the edition of the span itself.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132917
Mention both release *and* edition breakage for never type lints
This PR makes ~~two changes~~ a change to the never type lints (`dependency_on_unit_never_type_fallback` and `never_type_fallback_flowing_into_unsafe`):
1. Change the wording of the note to mention that the breaking change will be made in an edition _and_ in a future release
2. ~~Make these warnings be reported in deps (hopefully the lints are matured enough)~~
r? ``@compiler-errors``
cc ``@ehuss``
closes#132930
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132817 (Recurse into APITs in `impl_trait_overcaptures`)
- #133021 (Refactor `configure_annotatable`)
- #133045 (tests: Test pac-ret flag merging on clang with LTO)
- #133049 (Change Visitor::visit_precise_capturing_arg so it returns a Visitor::Result)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
This fixes a problem where code generated by an external macro with an
RPIT would end up using the call-site edition instead of the macro's
edition for the RPIT. When used from a 2024 crate, this caused the code
to change behavior to the 2024 capturing rules, which we don't want.
This was caused by the impl-trait lowering code would replace the span
with one marked with `DesugaringKind::OpaqueTy` desugaring. However, it
was also overriding the edition of the span with the edition of the
local crate. Instead it should be using the edition of the span itself.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132917
Recurse into APITs in `impl_trait_overcaptures`
We were previously not detecting cases where an RPIT was located in the return type of an async function, leading to underfiring of the `impl_trait_overcaptures`. This PR does this recursion properly now.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132809
Separate `RemoveLet` span into primary span for `let` and removal
suggestion span for `let `, so that primary span does not include
whitespace.
Fixes: #133031
Signed-off-by: Tyrone Wu <wudevelops@gmail.com>
check_consts: fix error requesting feature gate when that gate is not actually needed
When working on https://github.com/rust-lang/hashbrown/pull/586 I noticed that the compiler asks for the `rustc_private` feature to be enabled if one forgets to set `rustc_const_stable_indirect` on a function -- but enabling `rustc_private` would not actually help. This fixes the diagnostics.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Over in Zed we've noticed that loading crates for a large-ish workspace can take almost 200ms. We've pinned it down to how rustc searches for paths, as it performs a linear search over the list of candidate paths. In our case the candidate list had about 20k entries which we had to iterate over for each dependency being loaded.
This commit introduces a simple FilesIndex that's just a sorted Vec under the hood. Since crates are looked up by both prefix and suffix, we perform a range search on said Vec (which constraints the search space based on prefix) and follow up with a linear scan of entries with matching suffixes.
FilesIndex is also pre-filtered before any queries are performed using available target information; query prefixes/sufixes are based on the target we are compiling for, so we can remove entries that can never match up front.
Overall, this commit brings down build time for us in dev scenarios by about 6%.
100ms might not seem like much, but this is a constant cost that each of our workspace crates has to pay, even when said crate is miniscule.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132790 (Add as_slice/into_slice for IoSlice/IoSliceMut.)
- #132905 ([AIX] Add crate "unwind" to link with libunwind)
- #132977 (Fix compilation error on Solaris due to flock usage)
- #132984 ([illumos] use pipe2 to create anonymous pipes)
- #133019 (docs: Fix missing period and colon in methods for primitive types)
- #133048 (use `&raw` in `{read, write}_unaligned` documentation)
- #133050 (Always inline functions signatures containing `f16` or `f128`)
- #133053 (tests: Fix the SIMD FFI tests with certain x86 configuration)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Always inline functions signatures containing `f16` or `f128`
There are a handful of tier 2 and tier 3 targets that cause a LLVM crash or linker error when generating code that contains `f16` or `f128`. The cranelift backend also does not support these types. To work around this, every function in `std` or `core` that contains these types must be marked `#[inline]` in order to avoid sending any code to the backend unless specifically requested.
However, this is inconvenient and easy to forget. Introduce a check for these types in the frontend that automatically inlines any function signatures that take or return `f16` or `f128`.
Note that this is not a perfect fix because it does not account for the types being passed by reference or as members of aggregate types, but this is sufficient for what is currently needed in the standard library.
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133035
Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133037
There are a handful of tier 2 and tier 3 targets that cause a LLVM crash
or linker error when generating code that contains `f16` or `f128`. The
cranelift backend also does not support these types. To work around
this, every function in `std` or `core` that contains these types must
be marked `#[inline]` in order to avoid sending any code to the backend
unless specifically requested.
However, this is inconvenient and easy to forget. Introduce a check for
these types in the frontend that automatically inlines any function
signatures that take or return `f16` or `f128`.
Note that this is not a perfect fix because it does not account for the
types being passed by reference or as members of aggregate types, but
this is sufficient for what is currently needed in the standard library.
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/133035
Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133037
Skip locking span interner for some syntax context checks
- `from_expansion` now never needs to consult the interner
- `eq_ctxt` now only needs the interner when both spans are fully interned
borrowck diagnostics: suggest borrowing function inputs in generic positions
# Summary
This generalizes borrowck's existing suggestions to borrow instead of moving when passing by-value to a function that's generic in that input. Previously, this was special-cased to `AsRef`/`Borrow`-like traits and `Fn`-like traits. This PR changes it to test if, for a moved place with type `T`, that the callee's signature and clauses don't break if you substitute in `&T` or `&mut T`. For instance, it now works with `Read`/`Write`-like traits.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131413
# Incidental changes
- No longer spuriously suggests mutable borrows of closures in some situations (see e.g. the tests in [tests/ui/closures/2229_closure_analysis/](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/compare/master...dianne:rust:suggest-borrow-generic?expand=1#diff-8dfb200c559f0995d0f2ffa2f23bc6f8041b263e264e5c329a1f4171769787c0)).
- No longer suggests cloning closures that implement `Fn`, since they can be borrowed (see e.g. [tests/ui/moves/borrow-closures-instead-of-move.stderr](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/compare/master...dianne:rust:suggest-borrow-generic?expand=1#diff-5db268aac405eec56d099a72d8b58ac46dab523cf013e29008104840168577fb)).
This keeps the behavior to suppress suggestions of `fn_once.clone()()`. I think it might make sense to suggest it with a "but this might not be your desired behavior" caveat, as is done when something is used after being consumed as the receiver for a method call. That's probably out of the scope of this PR though.
# Limitations and possible improvements
- This doesn't work for receivers of method calls. This is a small change, and I have it implemented locally, but I'm not sure it's useful on its own. In most cases I've found borrowing the receiver would change the call's output type (see below). In other cases (e.g. `Iterator::sum`), borrowing the receiver isn't useful since it's consumed.
- This doesn't work when it would change the call's output type. In general, I figure inserting references into the output type is an unwanted change. However, this also means it doesn't work in cases where the new output type would be effectively the same as the old one. For example, from the rand crate, the iterator returned by [`Rng::sample_iter`](https://docs.rs/rand/latest/rand/trait.Rng.html#method.sample_iter) is effectively the same (modulo regions) whether you borrow or consume the receiver `Rng`, so common usage involves borrowing it. I'm not sure whether the best approach is to add a more complex check of approximate equivalence, to forego checking the call's output type and give spurious suggestions, or to leave it as-is.
- This doesn't work when it would change the call's other input types. Instead, it could suggest borrowing any others that have the same parameter type (but only when suggesting shared borrows). I think this would be a pretty easy change, but I don't think it's very useful so long as the normalized output type can't change.
I'm happy to implement any of these (or other potential improvements to this), but I'm not sure which are common enough patterns to justify the added complexity. Please let me know if any sound worthwhile.
PassWrapper: disable UseOdrIndicator for Asan Win32
As described in https://reviews.llvm.org/D137227 UseOdrIndicator should be disabled on Windows since link.exe does not support duplicate weak definitions.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124390.
Credits also belong to `@1c3t3a` who worked with me on this.
We are currently testing this on a Windows machine.
Handle infer vars in anon consts on stable
Fixes#132955
Diagnostics will sometimes try to replace generic parameters with inference variables in failing goals. This means that if we have some failing goal with an array repeat expr count anon const in it, we will wind up with some `ty::ConstKind::Unevaluated(anon_const_def, [?x])` during diagnostics which will then ICE if we do not handle inference variables correctly on stable when normalizing type system consts.
r? ```@compiler-errors```
This subsumes the suggestions to borrow arguments with `AsRef`/`Borrow` bounds and those to borrow
arguments with `Fn` and `FnMut` bounds. It works for other traits implemented on references as well,
such as `std::io::Read`, `std::io::Write`, and `core::fmt::Write`.
Incidentally, by making the logic for suggesting borrowing closures general, this removes some
spurious suggestions to mutably borrow `FnMut` closures in assignments, as well as an unhelpful
suggestion to add a `Clone` constraint to an `impl Fn` argument.
Important: we know from the `parse_annotatable_with` call above the call
site that only some of the `Annotatable` variants are possible. The
remaining cases can be replaced with `unreachable!`.
They each have a single callsite, and the result is always unwrapped, so
the `Option<Annotatable>` return type is misleading.
Also, the comment at the `configure_annotatable` call site is wrong,
talking about a result vector, so this commit also removes that.
This is setup for unifing the logic for suggestions to borrow arguments in generic positions.
As of this commit, it's still special cases for `AsRef`/`Borrow`-like traits and `Fn`-like traits.
This also downgrades its applicability to MaybeIncorrect. Its suggestion can result in ill-typed
code when the type parameter it suggests providing a different generic argument for appears
elsewhere in the callee's signature or predicates.
As described here UseOdrIndicator should be disabled on Windows
since link.exe does not support duplicate weak definitions
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D137227).
Co-Authored-By: Bastian Kersting <bkersting@google.com>
CFI: Append debug location to CFI blocks
Currently we're not appending debug locations to the inserted CFI blocks. This shows up in #132615 and #100783. This change fixes that by passing down the debug location to the CFI type-test generation and appending it to the blocks.
Credits also belong to `@jakos-sec` who worked with me on this.
clarify `must_produce_diag` ICE for debugging
We have a sanity check to ensure the expensive `trimmed_def_paths` functions are called only when producing diagnostics, and not e.g. on the happy path. The panic often happens IME during development because of randomly printing stuff, causing an ICE if no diagnostics were also emitted.
I have this change locally but figured it could be useful to others, so this PR clarifies the message when this happens during development.
The output currently looks like this by default; it's a bit confusing with words missing:
```
thread 'rustc' panicked at compiler/rustc_errors/src/lib.rs:628:17:
must_produce_diag: `trimmed_def_paths` called but no diagnostics emitted; `with_no_trimmed_paths` for debugging. called at: disabled backtrace
stack backtrace:
0: 0x7ffff79570f6 - std::backtrace_rs::backtrace::libunwind::trace::h33576c57327a3cea
at .../library/std/src/../../backtrace/src/backtrace/libunwind.rs:116:5
1: 0x7ffff79570f6 - std::backtrace_rs::backtrace::trace_unsynchronized::h7972a09393b420db
at .../library/std/src/../../backtrace/src/backtrace/mod.rs:66:5
2: 0x7ffff79570f6 - std::sys::backtrace::_print_fmt::hae8c5bbfbf7a8322
at .../library/std/src/sys/backtrace.rs:66:9
3: 0x7ffff79570f6 - <std::sys::backtrace::BacktraceLock::print::DisplayBacktrace as core::fmt::Display>::fmt::h1fd6a7a210f5b535
...
```
The new output mentions how to get more information and locate where the `with_no_trimmed_paths` call needs to be added.
1. By default, backtraces are disabled:
```
thread 'rustc' panicked at compiler/rustc_errors/src/lib.rs:642:17:
`trimmed_def_paths` called, diagnostics were expected but none were emitted. Use `with_no_trimmed_paths` for debugging. Backtraces are currently disabled: set `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` and re-run to see where it happened.
stack backtrace:
0: 0x7ffff79565f6 - std::backtrace_rs::backtrace::libunwind::trace::h33576c57327a3cea
...
```
2. With backtraces enabled:
```
thread 'rustc' panicked at compiler/rustc_errors/src/lib.rs:642:17:
`trimmed_def_paths` called, diagnostics were expected but none were emitted. Use `with_no_trimmed_paths` for debugging. This happened in the following `must_produce_diag` call's backtrace:
0: <rustc_errors::DiagCtxtHandle>::set_must_produce_diag
at .../compiler/rustc_errors/src/lib.rs:1133:58
1: <rustc_session::session::Session>::record_trimmed_def_paths
at .../compiler/rustc_session/src/session.rs:327:9
2: rustc_middle::ty::print::pretty::trimmed_def_paths
at .../compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/print/pretty.rs:3351:5
...
```
A `\n` could be added here or there, but it didn't matter much whenever I hit this case with the new message.
Make precise capturing suggestion machine-applicable only if it has no APITs
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132932
The only case where this suggestion is not machine-applicable is when we suggest turning arg-position impl trait into type parameters, which may expose type parameters that were not turbofishable before.
Proper support for cross-crate recursive const stability checks
~~Stacked on top of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/132492; only the last three commits are new.~~
In a crate without `staged_api` but with `-Zforce-unstable-if-unmarked`, we now subject all functions marked with `#[rustc_const_stable_indirect]` to recursive const stability checks. We require an opt-in so that by default, a crate can be built with `-Zforce-unstable-if-unmarked` and use nightly features as usual. This property is recorded in the crate metadata so when a `staged_api` crate calls such a function, it sees the `#[rustc_const_stable_indirect]` and allows it to be exposed on stable. This, finally, will let us expose `const fn` from hashbrown on stable.
The second commit makes const stability more like regular stability: via `check_missing_const_stability`, we ensure that all publicly reachable functions have a const stability attribute -- both in `staged_api` crates and `-Zforce-unstable-if-unmarked` crates. To achieve this, we move around the stability computation so that const stability is computed after regular stability is done. This lets us access the final result of the regular stability computation, which we use so that `const fn` can inherit the regular stability (but only if that is "unstable"). Fortunately, this lets us get rid of an `Option` in `ConstStability`.
This is the last PR that I have planned in this series.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Delete the `cfg(not(parallel))` serial compiler
Since it's inception a long time ago, the parallel compiler and its cfgs have been a maintenance burden. This was a necessary evil the allow iteration while not degrading performance because of synchronization overhead.
But this time is over. Thanks to the amazing work by the parallel working group (and the dyn sync crimes), the parallel compiler has now been fast enough to be shipped by default in nightly for quite a while now.
Stable and beta have still been on the serial compiler, because they can't use `-Zthreads` anyways.
But this is quite suboptimal:
- the maintenance burden still sucks
- we're not testing the serial compiler in nightly
Because of these reasons, it's time to end it. The serial compiler has served us well in the years since it was split from the parallel one, but it's over now.
Let the knight slay one head of the two-headed dragon!
#113349
Note that the default is still 1 thread, as more than 1 thread is still fairly broken.
cc `@onur-ozkan` to see if i did the bootstrap field removal correctly, `@SparrowLii` on the sync parts
Since it's inception a long time ago, the parallel compiler and its cfgs
have been a maintenance burden. This was a necessary evil the allow
iteration while not degrading performance because of synchronization
overhead.
But this time is over. Thanks to the amazing work by the parallel
working group (and the dyn sync crimes), the parallel compiler has now
been fast enough to be shipped by default in nightly for quite a while
now.
Stable and beta have still been on the serial compiler, because they
can't use `-Zthreads` anyways.
But this is quite suboptimal:
- the maintenance burden still sucks
- we're not testing the serial compiler in nightly
Because of these reasons, it's time to end it. The serial compiler has
served us well in the years since it was split from the parallel one,
but it's over now.
Let the knight slay one head of the two-headed dragon!
move all mono-time checks into their own folder, and their own query
The mono item collector currently also drives two mono-time checks: the lint for "large moves", and the check whether function calls are done with all the required target features.
Instead of doing this "inside" the collector, this PR refactors things so that we have a new `rustc_monomorphize::mono_checks` module providing a per-instance query that does these checks. We already have a per-instance query for the ABI checks, so this should be "free" for incremental builds. Non-incremental builds might do a bit more work now since we now have two separate MIR visits (in the collector and the mono-time checks) -- but one of them is cached in case the MIR doesn't change, which is nice.
This slightly changes behavior of the large-move check since the "move_size_spans" deduplication logic now only works per-instance, not globally across the entire collector.
Cc `@saethlin` since you're also doing some work related to queries and caching and monomorphization, though I don't know if there's any interaction here.
Make sure to ignore elided lifetimes when pointing at args for fulfillment errors
See the comment I left in the code.
---
If we have something like:
```
fn foo<'a, T: 'a + BoundThatIsNotSatisfied>() {}
```
And the user turbofishes just the type args:
```
foo::<()>();
```
Then if we try pointing at `()` (i.e. the type argument for `T`), we don't actually consider the possibility that the lifetimes may have been left out of the turbofish. We try indexing incorrectly into the HIR args, and bail on the suggestion.
Consolidate type system const evaluation under `traits::evaluate_const`
Part of #130704Fixes#128232Fixes#118545
Removes `ty::Const::{normalize_internal, eval_valtree}` and `InferCtxt::(try_)const_eval_resolve`, consolidating the associated logic into `evaluate_const` in `rustc_trait_selection`. This results in an API for `ty::Const` that is free of any normalization/evaluation functions that would be incorrect to use under `min_generic_const_args`/`associated_const_equality`/`generic_const_exprs` or, more generally, that would be incorrect to use in the presence of generic type system constants.
Moving this logic to `rustc_trait_selection` and out of `rustc_middle` is also a pre-requisite for ensuring that we do not evaluate constants whose where clauses do not hold.
From this point it should be relatively simple (hah) to implement more complex normalization of type system constants such as: checking wf'ness before invoking CTFE machinery, or being able to normalize const aliases that still refer to generic parameters.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Feature gate yield expressions not in 2024
This changes it so that yield expressions are no longer allowed in the 2024 edition without a feature gate. We are currently only reserving the `gen` keyword in the 2024 edition, and not allowing anything else to be implicitly enabled by the edition.
In practice this doesn't have a significant difference since yield expressions can't really be used outside of coroutines or gen blocks, which have their own feature gates. However, it does affect what is accepted pre-expansion, and I would feel more comfortable not allowing yield expressions.
I believe the stabilization process for gen blocks or coroutines will not need to check the edition here, so this shouldn't ever be needed.
Remove attributes from generics in built-in derive macros
Related issue #132561
Removes all attributes from generics in the expanded implementations of built-in derive macros.
Make sure that we suggest turbofishing the right type arg for never suggestion
I had a bug where rust would suggest the wrong arg to turbofish `()` if there were any early-bound lifetimes...
r? WaffleLapkin
Don't use `maybe_unwrap_block` when checking for macro calls in a block expr
Fixes#131915
Using `maybe_unwrap_block` to determine if we are looking at a `{ mac_call!{} }` will fail sometimes as `mac_call!{}` could be a `StmtKind::MacCall` not a `StmtKind::Expr`. This caused the def collector to think that `{ mac_call!{} }` was a non-trivial const argument and create a definition for it even though it should not.
r? `@compiler-errors` cc `@camelid`
cleanup: Remove outdated comment of `thir_body`
When typeck fails, `thir_body` returns `ErrorGuaranteed` rather than empty body.
No other code follows this outdated description except `check_unsafety`, which is also cleaned up in this PR.
Provide placeholder generics for traits in "no method found for type parameter" suggestions
In the diagnostics for the error ``no method named `method` found for type parameter `T` in the current scope [E0599]``, the compiler will suggest adding bounds on `T` for traits that define a method named `method`. However, these suggestions didn't include any generic arguments, so applying them would result in a `missing generics for trait` or `missing lifetime specifier` error. This PR adds placeholder arguments to the suggestion in such cases. Specifically, I tried to base the placeholders off of what's done in suggestions for when generics are missing or too few are provided:
- The placeholder for a parameter without a default is the name of the parameter.
- Placeholders are not provided for parameters with defaults.
Placeholder arguments are enclosed in `/*` and `*/`, and the applicability of the suggestion is downgraded to `Applicability::HasPlaceholders` if any placeholders are provided.
Fixes#132407