Enable verification for 1/32th of queries loaded from disk
This is a limited enabling of incremental verification for query results loaded from disk, which previously did not run without -Zincremental-verify-ich. If enabled for all queries, we see a probably unacceptable hit of ~50% in the worst case, so this pairs back the verification to a more limited set based on the hash key.
Per collected [perf results](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/84227#issuecomment-953350582), this is a regression of at most 7% on coercions opt incr-unchanged, and typically less than 0.5% on other benchmarks (largely limited to incr-unchanged). I believe this is acceptable performance to land, and we can either ratchet it up or down fairly easily.
We have no real sense of whether this will lead to a large amount of assertions in the wild, but since those assertions may lead to miscompilations today, it seems potentially warranted. We have a good bit of lead time until the next stable release, though the holiday season will also start soon; we may wish to discuss the timing of enabling this and weigh the desire to prevent (possible) miscompilations against assertions.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-incr-comp`
Revert "Add rustc lint, warning when iterating over hashmaps"
Fixes perf regressions introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90235 by temporarily reverting the relevant PR.
Build the query vtable directly.
Continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89978.
This shrinks the query interface and attempts to reduce the amount of function pointer calls.
Add support for artifact size profiling
This adds support for profiling artifact file sizes (incremental compilation artifacts and query cache to begin with).
Eventually we want to track this in perf.rlo so we can ensure that file sizes do not change dramatically on each pull request.
This relies on support in measureme: https://github.com/rust-lang/measureme/pull/169. Once that lands we can update this PR to not point to a git dependency.
This was worked on together with `@michaelwoerister.`
r? `@wesleywiser`
Adopt let_else across the compiler
This performs a substitution of code following the pattern:
```
let <id> = if let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
```
To simplify it to:
```
let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
```
By adopting the `let_else` feature (cc #87335).
The PR also updates the syn crate because the currently used version of the crate doesn't support `let_else` syntax yet.
Note: Generally I'm the person who *removes* usages of unstable features from the compiler, not adds more usages of them, but in this instance I think it hopefully helps the feature get stabilized sooner and in a better state. I have written a [comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87335#issuecomment-944846205) on the tracking issue about my experience and what I feel could be improved before stabilization of `let_else`.
Index and hash HIR as part of lowering
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88186
~Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88880 (see merge commit).~
Once HIR is lowered, it is later indexed by the `index_hir` query and hashed for `crate_hash`. This PR moves those post-processing steps to lowering itself. As a side objective, the HIR crate data structure is refactored as an `IndexVec<LocalDefId, Option<OwnerInfo<'hir>>>` where `OwnerInfo` stores all the relevant information for an HIR owner.
r? `@michaelwoerister`
cc `@petrochenkov`
This performs a substitution of code following the pattern:
let <id> = if let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
To simplify it to:
let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
By adopting the let_else feature.
This was already only enabled in debug_assertions builds. Generally, it seems
like most use cases that would use this could also use the -Zself-profile flag
which also tracks cache hits (in all builds), and so the extra cfg's and such
are not really necessary.
This is largely just a small cleanup though, which primarily is intended to make
other changes easier by avoiding the need to deal with this field.
Simplify lazy DefPathHash decoding by using an on-disk hash table.
This PR simplifies the logic around mapping `DefPathHash` values encountered during incremental compilation to valid `DefId`s in the current session. It is able to do so by using an on-disk hash table encoding that allows for looking up values directly, i.e. without deserializing the entire table.
The main simplification comes from not having to keep track of `DefPathHashes` being used during the compilation session.
Specify a log level in tracing instrument macro explicitly.
Additionally reduce the used log level from a default info level to a
debug level (all of those appear to be developer oriented logs, so there
should be no need to include them in release builds).
Refactor query forcing
The control flow in those functions was very complex, with several layers of continuations.
I tried to simplify the implementation, while keeping essentially the same logic.
Now, all code paths go through `try_execute_query` for the actual query execution.
Communication with the `dep_graph` and the live caches are the only difference between query getting/ensuring/forcing.
Previously, `QueryJobInfo` was composed of two parts: a `QueryInfo` and
a `QueryJob`. However, both `QueryInfo` and `QueryJob` have a `span`
field, which seem to be the same. So, the `span` was recorded twice.
Now, `QueryJobInfo` is composed of a `QueryStackFrame` (the other field
of `QueryInfo`) and a `QueryJob`. So, now, the `span` is only recorded
once.
try_execute_query is now able to centralize the path for query
get/ensure/force.
try_execute_query now takes the dep_node as a parameter, so it can
accommodate `force`. This dep_node is an Option to avoid computing it in
the `get` fast path.
try_execute_query now returns both the result and the dep_node_index to
allow the caller to handle the dep graph.
The caller is responsible for marking the dependency.