Commit Graph

10736 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
8810af8082
Rollup merge of #93227 - compiler-errors:gat-hrtb-wfcheck, r=jackh726
Liberate late bound regions when collecting GAT substs in wfcheck

The issue here is that the [`GATSubstCollector`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/wfcheck.rs#L604) does not currently do anything wrt `Binder`s, so the GAT substs it copies out have escaping late bound regions when it walks through types like `for<'x> fn() -> Self::Gat<'x>`.

I made that visitor call `liberate_late_bound_regions`, not sure if that's the right thing here or we need to do something else to replace these bound vars with placeholders. I'm not familiar with other code doing anything similar.. But the issue is indeed no longer ICEing.

Fixes #92954

r? `@jackh726`
since you last touched this code, feel free to reassign
2022-01-23 20:13:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5adef281d6
Rollup merge of #93226 - compiler-errors:issue-93141, r=jackh726
Normalize field access types during borrowck

I think a normalize was just left out here, since we normalize analogously throughout this file.

Fixes #93141
2022-01-23 20:13:05 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
552b564df0
Rollup merge of #93219 - cr1901:msp430-asm-squashed, r=Amanieu
Add preliminary support for inline assembly for msp430.

The `llvm_asm` macro was removed recently, and the MSP430 backend relies on inline assembly to build useful embedded apps. I conveniently "found" time to implement basic support for the new inline `asm` macro syntax with the help of `@Amanieu` :D.

In addition to tests in the compiler, I have tested this locally against deployed MSP430 code and have not found any noticeable differences in firmware operation or `objdump` disassemblies between the old `llvm_asm` and the new `asm` syntax.
2022-01-23 20:13:04 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0f2ff4b270
Rollup merge of #93213 - c410-f3r:let-chains-feature, r=matthewjasper
Fix `let_chains` and `if_let_guard` feature flags

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93150

cc #53667
2022-01-23 20:13:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
89baf0f162
Rollup merge of #91526 - petrochenkov:earlint, r=cjgillot
rustc_lint: Some early linting refactorings

The first one removes and renames some fields and methods from `EarlyContext`.

The second one uses the set of registered tools (for tool attributes and tool lints) in a more centralized way.

The third one removes creation of a fake `ast::Crate` from `fn pre_expansion_lint`.
Pre-expansion linting is done with per-module granularity on freshly loaded modules, and it previously synthesized an `ast::Crate` to visit non-root modules, now they are visited as modules.
The node ID used for pre-expansion linting is also made more precise (the loaded module ID is used).
2022-01-23 20:13:00 +01:00
Michael Goulet
4a74ace3c9 Liberate late bound regions when collecting GAT substs in wfcheck 2022-01-23 09:41:52 -08:00
bors
84322efad5 Auto merge of #93066 - nnethercote:infallible-decoder, r=bjorn3
Make `Decodable` and `Decoder` infallible.

`Decoder` has two impls:
- opaque: this impl is already partly infallible, i.e. in some places it
  currently panics on failure (e.g. if the input is too short, or on a
  bad `Result` discriminant), and in some places it returns an error
  (e.g. on a bad `Option` discriminant). The number of places where
  either happens is surprisingly small, just because the binary
  representation has very little redundancy and a lot of input reading
  can occur even on malformed data.
- json: this impl is fully fallible, but it's only used (a) for the
  `.rlink` file production, and there's a `FIXME` comment suggesting it
  should change to a binary format, and (b) in a few tests in
  non-fundamental ways. Indeed #85993 is open to remove it entirely.

And the top-level places in the compiler that call into decoding just
abort on error anyway. So the fallibility is providing little value, and
getting rid of it leads to some non-trivial performance improvements.

Much of this PR is pretty boring and mechanical. Some notes about
a few interesting parts:
- The commit removes `Decoder::{Error,error}`.
- `InternIteratorElement::intern_with`: the impl for `T` now has the same
  optimization for small counts that the impl for `Result<T, E>` has,
  because it's now much hotter.
- Decodable impls for SmallVec, LinkedList, VecDeque now all use
  `collect`, which is nice; the one for `Vec` uses unsafe code, because
  that gave better perf on some benchmarks.

r? `@bjorn3`
2022-01-23 15:37:43 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
67cccaff48 expand: Pass everything by reference to pre-expansion lint callback 2022-01-23 19:31:32 +08:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
05cd75504b rustc_lint: Stop creating a fake ast::Crate for running early lints
Add a trait generalizing over the crate root and freshly loaded modules instead
This also makes node IDs used for pre-expansion linting more precise
2022-01-23 19:31:32 +08:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
51b2338611 rustc_lint: Reuse the set of registered tools from resolver 2022-01-23 18:51:51 +08:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
452aa81770 rustc_lint: Remove some redundant fields from EarlyContext
Use consistent function parameter order for early context construction and early linting
Rename some functions to make it clear that they do not necessarily work on the whole crate
2022-01-23 18:51:51 +08:00
bors
16c1a9dd7c Auto merge of #93220 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-9bkrlk0, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #90666 (Stabilize arc_new_cyclic)
 - #91122 (impl Not for !)
 - #93068 (Fix spacing for `·` between stability and source)
 - #93103 (Tweak `expr.await` desugaring `Span`)
 - #93113 (Unify search input and buttons size)
 - #93168 (update uclibc instructions for new toolchain, add link from platforms doc)
 - #93185 (rustdoc: Make some `pub` items crate-private)
 - #93196 (Remove dead code from build_helper)

Failed merges:

 - #93188 (rustdoc: fix bump down typing search on Safari)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-23 09:16:32 +00:00
woppopo
aa6795e2d4 Add intrinsics::const_deallocate 2022-01-23 15:13:44 +09:00
mark
cf382de0cc Remove DiagnosticBuilder.quiet 2022-01-23 00:11:13 -06:00
William D. Jones
19809ed76d Add preliminary support for inline assembly for msp430. 2022-01-22 23:42:46 -05:00
pierwill
4f89224f7f Use an indexmap to avoid sorting LocalDefIds
Update `indexmap` to 1.8.0.

Bless test
2022-01-22 22:34:16 -06:00
Michael Goulet
4ff7e6e3e3 Normalize field access types during borrowck 2022-01-22 20:05:05 -08:00
bors
d13e8dd41d Auto merge of #93165 - eholk:disable-generator-drop-tracking, r=nikomatsakis
Disable drop range tracking in generators

Generator drop tracking caused an ICE for generators involving the Never type (Issue #93161). Since this breaks a test case with miri, we temporarily disable drop tracking so miri is unblocked while we properly fix the issue.
2022-01-23 02:20:50 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
a15252817a
Rollup merge of #93103 - estebank:await-span, r=nagisa
Tweak `expr.await` desugaring `Span`

Fix #93074
2022-01-23 01:09:43 +01:00
Santiago Pastorino
e5f2fdb539
Restructure the code leveraging in abilities more than modes 2022-01-22 18:16:11 -03:00
Ibraheem Ahmed
32ab0b88f4 respect doc(hidden) when suggesting available fields 2022-01-22 15:48:45 -05:00
Caio
cbb0fffe59 Fix let_chains and if_let_guard feature flags 2022-01-22 17:45:45 -03:00
Matthias Krüger
a8f64c0415
Rollup merge of #93153 - tmiasko:reject-unsupported-naked-functions, r=Amanieu
Reject unsupported naked functions

Transition unsupported naked functions future incompatibility lint into an error:

* Naked functions must contain a single inline assembly block. Introduced as future incompatibility lint in 1.50 #79653. Change into an error fixes a soundness issue described in #32489.

* Naked functions must not use any forms of inline attribute. Introduced as future incompatibility lint in 1.56 #87652.

Closes #32490.
Closes #32489.

r? ```@Amanieu``` ```@npmccallum``` ```@joshtriplett```
2022-01-22 15:32:54 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5fd9c059ef
Rollup merge of #93147 - nnethercote:interner-cleanups, r=lcnr
Interner cleanups

Improve some code that I have found confusing.

r? ```@lcnr```
2022-01-22 15:32:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2ecbc4b49d
Rollup merge of #93116 - rust-lang:oli-obk-patch-1, r=jackh726
Simplify use of `map_or`
2022-01-22 15:32:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9d7c8edd6c
Rollup merge of #92828 - Amanieu:unwind-abort, r=dtolnay
Print a helpful message if unwinding aborts when it reaches a nounwind function

This is implemented by routing `TerminatorKind::Abort` back through the panic handler, but with a special flag in the `PanicInfo` which indicates that the panic handler should *not* attempt to unwind the stack and should instead abort immediately.

This is useful for the planned change in https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/97 which would make `Drop` impls `nounwind` by default.

### Code

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

fn panic() {
    panic!()
}

extern "C" fn nounwind() {
    panic();
}

fn main() {
    nounwind();
}
```

### Before

```
$ ./test
thread 'main' panicked at 'explicit panic', test.rs:4:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Illegal instruction (core dumped)
```

### After

```
$ ./test
thread 'main' panicked at 'explicit panic', test.rs:4:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
thread 'main' panicked at 'panic in a function that cannot unwind', test.rs:7:1
stack backtrace:
   0:     0x556f8f86ec9b - <std::sys_common::backtrace::_print::DisplayBacktrace as core::fmt::Display>::fmt::hdccefe11a6ac4396
   1:     0x556f8f88ac6c - core::fmt::write::he152b28c41466ebb
   2:     0x556f8f85d6e2 - std::io::Write::write_fmt::h0c261480ab86f3d3
   3:     0x556f8f8654fa - std::panicking::default_hook::{{closure}}::h5d7346f3ff7f6c1b
   4:     0x556f8f86512b - std::panicking::default_hook::hd85803a1376cac7f
   5:     0x556f8f865a91 - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook::h4dc1c5a3036257ac
   6:     0x556f8f86f079 - std::panicking::begin_panic_handler::{{closure}}::hdda1d83c7a9d34d2
   7:     0x556f8f86edc4 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::h5b70ed0cce71e95f
   8:     0x556f8f865592 - rust_begin_unwind
   9:     0x556f8f85a764 - core::panicking::panic_no_unwind::h2606ab3d78c87899
  10:     0x556f8f85b910 - test::nounwind::hade6c7ee65050347
  11:     0x556f8f85b936 - test::main::hdc6e02cb36343525
  12:     0x556f8f85b7e3 - core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once::h4d02663acfc7597f
  13:     0x556f8f85b739 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h071d40135adb0101
  14:     0x556f8f85c149 - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::h70dbfbf38b685e93
  15:     0x556f8f85c791 - std::rt::lang_start_internal::h798f1c0268d525aa
  16:     0x556f8f85c131 - std::rt::lang_start::h476a7ee0a0bb663f
  17:     0x556f8f85b963 - main
  18:     0x7f64c0822b25 - __libc_start_main
  19:     0x556f8f85ae8e - _start
  20:                0x0 - <unknown>
thread panicked while panicking. aborting.
Aborted (core dumped)
```
2022-01-22 15:32:49 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ffd199d768
Rollup merge of #85967 - atopia:update-l4re-target, r=petrochenkov
add support for the l4-bender linker on the x86_64-unknown-l4re-uclibc tier 3 target

This PR contains the work by ```@humenda``` to update support for the `x86_64-unknown-l4re-uclibc` tier 3 target (published at [humenda/rust](https://github.com/humenda/rust)), rebased and adapted to current rust in follow up commits by myself. The publishing of the rebased changes is authorized and preferred by the original author. As the goal was to distort the original work as little as possible, individual commits introduce changes that are incompatible to the newer code base that the changes were rebased on. These incompatibilities have been remedied in follow up commits, so that the PR as a whole should result in a clean update of the target.
If you prefer another strategy to mainline these changes while preserving attribution, please let me know.
2022-01-22 15:32:48 +01:00
Mateusz Mikuła
bc8cef194b rustc_mir_itertools: Avoid needless collect with itertools 2022-01-22 12:14:42 +01:00
theidexisted
7529c89bce
Add VS 2022 into error message 2022-01-22 17:52:54 +08:00
Jack Huey
ce31f68f9e Move param count error emission to near end of check_argument_types 2022-01-21 23:13:00 -05:00
Jack Huey
762bdbfce7 Change signature of point_at_arg_instead_of_call_if_possible 2022-01-21 23:12:02 -05:00
Nicholas Nethercote
37fbd91eb5 Address review comments. 2022-01-22 10:38:34 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
416399dc10 Make Decodable and Decoder infallible.
`Decoder` has two impls:
- opaque: this impl is already partly infallible, i.e. in some places it
  currently panics on failure (e.g. if the input is too short, or on a
  bad `Result` discriminant), and in some places it returns an error
  (e.g. on a bad `Option` discriminant). The number of places where
  either happens is surprisingly small, just because the binary
  representation has very little redundancy and a lot of input reading
  can occur even on malformed data.
- json: this impl is fully fallible, but it's only used (a) for the
  `.rlink` file production, and there's a `FIXME` comment suggesting it
  should change to a binary format, and (b) in a few tests in
  non-fundamental ways. Indeed #85993 is open to remove it entirely.

And the top-level places in the compiler that call into decoding just
abort on error anyway. So the fallibility is providing little value, and
getting rid of it leads to some non-trivial performance improvements.

Much of this commit is pretty boring and mechanical. Some notes about
a few interesting parts:
- The commit removes `Decoder::{Error,error}`.
- `InternIteratorElement::intern_with`: the impl for `T` now has the same
  optimization for small counts that the impl for `Result<T, E>` has,
  because it's now much hotter.
- Decodable impls for SmallVec, LinkedList, VecDeque now all use
  `collect`, which is nice; the one for `Vec` uses unsafe code, because
  that gave better perf on some benchmarks.
2022-01-22 10:38:31 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
88600a6d7f Rename Decoder::read_nil and read_unit.
Because `()` is called "unit" and it makes it match
`Encoder::emit_unit`.
2022-01-22 10:22:24 +11:00
Santiago Pastorino
e2567b034d
Remove intermediate function doesn't make more sense 2022-01-21 18:23:36 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
19e3c86003
Make strict_disjoint use explicit_disjoint 2022-01-21 18:23:22 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
1ec962fb34
Do not pass OverlapMode down, just create a closure to properly set the filtering 2022-01-21 18:22:24 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
d2d25a5be0
Implement stable with negative coherence mode 2022-01-21 18:22:21 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
c2890ed426
Add overlap mode 2022-01-21 18:21:04 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
b2a45f0645
Extract stable_disjoint fn 2022-01-21 18:20:58 -03:00
Matthias Krüger
ab19d4a515
Rollup merge of #93046 - est31:let_else, r=davidtwco
Use let_else in even more places

Followup of #89933, #91018, #91481.
2022-01-21 22:03:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
1f3a2dd0b1
Rollup merge of #92963 - terrarier2111:tuple-diagnostic, r=davidtwco
Implement tuple array diagnostic

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92089
2022-01-21 22:03:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
430673f265
Rollup merge of #92843 - camelid:str-concat-sugg, r=davidtwco
Improve string concatenation suggestion

Before:

    error[E0369]: cannot add `&str` to `&str`
     --> file.rs:2:22
      |
    2 |     let _x = "hello" + " world";
      |              ------- ^ -------- &str
      |              |       |
      |              |       `+` cannot be used to concatenate two `&str` strings
      |              &str
      |
    help: `to_owned()` can be used to create an owned `String` from a string reference. String concatenation appends the string on the right to the string on the left and may require reallocation. This requires ownership of the string on the left
      |
    2 |     let _x = "hello".to_owned() + " world";
      |              ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

After:

    error[E0369]: cannot add `&str` to `&str`
     --> file.rs:2:22
      |
    2 |     let _x = "hello" + " world";
      |              ------- ^ -------- &str
      |              |       |
      |              |       `+` cannot be used to concatenate two `&str` strings
      |              &str
      |
      = note: string concatenation requires an owned `String` on the left
    help: create an owned `String` from a string reference
      |
    2 |     let _x = "hello".to_owned() + " world";
      |                     +++++++++++
2022-01-21 22:03:15 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e38cbc78aa
Rollup merge of #92835 - iwanders:issue-66450-improve-cfg-error-message, r=nagisa
Improve error message for key="value" cfg arguments.

Hi, I ran into difficulties using the `--cfg` flag syntax, first hit when googling for the error was issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66450. Reading that issue, it sounded like the best way to improve the experience was to improve the error message, this is low risk and doesn't introduce any additional argument parsing.

The issue mentions that it is entirely dependent on the shell, while this may be true, I think guiding the the user into the realization that the quotes may need to be escaped is helpful. The two suggested escapings both work in Bash and in the Windows command prompt.

fyi `@ehuss`
2022-01-21 22:03:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
10c9ec399e
Rollup merge of #92467 - Aaron1011:extern-local-region, r=oli-obk
Ensure that early-bound function lifetimes are always 'local'

During borrowchecking, we treat any free (early-bound) regions on
the 'defining type' as `RegionClassification::External`. According
to the doc comments, we should only have 'external' regions when
checking a closure/generator.

However, a plain function can also have some if its regions
be considered 'early bound' - this occurs when the region is
constrained by an argument, appears in a `where` clause, or
in an opaque type. This was causing us to incorrectly mark these
regions as 'external', which caused some diagnostic code
to act as if we were referring to a 'parent' region from inside
a closure.

This PR marks all instantiated region variables as 'local'
when we're borrow-checking something other than a
closure/generator/inline-const.
2022-01-21 22:03:12 +01:00
Wesley Wiser
1a0278e1d1 Work around missing code coverage data causing llvm-cov failures
If we do not add code coverage instrumentation to the `Body` of a
function, then when we go to generate the function record for it, we
won't write any data and this later causes llvm-cov to fail when
processing data for the entire coverage report.

I've identified two main cases where we do not currently add code
coverage instrumentation to the `Body` of a function:

  1. If the function has a single `BasicBlock` and it ends with a
     `TerminatorKind::Unreachable`.

  2. If the function is created using a proc macro of some kind.

For case 1, this typically not important as this most often occurs as
the result of function definitions that take or return uninhabited
types. These kinds of functions, by definition, cannot even be called so
they logically should not be counted in code coverage statistics.

For case 2, I haven't looked into this very much but I've noticed while
testing this patch that (other than functions which are covered by case
1) the skipped function coverage debug message is occasionally triggered
in large crate graphs by functions generated from a proc macro. This may
have something to do with weird spans being generated by the proc macro
but this is just a guess.

I think it's reasonable to land this change since currently, we fail to
generate *any* results from llvm-cov when a function has no coverage
instrumentation applied to it. With this change, we get coverage data
for all functions other than the two cases discussed above.
2022-01-21 19:39:18 +00:00
Eric Holk
ead84d0895 Add reference to breakage this works around 2022-01-21 11:06:14 -08:00
Eric Holk
13090889f5 Disable drop range tracking in generators
Generator drop tracking caused an ICE for generators involving the Never
type (Issue #93161). Since this breaks miri, we temporarily disable drop
tracking so miri is unblocked while we properly fix the issue.
2022-01-21 09:36:24 -08:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
29d623528d Gate l4-bender linker flavor 2022-01-21 16:51:10 +01:00
Benjamin Lamowski
660d993c64 adapt L4Bender implementation
- Fix style errors.

- L4-bender does not yet support dynamic linking.

- Stack unwinding is not yet supported for x86_64-unknown-l4re-uclibc.
  For now, just abort on panics.

- Use GNU-style linker options where possible. As suggested by review:
    - Use standard GNU-style ld syntax for relro flags.
    - Use standard GNU-style optimization flags and logic.
    - Use standard GNU-style ld syntax for --subsystem.

- Don't read environment variables in L4Bender linker. Thanks to
  CARGO_ENCODED_RUSTFLAGS introduced in #9601, l4-bender's arguments can
  now be passed from the L4Re build system without resorting to custom
  parsing of environment variables.
2022-01-21 16:50:33 +01:00
Sebastian Humenda
d98428711e Add L4Bender as linker variant 2022-01-21 16:28:33 +01:00
Santiago Pastorino
052b31b587
Move auxiliary fns out of overlap_with_probe 2022-01-21 10:53:17 -03:00
Santiago Pastorino
f518827503
Use impl1 and impl2 instead of a and b prefixes 2022-01-21 10:50:42 -03:00
Cameron Steffen
b11733534d Remove a span from hir::ExprKind::MethodCall 2022-01-21 07:48:10 -06:00
bors
84e918971d Auto merge of #92896 - lqd:update-deps, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update some rustc dependencies to deduplicate them

This PR updates `rand` and `itertools` in rustc (not the whole workspace) in order to deduplicate them (and hopefully slightly improve compile times).

~~Currently, `object` is still duplicated, but https://github.com/rust-lang/thorin/pull/15 and updating `thorin` in the future will remove the use of version 0.27.~~  Update: Thorin 0.2 has now been released, and this PR updates `rustc_codegen_ssa` to use it and deduplicate the `object` crate.

There's a final tiny rustc dependency, `cfg-if`, which will be left: as both versions 0.1.x and 1.0 looked to be heavily depended on, they will require a few cascading updates to be removed.
2022-01-21 10:38:30 +00:00
bors
0bcacb391b Auto merge of #91359 - dtolnay:args, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Emit simpler code from format_args

I made this PR so that `cargo expand` dumps a less overwhelming amount of formatting-related code.

<br>

`println!("rust")` **Before:**

```rust
{
    ::std::io::_print(::core::fmt::Arguments::new_v1(&["rust\n"],
                                                     &match () {
                                                          _args => [],
                                                      }));
};
```

**After:**

```rust
{ ::std::io::_print(::core::fmt::Arguments::new_v1(&["rust\n"], &[])); };
```

`println!("{}", x)` **Before:**

```rust
{
    ::std::io::_print(::core::fmt::Arguments::new_v1(
        &["", "\n"],
        &match (&x,) {
            _args => [::core::fmt::ArgumentV1::new(
                _args.0,
                ::core::fmt::Display::fmt,
            )],
        },
    ));
};
```

**After:**

```rust
{
    ::std::io::_print(::core::fmt::Arguments::new_v1(
        &["", "\n"],
        &[::core::fmt::ArgumentV1::new(&x, ::core::fmt::Display::fmt)],
    ));
};
```
2022-01-21 06:20:18 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
d46ed5d333 Clarify some code relating to interning and types.
I have found this code very confusing at times. This commit clarifies
things.

In particular, the commit explains the requirements that the `Borrow`
impls put on the `Eq` and `Hash` impls, which are non-obvious. And it
puts the `Borrow` impls first, since they force `Eq` and `Hash` to have
particular forms.

The commit also notes `TyS`'s uniqueness requirements.
2022-01-21 14:38:43 +11:00
bors
523be2e05d Auto merge of #93138 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-m8akifd, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 17 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #91032 (Introduce drop range tracking to generator interior analysis)
 - #92856 (Exclude "test" from doc_auto_cfg)
 - #92860 (Fix errors on blanket impls by ignoring the children of generated impls)
 - #93038 (Fix star handling in block doc comments)
 - #93061 (Only suggest adding `!` to expressions that can be macro invocation)
 - #93067 (rustdoc mobile: fix scroll offset when jumping to internal id)
 - #93086 (Add tests to ensure that `let_chains` works with `if_let_guard`)
 - #93087 (Fix src/test/run-make/raw-dylib-alt-calling-convention)
 - #93091 (⬆ chalk to 0.76.0)
 - #93094 (src/test/rustdoc-json: Check for `struct_field`s in `variant_tuple_struct.rs`)
 - #93098 (Show a more informative panic message when `DefPathHash` does not exist)
 - #93099 (rustdoc: auto create output directory when "--output-format json")
 - #93102 (Pretty printer algorithm revamp step 3)
 - #93104 (Support --bless for pp-exact pretty printer tests)
 - #93114 (update comment for `ensure_monomorphic_enough`)
 - #93128 (Add script to prevent point releases with same number as existing ones)
 - #93136 (Backport the 1.58.1 release notes to master)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2022-01-21 03:04:43 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
beeba4bcea Reject may_unwind option in naked functions 2022-01-21 00:00:00 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
888332fee4 Reject unsupported naked functions
Transition unsupported naked functions future incompatibility lint into
an error:

* Naked functions must contain a single inline assembly block.
  Introduced as future incompatibility lint in 1.50 #79653.
  Change into an error fixes a soundness issue described in #32489.

* Naked functions must not use any forms of inline attribute.
  Introduced as future incompatibility lint in 1.56 #87652.
2022-01-21 17:38:21 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
c55819ae60 Make stability interning follow the usual pattern. 2022-01-21 10:14:18 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
b8df581ef8
Rollup merge of #93114 - lcnr:mk_array, r=RalfJung
update comment for `ensure_monomorphic_enough`

r? `@RalfJung`
2022-01-20 23:37:42 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d4ec46444b
Rollup merge of #93102 - dtolnay:ringbuffer, r=lcnr
Pretty printer algorithm revamp step 3

This PR follows #93065 as a third chunk of minor modernizations backported from https://github.com/dtolnay/prettyplease into rustc_ast_pretty.

I've broken this up into atomic commits that hopefully are sensible in isolation. At every commit, the pretty printer is compilable and has runtime behavior that is identical to before and after the PR. None of the refactoring so far changes behavior.

This PR is the last chunk of non-behavior-changing cleanup. After this the **next PR** will begin backporting behavior changes from `prettyplease`, starting with block indentation:

```rust
macro_rules! print_expr {
    ($expr:expr) => {
        println!("{}", stringify!($expr));
    };
}

fn main() {
    print_expr!(Struct { x: 0, y: 0 });
    print_expr!(Structtttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt { xxxxxxxxx: 0, yyyyyyyyy: 0 });
}
```

Output currently on master (nowhere near modern Rust style):

```console
Struct{x: 0, y: 0,}
Structtttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt{xxxxxxxxx: 0,
                                                         yyyyyyyyy: 0,}
```

After the upcoming PR for block indentation (based on 401d60c042):

```console
Struct { x: 0, y: 0, }
Structtttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt {
    xxxxxxxxx: 0,
    yyyyyyyyy: 0,
}
```

And the PR after that, for intelligent trailing commas (based on e2a0297f17):

```console
Struct { x: 0, y: 0 }
Structtttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt {
    xxxxxxxxx: 0,
    yyyyyyyyy: 0,
}
```
2022-01-20 23:37:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e901b24310
Rollup merge of #93098 - Aaron1011:def-path-hash-debug, r=oli-obk
Show a more informative panic message when `DefPathHash` does not exist

This should hopefully make it easier to debug incremental compilation
bugs like #93096 without affecting performance.
2022-01-20 23:37:38 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
b1a405df19
Rollup merge of #93091 - pierwill:chalk-0.76, r=jackh726
⬆ chalk to 0.76.0

This update contains https://github.com/rust-lang/chalk/pull/740, which is needed for work on #90317.
2022-01-20 23:37:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
dc393b2ecc
Rollup merge of #93061 - estebank:macr-suggestion, r=cjgillot
Only suggest adding `!` to expressions that can be macro invocation
2022-01-20 23:37:33 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
aa7f4520a1
Rollup merge of #93038 - GuillaumeGomez:block-doc-comments, r=notriddle
Fix star handling in block doc comments

Fixes #92872.

Some extra explanation about this PR and why https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92357 created this regression: when we merge doc comment kinds for example in:

```rust
/// he
/**
* hello
*/
#[doc = "boom"]
```

We don't want to remove the empty lines between them. However, to correctly compute the "horizontal trim", we still need it, so instead, I put back a part of the "vertical trim" directly in the "horizontal trim" computation so it doesn't impact the output buffer but allows us to correctly handle the stars.

r? ``@camelid``
2022-01-20 23:37:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3d10c64b26
Rollup merge of #91032 - eholk:generator-drop-tracking, r=nikomatsakis
Introduce drop range tracking to generator interior analysis

This PR addresses cases such as this one from #57478:
```rust
struct Foo;
impl !Send for Foo {}

let _: impl Send = || {
    let guard = Foo;
    drop(guard);
    yield;
};
```

Previously, the `generator_interior` pass would unnecessarily include the type `Foo` in the generator because it was not aware of the behavior of `drop`. We fix this issue by introducing a drop range analysis that finds portions of the code where a value is guaranteed to be dropped. If a value is dropped at all suspend points, then it is no longer included in the generator type. Note that we are using "dropped" in a generic sense to include any case in which a value has been moved. That is, we do not only look at calls to the `drop` function.

There are several phases to the drop tracking algorithm, and we'll go into more detail below.
1. Use `ExprUseVisitor` to find values that are consumed and borrowed.
2. `DropRangeVisitor` uses consume and borrow information to gather drop and reinitialization events, as well as build a control flow graph.
3. We then propagate drop and reinitialization information through the CFG until we reach a fix point (see `DropRanges::propagate_to_fixpoint`).
4. When recording a type (see `InteriorVisitor::record`), we check the computed drop ranges to see if that value is definitely dropped at the suspend point. If so, we skip including it in the type.

## 1. Use `ExprUseVisitor` to find values that are consumed and borrowed.

We use `ExprUseVisitor` to identify the places where values are consumed. We track both the `hir_id` of the value, and the `hir_id` of the expression that consumes it. For example, in the expression `[Foo]`, the `Foo` is consumed by the array expression, so after the array expression we can consider the `Foo` temporary to be dropped.

In this process, we also collect values that are borrowed. The reason is that the MIR transform for generators conservatively assumes anything borrowed is live across a suspend point (see `rustc_mir_transform::generator::locals_live_across_suspend_points`). We match this behavior here as well.

## 2. Gather drop events, reinitialization events, and control flow graph

After finding the values of interest, we perform a post-order traversal over the HIR tree to find the points where these values are dropped or reinitialized. We use the post-order index of each event because this is how the existing generator interior analysis refers to the position of suspend points and the scopes of variables.

During this traversal, we also record branching and merging information to handle control flow constructs such as `if`, `match`, and `loop`. This is necessary because values may be dropped along some control flow paths but not others.

## 3. Iterate to fixed point

The previous pass found the interesting events and locations, but now we need to find the actual ranges where things are dropped. Upon entry, we have a list of nodes ordered by their position in the post-order traversal. Each node has a set of successors. For each node we additionally keep a bitfield with one bit per potentially consumed value. The bit is set if we the value is dropped along all paths entering this node.

To compute the drop information, we first reverse the successor edges to find each node's predecessors. Then we iterate through each node, and for each node we set its dropped value bitfield to the intersection of all incoming dropped value bitfields.

If any bitfield for any node changes, we re-run the propagation loop again.

## 4. Ignore dropped values across suspend points

At this point we have a data structure where we can ask whether a value is guaranteed to be dropped at any post order index for the HIR tree. We use this information in `InteriorVisitor` to check whether a value in question is dropped at a particular suspend point. If it is, we do not include that value's type in the generator type.

Note that we had to augment the region scope tree to include all yields in scope, rather than just the last one as we did before.

r? `@nikomatsakis`
2022-01-20 23:37:29 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6c627d25f6
Rollup merge of #93038 - GuillaumeGomez:block-doc-comments, r=notriddle
Fix star handling in block doc comments

Fixes #92872.

Some extra explanation about this PR and why https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92357 created this regression: when we merge doc comment kinds for example in:

```rust
/// he
/**
* hello
*/
#[doc = "boom"]
```

We don't want to remove the empty lines between them. However, to correctly compute the "horizontal trim", we still need it, so instead, I put back a part of the "vertical trim" directly in the "horizontal trim" computation so it doesn't impact the output buffer but allows us to correctly handle the stars.

r? `@camelid`
2022-01-20 17:10:41 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5c10dbd85f
Rollup merge of #92704 - 5225225:std_mem_transmute_ref_t_mut_t, r=michaelwoerister
Change lint message to be stronger for &T -> &mut T transmute

The old message implied that it's only UB if you use the reference to mutate, which (as far as I know) is not true. As in, the following program has UB, and a &T -> &mut T transmute is effectively an `unreachable_unchecked`.

```rust
fn main() {
    #[allow(mutable_transmutes)]
    unsafe {
        let _ = std::mem::transmute::<&i32, &mut i32>(&0);
    }
}
```

In the future, it might be a good idea to use the edition system to make this a hard error, since I don't think it is *ever* defined behaviour? Unless we rule that `&UnsafeCell<i32> -> &mut i32` is fine. (That, and you always could just use `.get()`, so you're not losing anything)
2022-01-20 17:10:37 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
db1253f1d2
Rollup merge of #92582 - lcnr:generic-arg-infer, r=BoxyUwU
improve `_` constants in item signature handling

removing the "type" from the error messages does slightly worsen the error messages for types, but figuring out whether the placeholder is for a type or a constant and correctly dealing with that seemed fairly difficult to me so I took the easy way out  Imo the error message is still clear enough.

r? `@BoxyUwU` cc `@estebank`
2022-01-20 17:10:35 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
413f490677
Rollup merge of #92183 - tmandry:issue-74256, r=estebank
Point at correct argument when async fn output type lifetime disagrees with signature

Fixes most of #74256.

## Problems fixed

This PR fixes a couple of related problems in the error reporting code.

### Highlighting the wrong argument

First, the error reporting code was looking at the desugared return type of an `async fn` to decide which parameter to highlight. For example, a function like

```rust
async fn async_fn(self: &Struct, f: &u32) -> &u32
{ f }
```

desugars to

```rust
async fn async_fn<'a, 'b>(self: &'a Struct, f: &'b u32)
-> impl Future<Output = &'a u32> + 'a + 'b
{ f }
```

Since `f: &'b u32` is returned but the output type is `&'a u32`, the error would occur when checking that `'a: 'b`.

The reporting code would look to see if the "offending" lifetime `'b` was included in the return type, and because the code was looking at the desugared future type, it was included. So it defaulted to reporting that the source of the other lifetime `'a` (the `self` type) was the problem, when it was really the type of `f`. (Note that if it had chosen instead to look at `'a` first, it too would have been included in the output type, and it would have arbitrarily reported the error (correctly this time) on the type of `f`.)

Looking at the actual future type isn't useful for this reason; it captures all input lifetimes. Using the written return type for `async fn` solves this problem and results in less confusing error messages for the user.

This isn't a perfect fix, unfortunately; writing the "manually desugared" form of the above function still results in the wrong parameter being highlighted. Looking at the output type of every `impl Future` return type doesn't feel like a very principled approach, though it might work. The problem would remain for function signatures that look like the desugared one above but use different traits. There may be deeper changes required to pinpoint which part of each type is conflicting.

### Lying about await point capture causing lifetime conflicts

The second issue fixed by this PR is the unnecessary complexity in `try_report_anon_anon_conflict`. It turns out that the root cause I suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76547#issuecomment-692863608 wasn't really the root cause. Adding special handling to report that a variable was captured over an await point only made the error messages less correct and pointed to a problem other than the one that actually occurred.

Given the above discussion, it's easy to see why: `async fn`s capture all input lifetimes in their return type, so holding an argument across an await point should never cause a lifetime conflict! Removing the special handling simplified the code and improved the error messages (though they still aren't very good!)

## Future work

* Fix error reporting on the "desugared" form of this code
* Get the `suggest_adding_lifetime_params` suggestion firing on these examples
  * cc #42703, I think

r? `@estebank`
2022-01-20 17:10:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
02379e917b
Rollup merge of #91606 - joshtriplett:stabilize-print-link-args, r=pnkfelix
Stabilize `-Z print-link-args` as `--print link-args`

We have stable options for adding linker arguments; we should have a
stable option to help debug linker arguments.

Add documentation for the new option. In the documentation, make it clear that
the *exact* format of the output is not a stable guarantee.
2022-01-20 17:10:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d188287a54
Rollup merge of #89764 - tmiasko:uninhabited-enums, r=wesleywiser
Fix variant index / discriminant confusion in uninhabited enum branching

Fix confusion between variant index and variant discriminant. The pass
incorrectly assumed that for `Variants::Single` variant index is the same as
variant discriminant.

r? `@wesleywiser`
2022-01-20 17:10:31 +01:00
Oli Scherer
8d0d023964
Simplify use of map_or 2022-01-20 15:41:00 +01:00
Rémy Rakic
820fd05e29 Update thorin-dwp to deduplicate object 2022-01-20 15:09:05 +01:00
lcnr
c29b637875 update comments 2022-01-20 14:50:35 +01:00
Esteban Kuber
7356e28abb Tweak expr.await desugaring Span
Fix #93074
2022-01-20 04:09:46 +00:00
Michael Goulet
b7e4433974 Foreign types are trivially drop
- Also rename a trivial_const_drop to match style of other functions in
  the util module.
- Also add a test for `const Drop` that doesn't depend on a `~const`
  bound.
- Also comment a bit why we remove the const bound during dropck impl
  check.
2022-01-19 20:07:04 -08:00
David Tolnay
21c1571e79
Deduplicate branches of print_break implementation 2022-01-19 19:04:36 -08:00
David Tolnay
51eeb82d9d
Inline print_newline function 2022-01-19 19:04:35 -08:00
David Tolnay
224536f4fe
Inline indent function 2022-01-19 19:04:35 -08:00
David Tolnay
9e794d7de3
Eliminate offset number from Fits frames
PrintStackElems with pbreak=PrintStackBreak::Fits always carried a
meaningless value offset=0. We can combine the two types PrintStackElem
+ PrintStackBreak into one PrintFrame enum that stores offset only for
Broken frames.
2022-01-19 19:04:34 -08:00
David Tolnay
65dd67096e
Touch up print_string 2022-01-19 19:04:33 -08:00
David Tolnay
d5f15a8c18
Replace all single character variable names 2022-01-19 19:04:32 -08:00
David Tolnay
ea23a1fac7
Combine advance_left matches 2022-01-19 19:04:31 -08:00
David Tolnay
ae75ba692a
Inline print into advance_left 2022-01-19 19:04:30 -08:00
David Tolnay
d2eb46cfec
Simplify advance_left 2022-01-19 19:03:53 -08:00
David Tolnay
351011ec3f
Simplify left_total tracking 2022-01-19 19:02:56 -08:00
David Tolnay
d981c5b354
Eliminate a token clone from advance_left 2022-01-19 19:02:25 -08:00
David Tolnay
d81740ed2a
Grow scan_stack in the conventional direction
The pretty printer algorithm involves 2 VecDeques: a ring-buffer of
tokens and a deque of ring-buffer indices. Confusingly, those two deques
were being grown in opposite directions for no good reason. Ring-buffer
pushes would go on the "back" of the ring-buffer (i.e. higher indices)
while scan_stack pushes would go on the "front" (i.e. lower indices).
This commit flips the scan_stack accesses to grow the scan_stack and
ring-buffer in the same direction, where push does the same
operation as a Vec push i.e. inserting on the high-index end.
2022-01-19 18:32:18 -08:00
David Tolnay
eec6016ec3
Delete unused Display for pretty printer Token 2022-01-19 18:31:36 -08:00
Aaron Hill
70d36a05bc
Show a more informative panic message when DefPathHash does not exist
This should hopefully make it easier to debug incremental compilation
bugs like #93096 without affecting performance.
2022-01-19 17:36:44 -05:00
Aaron Hill
c8941d3e48
Store a Symbol instead of an Ident in AssocItem
This is the same idea as #92533, but for `AssocItem` instead
of `VariantDef`/`FieldDef`.

With this change, we no longer have any uses of
`#[stable_hasher(project(...))]`
2022-01-19 17:13:21 -05:00
Tyler Mandry
698631e16c Simplify error reporting code, remove await point wording 2022-01-19 21:33:57 +00:00
Tyler Mandry
5c15ad7fca NiceRegionError: Use written return type for async fn 2022-01-19 21:33:57 +00:00
Tyler Mandry
6487845884 Properly account for binders in get_impl_future_output_ty 2022-01-19 21:33:57 +00:00
Michael Goulet
8547f5732c never is trivially const-drop, and add test 2022-01-19 12:59:28 -08:00
Amanieu d'Antras
5eb6fff824 Add links to the reference and rust by example for asm! docs and lints 2022-01-19 20:00:10 +00:00
pierwill
8d27c28e39 ⬆ chalk to 0.76.0 2022-01-19 13:44:43 -06:00
pierwill
7f16d0ed54 Remove ordering traits from rustc_borrowck::constraints::OutlivesConstraint
In two cases where this ordering was used, I've replaced the sorting
to use a key that does not include DefId. I'm not sure this is correct
in terms of our goals from #90317, or otherwise.
2022-01-19 13:12:26 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
43d508bb78
Rollup merge of #93077 - lcnr:write_substs, r=oli-obk
remove `List::is_noop`

think that `is_noop` is actually less clear than just using `is_empty`
2022-01-19 19:19:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
fe93f08051
Rollup merge of #93065 - dtolnay:ringbuffer, r=lcnr
Pretty printer algorithm revamp step 2

This PR follows #92923 as a second chunk of modernizations backported from https://github.com/dtolnay/prettyplease into rustc_ast_pretty.

I've broken this up into atomic commits that hopefully are sensible in isolation. At every commit, the pretty printer is compilable and has runtime behavior that is identical to before and after the PR. None of the refactoring so far changes behavior.

The general theme of this chunk of commits is: the logic in the old pretty printer is doing some very basic things (pushing and popping tokens on a ring buffer) but expressed in a too-low-level way that I found makes it quite complicated/subtle to reason about. There are a number of obvious invariants that are "almost true" -- things like `self.left == self.buf.offset` and `self.right == self.buf.offset + self.buf.data.len()` and `self.right_total == self.left_total + self.buf.data.sum()`. The reason these things are "almost true" is the implementation tends to put updating one side of the invariant unreasonably far apart from updating the other side, leaving the invariant broken while unrelated stuff happens in between. The following code from master is an example of this:

e5e2b0be26/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pp.rs (L314-L317)

In this code the `advance_right` is reserving an entry into which to write a next token on the right side of the ring buffer, the `check_stack` is doing something totally unrelated to the right boundary of the ring buffer, and the `scan_push` is actually writing the token we previously reserved space for. Much of what this PR is doing is rearranging code to shrink the amount of stuff in between when an invariant is broken to when it is restored, until the whole thing can be factored out into one indivisible method call on the RingBuffer type.

The end state of the PR is that we can entirely eliminate `self.left` (because it's now just equal to `self.buf.offset` always) and `self.right` (because it's equal to `self.buf.offset + self.buf.data.len()` always) and the whole `Token::Eof` state which used to be the value of tokens that have been reserved space for but not yet written.

I found without these changes the pretty printer implementation to be hard to reason about and I wasn't able to confidently introduce improvements like trailing commas in `prettyplease` until after this refactor. The logic here is 43 years old at this point (Graydon translated it as directly as possible from the 1979 pretty printing paper) and while there are advantages to following the paper as closely as possible, in `prettyplease` I decided if we're going to adapt the algorithm to work better for Rust syntax, it was worthwhile making it easier to follow than the original.
2022-01-19 19:19:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
715cda2e81
Rollup merge of #92316 - petrochenkov:extmangle, r=wesleywiser
mangling_v0: Skip extern blocks during mangling

There's no need to include the dummy `Nt` into the symbol name, items in extern blocks belong to their parent modules for all purposes except for inheriting the ABI and attributes.

Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92032

(There's also a drive-by fix to the `rust-demangler` tool's tests, which don't run on CI, I initially attempted using them for testing this PR.)
2022-01-19 19:19:45 +01:00
Esteban Kuber
017747fa5a Only suggest adding ! to expressions that can be macro invocation 2022-01-19 18:00:10 +00:00
lcnr
4bd571c4ff remove is_noop 2022-01-19 13:58:29 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
2938be612d Correctly handle starts in block doc comments 2022-01-19 11:18:17 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0b9056c38a
Rollup merge of #93041 - pierwill:rm-unused-defid-ords, r=cjgillot
Remove some unused ordering derivations based on `DefId`

Like #93018, this removes some unused/unneeded ordering derivations as part of ongoing work on #90317. Here, these changes are aimed at making https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90749 easier to review, test, and merge.

r? `@cjgillot`
2022-01-19 10:42:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
420ada6f8a
Rollup merge of #92920 - dtolnay:printtidy, r=cjgillot
Move expr- and item-related pretty printing functions to modules

Currently *compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pprust/state.rs* is 2976 lines on master. The `tidy` limit is 3000, which is blocking #92243.

This PR adds a `mod expr;` and `mod item;` to move logic related to those AST nodes out of the single huge file.
2022-01-19 10:42:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9a82f74cdf
Rollup merge of #92783 - FabianWolff:issue-92726, r=nikomatsakis
Annotate dead code lint with notes about ignored derived impls

Fixes #92726. CC `@pmetzger,` is this what you had in mind?

r? `@nikomatsakis`
2022-01-19 10:42:16 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
3a1db90efb
Rollup merge of #91278 - SparrowLii:place, r=spastorino
Use iterator instead of recursion in `codegen_place`

This PR fixes the FIXME in `codegen_place` about using iterator instead of recursion when processing the `projection` field in `mir::PlaceRef`. At the same time, it also reduces the right drift.
2022-01-19 10:42:14 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5d2928f7b9
Rollup merge of #88642 - c410-f3r:let_chains_2, r=matthewjasper
Formally implement let chains

## Let chains

My longest and hardest contribution since #64010.

Thanks to `@Centril` for creating the RFC and special thanks to `@matthewjasper` for helping me since the beginning of this journey. In fact, `@matthewjasper` did much of the complicated MIR stuff so it's true to say that this feature wouldn't be possible without him. Thanks again `@matthewjasper!`

With the changes proposed in this PR, it will be possible to chain let expressions along side local variable declarations or ordinary conditional expressions. In other words, do much of what the `if_chain` crate already does.

## Other considerations

* `if let guard` and `let ... else` features need special care and should be handled in a following PR.

* Irrefutable patterns are allowed within a let chain context

* ~~Three Clippy lints were already converted to start dogfooding and help detect possible corner cases~~

cc #53667
2022-01-19 10:42:12 +01:00
Michael Goulet
0eccd5feef skip some layers in const drop confirmation 2022-01-19 01:28:14 -08:00
Michael Goulet
e3f01b2b6f never type is const Drop 2022-01-19 00:40:05 -08:00
David Tolnay
4d3faae5cd
Eliminate left and right cursors in favor of ring buffer 2022-01-18 20:19:44 -08:00
Aaron Hill
02f1a565fe
Properly track DepNodes in trait evaluation provisional cache
Fixes #92987

During evaluation of an auto trait predicate, we may encounter a cycle.
This causes us to store the evaluation result in a special 'provisional
cache;. If we later end up determining that the type can legitimately
implement the auto trait despite the cycle, we remove the entry from
the provisional cache, and insert it into the evaluation cache.

Additionally, trait evaluation creates a special anonymous `DepNode`.
All queries invoked during the predicate evaluation are added as
outoging dependency edges from the `DepNode`. This `DepNode` is then
store in the evaluation cache - if a different query ends up reading
from the cache entry, it will also perform a read of the stored
`DepNode`. As a result, the cached evaluation will still end up
(transitively) incurring all of the same dependencies that it would
if it actually performed the uncached evaluation (e.g. a call to
`type_of` to determine constituent types).

Previously, we did not correctly handle the interaction between the
provisional cache and the created `DepNode`. Storing an evaluation
result in the provisional cache would cause us to lose the `DepNode`
created during the evaluation. If we later moved the entry from the
provisional cache to the evaluation cache, we would use the `DepNode`
associated with the evaluation that caused us to 'complete' the cycle,
not the evaluatoon where we first discovered the cycle. As a result,
future reads from the evaluation cache would miss some incremental
compilation dependencies that would have otherwise been added if the
evaluation was *not* cached.

Under the right circumstances, this could lead to us trying to force
a query with a no-longer-existing `DefPathHash`, since we were missing
the (red) dependency edge that would have caused us to bail out before
attempting forcing.

This commit makes the provisional cache store the `DepNode` create
during the provisional evaluation. When we move an entry from the
provisional cache to the evaluation cache, we create a *new* `DepNode`
that has dependencies going to *both* of the evaluation `DepNodes` we
have available. This ensures that cached reads will incur all of
the necessary dependency edges.
2022-01-18 23:12:42 -05:00
David Tolnay
cc66a7ff20
Eliminate eof token state 2022-01-18 20:08:52 -08:00
David Tolnay
6e8b06015e
Simplify the buffer push done by scan_break 2022-01-18 19:35:43 -08:00
David Tolnay
fe5c4eab2d
Eliminate a check_stack call on an empty scan stack 2022-01-18 19:23:22 -08:00
David Tolnay
377c9dbabf
Index a single time in check_stack 2022-01-18 19:21:18 -08:00
David Tolnay
a37d272892
Implement check_stack nonrecursively 2022-01-18 19:20:33 -08:00
David Tolnay
0490e43422
Implement check_stream nonrecursively 2022-01-18 19:19:18 -08:00
David Tolnay
947a09a4a8
Replace if + unwrap with if let in check_stack 2022-01-18 19:18:47 -08:00
David Tolnay
80139a0f02
Ensure Printer buf is always indexed using self.left or self.right 2022-01-18 19:18:04 -08:00
David Tolnay
ae28ec5a9c
Inline Printer's scan_pop_bottom method 2022-01-18 19:16:33 -08:00
David Tolnay
2a14275500
Inline Printer's scan_top method 2022-01-18 19:16:32 -08:00
David Tolnay
e20d5abdfb
Inline Printer's scan_pop method 2022-01-18 19:16:32 -08:00
David Tolnay
50d722a691
Simplify ring buffer pushes 2022-01-18 19:07:12 -08:00
David Tolnay
e219b2b5f9
Inline Printer's scan_push method 2022-01-18 19:04:12 -08:00
David Tolnay
fdb95f54e8
Inline Printer's advance_right method 2022-01-18 19:02:49 -08:00
Michael Goulet
ba87be05cf Short-circuit some trivially const Drop types 2022-01-18 17:01:52 -08:00
Noah Lev
7c4eca0687 Make suggestions verbose 2022-01-18 16:38:06 -08:00
Noah Lev
7507fb6306 Shorten and improve messages 2022-01-18 16:32:58 -08:00
Eric Holk
76f6b57125 Fix build after rebase 2022-01-18 14:42:39 -08:00
Caio
5f74ef4fb1 Formally implement let chains 2022-01-18 19:38:17 -03:00
Eric Holk
d840d0c62e Use .. patterns in cfg_build.rs 2022-01-18 14:25:31 -08:00
Eric Holk
e0a5370ef0 Respond to code review comments 2022-01-18 14:25:31 -08:00
Eric Holk
32930d9ea7 Safely handle partial drops
We previously weren't tracking partial re-inits while being too
aggressive around partial drops. With this change, we simply ignore
partial drops, which is the safer, more conservative choice.
2022-01-18 14:25:30 -08:00
Eric Holk
78c5644de5 drop_ranges: Add TrackedValue enum
This makes it clearer what values we are tracking and why.
2022-01-18 14:25:30 -08:00
Eric Holk
787f4cbd15 Handle uninhabited return types
This changes drop range analysis to handle uninhabited return types such
as `!`. Since these calls to these functions do not return, we model
them as ending in an infinite loop.
2022-01-18 14:25:30 -08:00
Eric Holk
f730bd0dad Track changed bitsets in CFG propagation
This reduces the amount of work done, especially in later iterations,
by only processing nodes whose predecessors changed in the previous
iteration, or earlier in the current iteration. This also has the side
effect of completely ignoring all unreachable nodes.
2022-01-18 14:25:29 -08:00
Eric Holk
7d11b336f3 Remove clones and most allocations from propagate_to_fixpoint 2022-01-18 14:25:29 -08:00
Eric Holk
a7df4e8d2f Handle empty loops better 2022-01-18 14:25:29 -08:00
Eric Holk
6e281a7782 Explicitly list all ExprKinds in cfg_build
Also rearranges the existing arms to be more logical. For example, Break
and Continue come closer to Loop now.
2022-01-18 14:25:29 -08:00
Eric Holk
4a70de7932 Handle reinits in match guards 2022-01-18 14:25:29 -08:00
Eric Holk
2af02cf2c4 More comments and refactoring
The refactoring mainly keeps the separation between the modules clearer.
For example, process_deferred_edges function moved to cfg_build.rs since
that is really part of building the CFG, not finding the fixpoint.

Also, we use PostOrderId instead of usize in a lot more places now.
2022-01-18 14:25:28 -08:00
Eric Holk
6a28afb2a3 Fixing formatting 2022-01-18 14:25:28 -08:00
Eric Holk
9347bf498a Additional cleanup
This cleans up the refactoring from the previous patch and cleans things
up a bit. Each module has a clear entry point and everything else is
private.
2022-01-18 14:25:28 -08:00
Eric Holk
f5f98d7ee4 Refactor drop_ranges
Splits drop_ranges into drop_ranges::record_consumed_borrow,
drop_ranges::cfg_build, and drop_ranges::cfg_propagate. The top level
drop_ranges module has an entry point that does all the coordination of
the other three phases, using code original in generator_interior.
2022-01-18 14:25:27 -08:00
Eric Holk
30e1b1e92e Address code review comments
1. Add test case for partial drops
2. Simplify code in `propagate_to_fixpoint` and remove most clones
3. Clean up PostOrderIndex creation
2022-01-18 14:25:27 -08:00
Eric Holk
006f547162 Add more comments 2022-01-18 14:25:27 -08:00
Eric Holk
5feb4d0106 Refactor code to keep most drop range analysis in drop_ranges.rs 2022-01-18 14:25:27 -08:00
Eric Holk
904c270149 More comments and small cleanups 2022-01-18 14:25:26 -08:00
Eric Holk
b39fb9bb7b Fix control flow handling in generator_interior
All tests pass now! The issue was that we weren't handling all edges
correctly, but now they are handled consistently.

This includes code to dump a graphviz file for the CFG we built for drop
tracking.

Also removes old DropRanges tests.
2022-01-18 14:25:26 -08:00
Eric Holk
c7afaa1686 Handle break and continue. Change fixpoint computation to handle unreachable nodes. 2022-01-18 14:25:26 -08:00
Eric Holk
ff0e8f4ba2 Revamped DropRange data structure
Not currently working. Need to flow drop information.
2022-01-18 14:25:26 -08:00
Eric Holk
ba7d12731e More tracing and tests 2022-01-18 14:25:25 -08:00
Eric Holk
457415294c Handle more cases with conditionally initialized/dropped values 2022-01-18 14:25:25 -08:00
Eric Holk
298ca2f679 Basic loop support 2022-01-18 14:25:25 -08:00
Eric Holk
96117701f9 Support reinitialization of variables 2022-01-18 14:25:25 -08:00
Eric Holk
aa029d4bbe Support conditional drops
This adds support for branching and merging control flow and uses this
to correctly handle the case where a value is dropped in one branch of
an if expression but not another.

There are other cases we need to handle, which will come in follow up
patches.

Issue #57478
2022-01-18 14:25:24 -08:00
Eric Holk
f246c0b116 Attribute drop to parent expression of the consume point
This is needed to handle cases like `[a, b.await, c]`. `ExprUseVisitor`
considers `a` to be consumed when it is passed to the array, but the
array is not quite live yet at that point. This means we were missing
the `a` value across the await point. Attributing drops to the parent
expression means we do not consider the value consumed until the
consuming expression has finished.

Issue #57478
2022-01-18 14:25:24 -08:00
Eric Holk
f664cfc47c Make generator and async-await tests pass
The main change needed to make this work is to do a pessimistic over-
approximation for AssignOps. The existing ScopeTree analysis in
region.rs works by doing both left to right and right to left order and
then choosing the most conservative ordering. This behavior is needed
because AssignOp's evaluation order depends on whether it is a primitive
type or an overloaded operator, which runs as a method call.

This change mimics the same behavior as region.rs in
generator_interior.rs.

Issue #57478
2022-01-18 14:25:24 -08:00
Eric Holk
c4dee40170 Track drops across multiple yields 2022-01-18 14:25:24 -08:00
Eric Holk
f712df8c5d Track drop points in generator_interior
This change adds the basic infrastructure for tracking drop ranges in
generator interior analysis, which allows us to exclude dropped types
from the generator type.

Not yet complete, but many of the async/await and generator tests pass.
The main missing piece is tracking branching control flow (e.g. around
an `if` expression). The patch does include support, however, for
multiple yields in th e same block.

Issue #57478
2022-01-18 14:25:23 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
73988b6d82
Rollup merge of #93018 - pierwill:rm-unused-ord, r=davidtwco
Remove some unused `Ord` derives based on `Span`

Remove some `Ord`, `PartialOrd` derivations that rely on underlying ordering of `Span`. These ordering traits appear to be unused right now.

If we're going to attempt to remove ordering traits from `Span` as suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90317#issuecomment-1013980591, we might want to slowly remove code that depends on this ordering (as opposed to the all-at-once approach in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90749 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90408).

cc `@tmiasko` `@cjgillot`
2022-01-18 22:00:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
262f48eab0
Rollup merge of #92924 - dtolnay:pptracing, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Delete pretty printer tracing

These are left over from 2011. I did not find these helpful at all in my work on https://github.com/dtolnay/prettyplease despite doing significant refactors to this code. Learning what these messages all refer to is harder than putting in your own messages to log exactly what is relevant to specifically the thing that you are working on debugging.
2022-01-18 22:00:49 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
5a4f47460b
Rollup merge of #92780 - b-naber:postpone-const-eval-coherence, r=lcnr
Directly use ConstValue for single literals in blocks

Addresses the minimal repro in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92186, but doesn't fix the underlying problem (which would be solved by solving the anon subst problem afaict).

I do, however, think that it makes sense in general to treat single literals in anon blocks as const values directly, especially in light of the problem that the issue refers to (anon const evaluation being postponed until infer variables in substs can be resolved, which was introduced by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90023), i.e. while we do get warnings for those unnecessary braces, we should try to avoid errors caused by those braces if possible.
2022-01-18 22:00:47 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
7889f96103
Rollup merge of #92425 - calebzulawski:simd-cast, r=workingjubilee
Improve SIMD casts

* Allows `simd_cast` intrinsic to take `usize` and `isize`
* Adds `simd_as` intrinsic, which is the same as `simd_cast` except for saturating float-to-int conversions (matching the behavior of `as`).

cc `@workingjubilee`
2022-01-18 22:00:45 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f372476d2c
Rollup merge of #91150 - dtolnay:qpath, r=davidtwco
Let qpath contain NtTy: `<$:ty as $:ty>::…`

Example:

```rust
macro_rules! m {
    (<$type:ty as $trait:ty>::$name:ident) => {
        <$type as $trait>::$name
    };
}

fn main() {
    let _: m!(<str as ToOwned>::Owned);
}
```

Previous behavior:

```console
error: expected identifier, found `ToOwned`
 --> src/main.rs:3:19
  |
3 |         <$type as $trait>::$name
  |                   ^^^^^^ expected identifier
...
8 |     let _: m!(<str as ToOwned>::Owned);
  |            ---------------------------
  |            |
  |            this macro call doesn't expand to a type
  |            in this macro invocation
```

The <code>expected identifier, found \`ToOwned\`</code> error is particularly silly. I think it should be fine to accept this code as long as $trait is of the form `TyKind::Path(None, path)`; if it is any other kind of `NtTy`, we'll keep the same behavior as before.
2022-01-18 22:00:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
dd621a4c5c
Rollup merge of #90782 - ricobbe:binutils-dlltool, r=michaelwoerister
Implement raw-dylib support for windows-gnu

Add support for `#[link(kind = "raw-dylib")]` on windows-gnu targets.  Work around binutils's linker's inability to read import libraries produced by LLVM by calling out to the binutils `dlltool` utility to create an import library from a temporary .DEF file; this approach is effectively a slightly refined version of `@mati865's` earlier attempt at this strategy in PR #88801.  (In particular, this attempt at this strategy adds support for `#[link_ordinal(...)]` as well.)

In support of #58713.
2022-01-18 22:00:42 +01:00
David Tolnay
07a0325137
Move item-related pretty printing functions to module 2022-01-18 12:39:20 -08:00
David Tolnay
b1605643e3
Move expr-related pretty printing functions to module 2022-01-18 12:39:19 -08:00
est31
b2dd1377c7 Use let_else in even more places 2022-01-18 21:37:57 +01:00
David Tolnay
fe86dcf0cc
Delete pretty printer tracing 2022-01-18 12:33:42 -08:00
David Tolnay
0904614751
Render more readable macro matchers in rustdoc 2022-01-18 11:13:29 -08:00
pierwill
0882bbb3a1 Remove some unused Ord derivations based on DefId
Removes `Ord` and `PartialOrd` from  middle::mir::mirsource, inlineasmoperand,
terminatorkind, operand, constant, constantkind, and place
2022-01-18 10:53:40 -06:00
bors
9ad5d82f82 Auto merge of #92731 - bjorn3:asm_support_changes, r=nagisa
Avoid unnecessary monomorphization of inline asm related functions

This should reduce build time for codegen backends by avoiding duplicated monomorphization of certain inline asm related functions for each passed in closure type.
2022-01-18 14:32:52 +00:00
threadexception
ef46e38c2b Implement tuple array diagnostic
Co-authored-by: David Wood <Q0KPU0H1YOEPHRY1R2SN5B5RL@david.davidtw.co>
2022-01-18 15:22:35 +01:00
lcnr
217458b9da intra-doc links 2022-01-18 12:23:43 +01:00
lcnr
cbc6d35a57 privacy: update visit_infer 2022-01-18 12:23:43 +01:00
lcnr
b2d8f0c77d generic_arg_infer: placeholder in signature err 2022-01-18 12:23:43 +01:00
lcnr
621e60a54f remove unnecessary fixme 2022-01-18 12:22:57 +01:00
lcnr
a8b71164af change ct_infer to a delay_span_bug 2022-01-18 12:22:57 +01:00
bors
7bc7be860f Auto merge of #87648 - JulianKnodt:const_eq_constrain, r=oli-obk
allow eq constraints on associated constants

Updates #70256

(cc `@varkor,` `@Centril)`
2022-01-18 09:58:39 +00:00
Michael Goulet
6ed42a7ca4 Check const Drop impls considering ConstIfConst bounds 2022-01-18 01:44:46 -08:00
DrMeepster
f9eb0b3b7b ignore constness when checking dtor predicates 2022-01-17 21:37:38 -08:00
Caleb Zulawski
49d36d733d Improve documentation of splatted constants 2022-01-18 03:51:04 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
04b2073c84
Rollup merge of #92923 - dtolnay:ringbuffer, r=petrochenkov
Abstract the pretty printer's ringbuffer to be infinitely sized

This PR backports 8e5e83c3ff from the `prettyplease` crate into `rustc_ast_pretty`.

Using a dedicated RingBuffer type with non-wrapping indices, instead of manually `%`-ing indices into a capped sized buffer, unlocks a number of simplifications to the pretty printing algorithm implementation in followup commits such as fcb5968b1e and 4427cedcb8.

This change also greatly reduces memory overhead of the pretty printer. The old implementation always grows its buffer to 205920 bytes even for files without deeply nested code, because it only wraps its indices when they hit the maximum tolerable size of the ring buffer (the size after which the pretty printer will crash if there are that many tokens buffered). In contrast, the new implementation uses memory proportional to the peak number of simultaneously buffered tokens only, not the number of tokens that have ever been in the buffer.

Speaking of crashing the pretty printer and "maximum tolerable size", the constant used for that in the old implementation is a lie:

de9b573eed/compiler/rustc_ast_pretty/src/pp.rs (L227-L228)

It was raised from 3 to 55 in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/33934 because that was empirically the size that avoided crashing on one particular test crate, but according to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/33934#issuecomment-226700470 other syntax trees still crash at that size. There is no reason to believe that any particular size is good enough for arbitrary code, and using a large number like 55 adds overhead to inputs that never need close to that much of a buffer. The new implementation eliminates this tradeoff.
2022-01-18 04:42:06 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
804072fdfc
Rollup merge of #92701 - ehuss:even-more-attr-validation, r=matthewjasper
Add some more attribute validation

This adds some more validation for the position of attributes:

* `link` is only valid on an `extern` block
* `windows_subsystem` and `no_builtins` are only valid at the crate level
2022-01-18 04:41:59 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
cb5ecff8b2
Rollup merge of #92640 - compiler-errors:array-deref-on-newtype, r=lcnr
Fix ICEs related to `Deref<Target=[T; N]>` on newtypes

1. Stash a const infer's type into the canonical var during canonicalization, so we can recreate the fresh const infer with that same type.
    For example, given `[T; _]` we know `_` is a `usize`. If we go from infer => canonical => infer, we shouldn't forget that variable is a usize.
Fixes #92626
Fixes #83704

2. Don't stash the autoderef'd slice type that we get from method lookup, but instead recreate it during method confirmation. We need to do this because the type we receive back after picking the method references a type variable that does not exist after probing is done.
Fixes #92637

... A better solution for the second issue would be to actually _properly_ implement `Deref` for `[T; N]` instead of fixing this autoderef hack to stop leaking inference variables. But I actually looked into this, and there are many complications with const impls.
2022-01-18 04:41:58 +01:00
Caleb Zulawski
1d5bf6bc28
Update compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/builder.rs
Co-authored-by: Jubilee <46493976+workingjubilee@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-01-17 22:29:12 -05:00
pierwill
ae9b624bf6 Rm some unused ord impls 2022-01-17 15:15:32 -06:00
David Tolnay
7b5b3cf82c
Abstract the pretty printer's ringbuffer to be infinitely sized 2022-01-17 12:08:08 -08:00
kadmin
b77bb5cb25 Update with final comments 2022-01-17 20:04:37 +00:00
kadmin
1c1ce2fbda Add term to ExistentialProjection
Also prevent ICE when adding a const in associated const equality.
2022-01-17 20:01:22 +00:00
kadmin
f396888c4d Update w/ comments
Removes uses of ty() where a method is implemented on TypeFoldable, and also directly formats
a Term.
2022-01-17 20:01:21 +00:00
kadmin
e7529d6a38 Update term for use in more places
Replace use of `ty()` on term and use it in more places. This will allow more flexibility in the
future, but slightly worried it allows items which are consts which only accept types.
2022-01-17 19:59:40 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
7f02604f3d
Rollup merge of #92877 - Amanieu:remove_llvm_nounwind, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Remove LLVMRustMarkAllFunctionsNounwind

This was originally introduced in #10916 as a way to remove all landing
pads when performing LTO. However this is no longer necessary today
since rustc properly marks all functions and call-sites as nounwind
where appropriate.

In fact this is incorrect in the presence of `extern "C-unwind"` which
must create a landing pad when compiled with `-C panic=abort` so that
foreign exceptions are caught and properly turned into aborts.
2022-01-17 20:07:07 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6acb7043e7
Rollup merge of #92825 - pierwill:rustc-version-force-rename, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Rename environment variable for overriding rustc version
2022-01-17 20:07:06 +01:00