Match ergonomics 2024: implement mutable by-reference bindings
Implements the mutable by-reference bindings portion of match ergonomics 2024 (#123076), with the `mut ref`/`mut ref mut` syntax, under feature gate `mut_ref`.
r? `@Nadrieril`
`@rustbot` label A-patterns A-edition-2024
CFI: Fix methods as function pointer cast
Fix casting between methods and function pointers by assigning a secondary type id to methods with their concrete self so they can be used as function pointers.
This was split off from #116404.
cc `@compiler-errors` `@workingjubilee`
Don't check match scrutinee of postfix match for unused parens
We only check the scrutinees of block-like constructs and a few others (return/index/assign/method calls). Just don't do it for postfix match at all.
Fixes#123064
r? fmease
Suggest correct path in include_bytes!
`include_bytes!` paths are relative, and I'm often not sure how nested is the `.rs` file that I'm editing, so I have to guess the number of `"../.."`. This change searches `..` and `../..` for the given file and offers corrected path as a suggestion.
I wasn't sure how to get the right span, and how to properly escape it.
```text
error: couldn't read src/file.txt: No such file or directory (os error 2)
--> src/main.rs:2:13
|
2 | let x = include_bytes!("file.txt");
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^----------^
| |
| help: it's in a parent directory: `"../../file.txt"`
```
Fix casting between methods and function pointers by assigning a
secondary type id to methods with their concrete self so they can be
used as function pointers.
Delegation: fix ICE on wrong `Self` instantiation
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119921
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119919
There is no way to instantiate `Self` param for caller in delegation item if
1. callee is a trait method && callee contains `Self` param
2. delegation item isn't an associative item
In general, we can consider `Self` param as independent type param in these cases:
```rust
trait Trait {
fn foo(_: Option<&Self>) {...}
}
reuse Trait::foo;
// will be desugared to:
fn foo<T: Trait>(x: Option<&T>) { Trait::foo(x) }
```
But this requires early bound parameters support. For now, I suggest banning such cases to avoid ICE's.
r? ``@petrochenkov``
CFI: Fix drop and drop_in_place
Fix drop and drop_in_place by transforming self of drop and drop_in_place methods into a Drop trait objects.
This was split off from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116404.
cc `@compiler-errors` `@workingjubilee`
CFI: Enable KCFI testing of run-pass tests
This enables KCFI-based testing for all the CFI run-pass tests in the suite today. We can add the test header on top of in-flight CFI tests once they land. This is becoming more important as we get closer to leveraging CFI's multiple type attachment feature, as that is where the implementations will have a divergence.
It also enables KCFI as a sanitizer for x86_64 and aarch64 Linux to make this possible. The sanitizer should likely be available for all aarch64, x86_64, and riscv targets, but that isn't critical for initial testing.
Soft-destabilize `RustcEncodable` & `RustcDecodable`, remove from prelude in next edition
cc rust-lang/libs-team#272
Any use of `RustcEncodable` and `RustcDecodable` now triggers a deny-by-default lint. The derives have been removed from the 2024 prelude. I specifically chose **not** to document this in the module-level documentation, as the presence in existing preludes is not documented (which I presume is intentional).
This does not implement the proposed change for `rustfix`, which I will be looking into shortly.
With regard to the items in the preludes being stable, this should not be an issue because #15702 has been resolved.
r? libs-api
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #108675 (Document `adt_const_params` feature in Unstable Book)
- #122120 (Suggest associated type bounds on problematic associated equality bounds)
- #122589 (Fix diagnostics for async block cloning)
- #122835 (Require `DerefMut` and `DerefPure` on `deref!()` patterns when appropriate)
- #123049 (In `ConstructCoroutineInClosureShim`, pass receiver by mut ref, not mut pointer)
- #123055 (enable cargo miri test doctests)
- #123057 (unix fs: Make hurd using explicit new rather than From)
- #123087 (Change `f16` and `f128` clippy stubs to be nonpanicking)
- #123103 (Rename `Inherited` -> `TypeckRootCtxt`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Suggest associated type bounds on problematic associated equality bounds
Fixes#105056. TL;DR: Suggest `Trait<Ty: Bound>` on `Trait<Ty = Bound>` in Rust >=2021.
~~Blocked on #122055 (stabilization of `associated_type_bounds`), I'd say.~~ (merged)
Delegation: fix ICE on wrong `self` resolution
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122874
Delegation item should be wrapped in a `rib` to behave like a regular function during name resolution.
r? `@petrochenkov`
CFI: (actually) check that methods are object-safe before projecting their receivers to `dyn Trait` in CFI
`trait_object_ty` assumed that associated types would be fully determined by the trait. This is *almost* true - const parameters and type parameters are no longer allowed, but lifetime parameters are. Since we erase all lifetime parameters anyways, instantiate it with as many erased regions as it needs.
Fixes: #123053
r? `@compiler-errors`
Avoid some unnecessary query invocations.
Specifically this inlines `const_eval_poly` and avoids computing the generic params, the param env, normalizing the param env and erasing lifetimes on everything.
should fix the perf regression from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121087
This enables KCFI-based testing for all the CFI run-pass tests in the
suite today. We can add the test header on top of in-flight CFI tests
once they land.
It also enables KCFI as a sanitizer for x86_64 and aarch64 Linux to make
this possible. The sanitizer should likely be available for all aarch64,
x86_64, and riscv targets, but that isn't critical for initial testing.
`trait_object_ty` assumed that associated types would be fully
determined by the trait. This is *almost* true - const parameters and
type parameters are no longer allowed, but lifetime parameters are.
Since we erase all lifetime parameters anyways, instantiate it with as
many erased regions as it needs.
Fixes: #123053
In `pretty_print_type()`, print `async fn` futures' paths instead of spans.
This makes `-Zprint-type-sizes`'s output easier to read, because the name of an `async fn` is more immediately recognizable than its span. This change will also synergize with my other `-Zprint-type-sizes` PR #122922 which prints the type of child futures being awaited.
I also deleted the comment "FIXME(eddyb) should use `def_span`." because it appears to have already been fixed by commit 67727aa7c3.
Validate that we're only matching on unit struct for path pattern
Resolution doesn't validate that we only really take `CtorKind::Unit` in path patterns, since all it sees is `Res::SelfCtor(def_id)`. Check this instead during pattern typeck.
r? petrochenkov
Fixes#122809
Delegation: fix ICE on `bound_vars` divergence
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122550.
Bug was caused by divergence between lowered type and corresponding `bound_vars` in `late_bound_vars_map`. In this patch `bound_vars` calculation for delegation item is moved from `lower_fn_ty` to `resolve_bound_vars` query.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Don't emit an error about failing to produce a file with a specific name if user never gave an explicit name
Fixes#122509
You can ask `rustc` to produce some intermediate results with `--emit foo`, this operation comes in two flavors: `--emit asm` and `--emit asm=foo.s`. First one produces one or more `.s` files without any name guarantees, second one renames it into `foo.s`. Second version only works when compiler produces a single file - for asm files this means using a single compilation unit for example.
In case compilation produced more than a single file `rustc` runs following check to emit some warnings:
```rust
if crate_output.outputs.contains_key(&output_type) {
// 2) Multiple codegen units, with `--emit foo=some_name`. We have
// no good solution for this case, so warn the user.
sess.dcx().emit_warn(errors::IgnoringEmitPath { extension });
} else if crate_output.single_output_file.is_some() {
// 3) Multiple codegen units, with `-o some_name`. We have
// no good solution for this case, so warn the user.
sess.dcx().emit_warn(errors::IgnoringOutput { extension });
} else {
// 4) Multiple codegen units, but no explicit name. We
// just leave the `foo.0.x` files in place.
// (We don't have to do any work in this case.)
}
```
Comment in the final `else` branch implies that if user didn't ask for a specific name - there's no need to emit warnings. However because of the internal representation of `crate_output.outputs` - this doesn't work as expected: if user asked to produce an asm file without giving it an implicit name it will contain `Some(None)`.
To fix the problem new code actually checks if user gave an explicit name. I think this was an original intentional behavior, at least comments imply that.
This makes `-Zprint-type-sizes`'s output easier to read, because the
name of an `async fn` is more immediately recognizable than its span.
I also deleted the comment "FIXME(eddyb) should use `def_span`." because
it appears to have already been fixed by commit 67727aa7c3.
CFI: Support complex receivers
Right now, we only support rewriting `&self` and `&mut self` into `&dyn MyTrait` and `&mut dyn MyTrait`. This expands it to handle the full gamut of receivers by calculating the receiver based on *substitution* rather than based on a rewrite. This means that, for example, `Arc<Self>` will become `Arc<dyn MyTrait>` appropriately with this change.
This approach also allows us to support associated type constraints as well, so we will correctly rewrite `&self` into `&dyn MyTrait<T=i32>`, for example.
r? ```@workingjubilee```
CFI: Handle dyn with no principal
In user-facing Rust, `dyn` always has at least one predicate following it. Unfortunately, because we filter out marker traits from receivers at callsites and `dyn Sync` is, for example, legal, this results in us having `dyn` types with no predicates on occasion in our alias set encoding. This patch handles cases where there are no predicates in a `dyn` type which are relevant to its alias set.
Fixes#122998
r? workingjubilee
Replace `mir_built` query with a hook and use mir_const everywhere instead
A small perf improvement due to less dep graph handling.
Mostly just a cleanup to get rid of one of our many mir queries
Previously, we only rewrote `&self` and `&mut self` receivers. By
instantiating the method from the trait definition, we can make this
work work with arbitrary legal receivers instead.
In user-facing Rust, `dyn` always has at least one predicate following
it. Unfortunately, because we filter out marker traits from receivers at
callsites and `dyn Sync` is, for example, legal, this results in us
having `dyn` types with no predicates on occasion in our alias set
encoding. This patch handles cases where there are no predicates in a
`dyn` type which are relevant to its alias set.
Fixes#122998
panic-in-panic-hook: formatting a message that's just a string is risk-free
This slightly improves the output in the 'panic while processing panic' case if the panic message does not involve any formatting. Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122930.
r? ``@Amanieu``
Add a regression test for #117310Closes#117310
It seems to have been fixed in `rustc 1.79.0-nightly (1388d7a06 2024-03-20)` or before, so just adding a regression test for it.
Fixed the `private-dependency` bug
Fixed the private-dependency bug: If the directly dependent crate is loaded last and is not configured with `--extern`, it may be incorrectly set to `private-dependency`
Fixes#122756
Encode implied predicates for traits
In #112629, we decided to make associated type bounds in the "supertrait" AST position *implied* even though they're not supertraits themselves.
This means that the `super_predicates` and `implied_predicates` queries now differ for regular traits. The assumption that they didn't differ was hard-coded in #107614, so in cross-crate positions this means that we forget the implied predicates from associated type bounds.
This isn't unsound, just kind of annoying. This should be backported since associated type bounds are slated to stabilize for 1.78 -- either that, or associated type bounds can be reverted on beta and re-shipped in 1.79 with this patch.
Fixes#122859