Commit Graph

32613 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Caio
a8084dcec1 [RFC-2011] Allow core_intrinsics when activated 2024-06-06 16:30:05 -03:00
Ralf Jung
77f8c3caea detect consts that reference extern statics 2024-02-10 16:13:48 +01:00
Ralf Jung
9c0623fe8f validation: descend from consts into statics 2024-02-10 16:13:47 +01:00
Ralf Jung
4e77e368eb unstably allow constants to refer to statics and read from immutable statics 2024-02-10 16:12:55 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
55913368c5
Rollup merge of #120870 - Zalathar:allow-min-spec, r=oli-obk
Allow restricted trait impls under `#[allow_internal_unstable(min_specialization)]`

This is a follow-up to #119963 and a companion to #120866, though it can land independently from the latter.

---

We have several compiler crates that only enable `#[feature(min_specialization)]` because it is required by their expansions of `newtype_index!`, in order to implement traits marked with `#[rustc_specialization_trait]`.

This PR allows those traits to be implemented internally by macros with `#[allow_internal_unstable(min_specialization)]`, without needing specialization to be enabled in the enclosing crate.
2024-02-10 13:12:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ed3b049a8b
Rollup merge of #120866 - Zalathar:no-min-spec, r=compiler-errors
Remove unnecessary `#![feature(min_specialization)]`

As of #119963 and #120676, we can now rely on `newtype_index!` having `#[allow_internal_unstable(min_specialization)]`, so there are a few compiler crates that no longer need to include min-spec in their own crate features.

---

Some of the expansions of `newtype_index!` still appear to require min-spec in the crate features. I think this is because `#[orderable]` causes the expansion to include an implementation of `TrustedStep`, which is flagged with `#[rustc_specialization_trait]`, and for whatever reason that isn't permitted by allow-internal-unstable. So this PR only touches the crates where that isn't the case.
2024-02-10 13:12:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9a8958f2bb
Rollup merge of #120865 - saethlin:missing-o-files, r=nnethercote
Turn the "no saved object file in work product" ICE into a translatable fatal error

I don't know if it's fair to say this fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120854 but it surely makes the error reporting better and should encourage people with good instincts like ```@CinchBlue.```
2024-02-10 13:12:31 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2dbc9f55f7
Rollup merge of #120859 - nnethercote:fix-120856, r=oli-obk
Loosen an assertion to account for stashed errors.

The meaning of this assertion changed in #120828 when the meaning of `has_errors` changed to exclude stashed errors. Evidently the new meaning is too restrictive.

Fixes #120856.

r? ```@oli-obk```
2024-02-10 13:12:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
e11e4446da
Rollup merge of #120719 - compiler-errors:no-dyn-atb, r=lcnr
Remove support for `associated_type_bound` nested in `dyn` types

These necessarily desugar to `impl Trait`, which is inconsistent with the `associated_type_bound` feature after #120584.

This PR keeps the `is_in_dyn_type` hack, which kind of makes me sad. Ideally, we'd be validating that no object types have associated type bounds somewhere else. Unfortunately, we can't do this later during astconv (i think?), nor can we do it earlier during ast validation (i think?) because of the feature gating of ATB being a *warning* rather than an *error*. Let me know if you have thoughts about this.

r? lcnr
2024-02-10 13:12:28 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
0b7f0ff230
Rollup merge of #117614 - RalfJung:static-mut-refs, r=davidtwco,oli-obk
static mut: allow mutable reference to arbitrary types, not just slices and arrays

For historical reasons, we allow this:
```rust
static mut ARRAY: &'static mut [isize] = &mut [1];
```
However, we do not allow this:
```rust
static mut INT: &'static mut isize = &mut 1;
```

I think that's terribly inconsistent. I don't care much for `static mut`, but we have to keep it around for backwards compatibility and so we have to keep supporting it properly in the compiler. In recent refactors of how we deal with mutability of data in `static` and `const`, I almost made a fatal mistake since I tested `static mut INT: &'static mut isize = &mut 1` and concluded that we don't allow such `'static` mutable references even inside `static mut`. After all, nobody would expect this to be allowed only for arrays and slices, right?!?? So for the sake of our own sanity, and of whoever else reverse engineers these rules in the future to understand what the Rust compiler accepts or does not accept, I propose that we accept this for all types, not just arrays and slices.
2024-02-10 13:12:28 +01:00
bors
232919c33a Auto merge of #120771 - oli-obk:useless_non_ensure_query_call, r=davidtwco
Use `ensure` when the result of the query is not needed beyond its `Result`ness

while I would like to just remove the `tcx` methods for ensure-only queries, that is hard to do without another query annotation or by turning the `define_callbacks` macro into a proc macro to get more control

should fix perf regression of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120558
2024-02-10 09:27:14 +00:00
bors
757b8efed4 Auto merge of #120712 - compiler-errors:async-closures-harmonize, r=oli-obk
Harmonize `AsyncFn` implementations, make async closures conditionally impl `Fn*` traits

This PR implements several changes to the built-in and libcore-provided implementations of `Fn*` and `AsyncFn*` to address two problems:
1. async closures do not implement the `Fn*` family traits, leading to breakage: https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/pr-120361/index.html
2. *references* to async closures do not implement `AsyncFn*`, as a consequence of the existing blanket impls of the shape `AsyncFn for F where F: Fn, F::Output: Future`.

In order to fix (1.), we implement `Fn` traits appropriately for async closures. It turns out that async closures can:
* always implement `FnOnce`, meaning that they're drop-in compatible with `FnOnce`-bound combinators like `Option::map`.
* conditionally implement `Fn`/`FnMut` if they have no captures, which means that existing usages of async closures should *probably* work without breakage (crater checking this: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120712#issuecomment-1930587805).

In order to fix (2.), we make all of the built-in callables implement `AsyncFn*` via built-in impls, and instead adjust the blanket impls for `AsyncFn*` provided by libcore to match the blanket impls for `Fn*`.
2024-02-10 07:15:15 +00:00
Zalathar
a2479a4ae7 Remove unnecessary min_specialization after bootstrap
These crates all needed specialization for `newtype_index!`, which will no
longer be necessary when the current nightly eventually becomes the next
bootstrap compiler.
2024-02-10 18:15:11 +11:00
Zalathar
7b73e4fd44 Allow restricted trait impls in macros with min_specialization
Implementing traits marked with `#[rustc_specialization_trait]` normally
requires (min-)specialization to be enabled for the enclosing crate.

With this change, that permission can also be granted by an
`allow_internal_unstable` attribute on the macro that generates the impl.
2024-02-10 18:14:02 +11:00
Michael Goulet
e6f5af9671 Remove unused fn 2024-02-10 03:52:13 +00:00
Michael Goulet
fde695a2d1 Add a helpful suggestion 2024-02-10 03:31:34 +00:00
Michael Goulet
973bbfbd23 No more associated type bounds in dyn trait 2024-02-10 03:23:51 +00:00
Zalathar
cf1096eb72 Remove unnecessary #![feature(min_specialization)] 2024-02-10 12:26:14 +11:00
Ben Kimock
3d4a9f5047 Turn the "no saved object file in work product" ICE into a translatable fatal error 2024-02-09 20:22:15 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
8e1eaddd27
Rollup merge of #120853 - blyxyas:no-collect, r=cjgillot
Avoid a collection and iteration on empty passes

Just some mini optimization I saw in the wild. This way, we avoid a `collect` and `map` on an empty `passes`. Honestly, I don't even think this is big enough of a change to make a benchmark, but I'd still like to see results.

Based on [this book](https://nnethercote.github.io/perf-book/iterators.html#collect-and-extend)
2024-02-10 00:58:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
8177c0fead
Rollup merge of #120850 - petrochenkov:empimpres, r=cjgillot
ast_lowering: Fix regression in `use ::{}` imports.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120789
2024-02-10 00:58:39 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
317c372284
Rollup merge of #120846 - petrochenkov:jobs, r=oli-obk
Update jobserver-rs to 0.1.28

Fixes the issues found in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120515 besides the diagnostic wording.
2024-02-10 00:58:38 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
9ec287dec2
Rollup merge of #120584 - compiler-errors:u, r=lcnr
For a rigid projection, recursively look at the self type's item bounds to fix the `associated_type_bounds` feature

Given a deeply nested rigid projection like `<<<T as Trait1>::Assoc1 as Trait2>::Assoc2 as Trait3>::Assoc3`, this PR adjusts both trait solvers to look at the item bounds for all of `Assoc3`, `Assoc2`, and `Assoc1` in order to satisfy a goal. We do this because the item bounds for projections may contain relevant bounds for *other* nested projections when the `associated_type_bounds` (ATB) feature is enabled. For example:

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

trait Trait1 {
    type Assoc1: Trait2<Assoc2: Foo>;
    // Item bounds for `Assoc1` are:
    // `<Self as Trait1>::Assoc1: Trait2`
    // `<<Self as Trait1>::Assoc1 as Trait2>::Assoc2: Foo`
}

trait Trait2 {
    type Assoc2;
}

trait Foo {}

fn hello<T: Trait1>(x: <<T as Trait1>::Assoc1 as Trait2>::Assoc2) {
    fn is_foo(_: impl Foo) {}
    is_foo(x);
    // Currently fails with:
    // ERROR the trait bound `<<Self as Trait1>::Assoc1 as Trait2>::Assoc2: Foo` is not satisfied
}
```

This has been a long-standing place of brokenness for ATBs, and is also part of the reason why ATBs currently desugar so differently in various positions (i.e. sometimes desugaring to param-env bounds, sometimes desugaring to RPITs, etc). For example, in RPIT and TAIT position, `impl Foo<Bar: Baz>` currently desugars to `impl Foo<Bar = impl Baz>` because we do not currently take advantage of these nested item bounds if we desugared them into a single set of item bounds on the opaque. This is obviously both strange and unnecessary if we just take advantage of these bounds as we should.

## Approach

This PR repeatedly peels off each projection of a given goal's self type and tries to match its item bounds against a goal, repeating with the self type of the projection. This is pretty straightforward to implement in the new solver, only requiring us to loop on the self type of a rigid projection to discover inner rigid projections, and we also need to introduce an extra probe so we can normalize them.

In the old solver, we can do essentially the same thing, however we rely on the fact that projections *should* be normalized already. This is obviously not always the case -- however, in the case that they are not fully normalized, such as a projection which has both infer vars and, we bail out with ambiguity if we hit an infer var for the self type.

## Caveats

⚠️ In the old solver, this has the side-effect of actually stalling some higher-ranked trait goals of the form `for<'a> <?0 as Tr<'a>>: Tr2`. Because we stall them, they no longer are eagerly treated as error -- this cause some existing `known-bug` tests to go from fail -> pass.

I'm pretty unconvinced that this is a problem since we make code that we expect to pass in the *new* solver also pass in the *old* solver, though this obviously doesn't solve the *full* problem.

## And then also...

We also adjust the desugaring of ATB to always desugar to a regular associated bound, rather than sometimes to an impl Trait **except** for when the ATB is present in a `dyn Trait`. We need to lower `dyn Trait<Assoc: Bar>` to `dyn Trait<Assoc = impl Bar>` because object types need all of their associated types specified.

I would also be in favor of splitting out the ATB feature and/or removing support for object types in order to stabilize just the set of positions for which the ATB feature is consistent (i.e. always elaborates to a bound).
2024-02-10 00:58:36 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
bb60ded24b Loosen an assertion to account for stashed errors.
The meaning of this assertion changed in #120828 when the meaning of
`has_errors` changed to exclude stashed errors. Evidently the new
meaning is too restrictive.

Fixes #120856.
2024-02-10 09:14:59 +11:00
bors
d44e3b95cb Auto merge of #120852 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-01pr8gj, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 11 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #120351 (Implement SystemTime for UEFI)
 - #120354 (improve normalization of `Pointee::Metadata`)
 - #120776 (Move path implementations into `sys`)
 - #120790 (better error message on download CI LLVM failure)
 - #120806 (Clippy subtree update)
 - #120815 (Improve `Option::inspect` docs)
 - #120822 (Emit more specific diagnostics when enums fail to cast with `as`)
 - #120827 (Print image input file and checksum in CI only)
 - #120836 (hide impls if trait bound is proven from env)
 - #120844 (Build DebugInfo for async closures)
 - #120851 (Remove duplicate release note)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-02-09 21:06:12 +00:00
blyxyas
4ef1790b4e
tidy 2024-02-09 19:30:47 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
aa0b0b65b3
Rollup merge of #120844 - compiler-errors:async-di, r=oli-obk
Build DebugInfo for async closures

The test is pretty bare, because I don't really know how to write debuginfo tests. I'd like to land this first, and then flesh it out correctly one it's no longer ICEing on master (which breaks people's ability to test using async closures).

r? oli-obk cc `@rust-lang/wg-debugging` (if any of y'all want to help me write a more fleshed out async closures test)
2024-02-09 19:21:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
251584581f
Rollup merge of #120836 - lcnr:param-env-hide-impl, r=BoxyUwU
hide impls if trait bound is proven from env

AVERT YOUR EYES `@compiler-errors`

fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/76 and https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/12#issuecomment-1865234925

this is kinda ugly and I hate it, but I wasn't able to think of a cleaner approach for now. I am also unsure whether we have to refine this filtering later on, so by making the change pretty minimal it should be easier to improve going forward.

r? `@BoxyUwU`
2024-02-09 19:21:19 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
d9a957b32a
Rollup merge of #120822 - gurry:120756-terse-non-prim-cast-diag, r=petrochenkov
Emit more specific diagnostics when enums fail to cast with `as`

Fixes #120756

Changes this diagnostic reported in the issue:
```
error[E0605]: non-primitive cast: `Bad` as `u32`
  --> src/main.rs:18:10
   |
18 |     dbg!(bad as u32);
   |          ^^^^^^^^^^ an `as` expression can only be used to convert between primitive types or to coerce to a specific trait object
```

to this:
```
error[E0605]: non-primitive cast: `Bad` as `u32`
  --> src/main.rs:18:10
   |
18 |     dbg!(bad as u32);
   |          ^^^^^^^^^^ an `as` expression can be used to convert enum types to numeric types only if the enum type is unit-only or field-less
   |
   = note: see https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/items/enumerations.html#casting for more information
```

This change is only for enums. The diagnostic remains unchanged for all other cases.
2024-02-09 19:21:18 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
99bafad6c2
Rollup merge of #120354 - lukas-code:metadata-normalize, r=lcnr
improve normalization of `Pointee::Metadata`

This PR makes it so that `<Wrapper<Tail> as Pointee>::Metadata` is normalized to `<Tail as Pointee>::Metadata` if we don't know `Wrapper<Tail>: Sized`. With that, the trait solver can prove projection predicates like `<Wrapper<Tail> as Pointee>::Metadata == <Tail as Pointee>::Metadata`, which makes it possible to use the metadata APIs to cast between the tail and the wrapper:

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

use std::ptr::{self, Pointee};

fn cast_same_meta<T: ?Sized, U: ?Sized>(ptr: *const T) -> *const U
where
    T: Pointee<Metadata = <U as Pointee>::Metadata>,
{
    let (thin, meta) = ptr.to_raw_parts();
    ptr::from_raw_parts(thin, meta)
}

struct Wrapper<T: ?Sized>(T);

fn cast_to_wrapper<T: ?Sized>(ptr: *const T) -> *const Wrapper<T> {
    cast_same_meta(ptr)
}
```

Previously, this failed to compile:

```
error[E0271]: type mismatch resolving `<Wrapper<T> as Pointee>::Metadata == <T as Pointee>::Metadata`
  --> src/lib.rs:16:5
   |
15 | fn cast_to_wrapper<T: ?Sized>(ptr: *const T) -> *const Wrapper<T> {
   |                    - found this type parameter
16 |     cast_same_meta(ptr)
   |     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `Wrapper<T>`, found type parameter `T`
   |
   = note: expected associated type `<Wrapper<T> as Pointee>::Metadata`
              found associated type `<T as Pointee>::Metadata`
   = note: an associated type was expected, but a different one was found
```

(Yes, you can already do this with `as` casts. But using functions is so much  *safer* , because you can't change the metadata on accident.)

---

This PR essentially changes the built-in impls of `Pointee` from this:

```rust
// before

impl Pointee for u8 {
    type Metadata = ();
}

impl Pointee for [u8] {
    type Metadata = usize;
}

// ...

impl Pointee for Wrapper<u8> {
    type Metadata = ();
}

impl Pointee for Wrapper<[u8]> {
    type Metadata = usize;
}

// ...

// This impl is only selected if `T` is a type parameter or unnormalizable projection or opaque type.
fallback impl<T: ?Sized> Pointee for Wrapper<T>
where
    Wrapper<T>: Sized
{
    type Metadata = ();
}

// This impl is only selected if `T` is a type parameter or unnormalizable projection or opaque type.
fallback impl<T /*: Sized */> Pointee for T {
    type Metadata = ();
}
```

to this:

```rust
// after

impl Pointee for u8 {
    type Metadata = ();
}

impl Pointee for [u8] {
    type Metadata = usize;
}

// ...

impl<T: ?Sized> Pointee for Wrapper<T> {
    // in the old solver this will instead project to the "deep" tail directly,
    // e.g. `Wrapper<Wrapper<T>>::Metadata = T::Metadata`
    type Metadata = <T as Pointee>::Metadata;
}

// ...

// This impl is only selected if `T` is a type parameter or unnormalizable projection or opaque type.
fallback impl<T /*: Sized */> Pointee for T {
    type Metadata = ();
}
```
2024-02-09 19:21:16 +01:00
blyxyas
e59d9b171e
Avoid a collection and iteration on empty passes 2024-02-09 19:15:40 +01:00
bors
f4cfd87202 Auto merge of #120676 - Mark-Simulacrum:bootstrap-bump, r=clubby789
Bump bootstrap compiler to just-built 1.77 beta

https://forge.rust-lang.org/release/process.html#master-bootstrap-update-t-2-day-tuesday
2024-02-09 18:09:02 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
8b6b9c5efc ast_lowering: Fix regression in use ::{} imports. 2024-02-09 20:17:48 +03:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
83f3bc4271 Update jobserver-rs to 0.1.28 2024-02-09 19:13:07 +03:00
Michael Goulet
34ed554d81 Build DebugInfo for coroutine-closure 2024-02-09 16:01:29 +00:00
bors
e28fae52d9 Auto merge of #120843 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-med37z5, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #113671 (Make privacy visitor use types more (instead of HIR))
 - #120308 (core/time: avoid divisions in Duration::new)
 - #120693 (Invert diagnostic lints.)
 - #120704 (A drive-by rewrite of `give_region_a_name()`)
 - #120809 (Use `transmute_unchecked` in `NonZero::new`.)
 - #120817 (Fix more `ty::Error` ICEs in MIR passes)
 - #120828 (Fix `ErrorGuaranteed` unsoundness with stash/steal.)
 - #120831 (Startup objects disappearing from sysroot)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-02-09 15:34:48 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
2f1ac412ec
Rollup merge of #120828 - nnethercote:fix-stash-steal, r=oli-obk
Fix `ErrorGuaranteed` unsoundness with stash/steal.

When you stash an error, the error count is incremented. You can then use the non-zero error count to get an `ErrorGuaranteed`. You can then steal the error, which decrements the error count. You can then cancel the error.

Example code:
```
fn unsound(dcx: &DiagCtxt) -> ErrorGuaranteed {
    let sp = rustc_span::DUMMY_SP;
    let k = rustc_errors::StashKey::Cycle;
    dcx.struct_err("bogus").stash(sp, k);           // increment error count on stash
    let guar = dcx.has_errors().unwrap();           // ErrorGuaranteed from error count > 0
    let err = dcx.steal_diagnostic(sp, k).unwrap(); // decrement error count on steal
    err.cancel();                                   // cancel error
    guar                                            // ErrorGuaranteed with no error emitted!
}
```

This commit fixes the problem in the simplest way: by not counting stashed errors in `DiagCtxt::{err_count,has_errors}`.

However, just doing this without any other changes leads to over 40 ui test failures. Mostly because of uninteresting extra errors (many saying "type annotations needed" when type inference fails), and in a few cases, due to delayed bugs causing ICEs when no normal errors are printed.

To fix these, this commit adds `DiagCtxt::stashed_err_count`, and uses it in three places alongside `DiagCtxt::{has_errors,err_count}`. It's dodgy to rely on it, because unlike `DiagCtxt::err_count` it can go up and down. But it's needed to preserve existing behaviour, and at least the three places that need it are now obvious.

r? oli-obk
2024-02-09 14:41:52 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
116efb5bb1
Rollup merge of #120817 - compiler-errors:more-mir-errors, r=oli-obk
Fix more `ty::Error` ICEs in MIR passes

Fixes #120791 - Add a check for `ty::Error` in the `ByMove` coroutine pass
Fixes #120816 - Add a check for `ty::Error` in the MIR validator

Also a drive-by fix for a FIXME I had asked oli to add

r? oli-obk
2024-02-09 14:41:51 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
df2281b058
Rollup merge of #120704 - amandasystems:silly-region-name-rewrite, r=compiler-errors
A drive-by rewrite of `give_region_a_name()`

This drive-by rewrite makes the cache-updating nature of the method clearer, using the Entry API into the hash table for region names to capture the update-insert nature of the method. May be marginally more efficient since it only runtime-borrows and indexes the map once, but in this context the performance impact is almost certainly completely negligible.

Note that this commit should preserve all externally visible behaviour. Notably, it preserves the debug logging:

1. printing even in the case of a `None` for the new computed name, and
2. only printing on new values, begin silent on reused values
2024-02-09 14:41:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
46a0448405
Rollup merge of #120693 - nnethercote:invert-diagnostic-lints, r=davidtwco
Invert diagnostic lints.

That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and `untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than half of the compiler has been converted to use translated diagnostics.

This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow` attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.

r? ````@davidtwco````
2024-02-09 14:41:50 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f41d0d90c2
Rollup merge of #113671 - oli-obk:normalize_weak_tys, r=petrochenkov
Make privacy visitor use types more (instead of HIR)

r? ``@petrochenkov``

This is a prerequisite to normalizing projections, as otherwise we have too many invalid bound vars (hir_ty_to_ty is creating types that have bound vars, but no binder).

The commits are still chaotic, I'm gonna clean them up, but I just wanted to let you know about the general direction and wondering if we could land this before adding normalization, as normalization is where behavioral changes happen, and I'd like to keep that part as minimal as possible.

[context can be found on zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/315482-t-compiler.2Fetc.2Fopaque-types/topic/weak.20type.20aliases.20and.20privacy)
2024-02-09 14:41:48 +01:00
bors
8fb67fb37f Auto merge of #120594 - saethlin:delayed-debug-asserts, r=oli-obk
Toggle assert_unsafe_precondition in codegen instead of expansion

The goal of this PR is to make some of the unsafe precondition checks in the standard library available in debug builds. Some UI tests are included to verify that it does that.

The diff is large, but most of it is blessing mir-opt tests and I've also split up this PR so it can be reviewed commit-by-commit.

This PR:
1. Adds a new intrinsic, `debug_assertions` which is lowered to a new MIR NullOp, and only to a constant after monomorphization
2. Rewrites `assume_unsafe_precondition` to check the new intrinsic, and be monomorphic.
3. Skips codegen of the `assume` intrinsic in unoptimized builds, because that was silly before but with these checks it's *very* silly
4. The checks with the most overhead are `ptr::read`/`ptr::write` and `NonNull::new_unchecked`. I've simply added `#[cfg(debug_assertions)]` to the checks for `ptr::read`/`ptr::write` because I was unable to come up with any (good) ideas for decreasing their impact. But for `NonNull::new_unchecked` I found that the majority of callers can use a different function, often a safe one.

Yes, this PR slows down the compile time of some programs. But in our benchmark suite it's never more than 1% icount, and the average icount change in debug-full programs is 0.22%. I think that is acceptable for such an improvement in developer experience.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120539#issuecomment-1922687101
2024-02-09 13:33:38 +00:00
lcnr
5051637979 hide impls if trait bound is proven from env 2024-02-09 12:41:39 +01:00
lcnr
a913c243da add comment 2024-02-09 10:44:19 +01:00
Gurinder Singh
6e37f955e5 Emit more specific diagnostics when enums fail to cast with as 2024-02-09 09:19:44 +05:30
Nicholas Nethercote
7619792107 Fix ErrorGuaranteed unsoundness with stash/steal.
When you stash an error, the error count is incremented. You can then
use the non-zero error count to get an `ErrorGuaranteed`. You can then
steal the error, which decrements the error count. You can then cancel
the error.

Example code:
```
fn unsound(dcx: &DiagCtxt) -> ErrorGuaranteed {
    let sp = rustc_span::DUMMY_SP;
    let k = rustc_errors::StashKey::Cycle;
    dcx.struct_err("bogus").stash(sp, k);           // increment error count on stash
    let guar = dcx.has_errors().unwrap();           // ErrorGuaranteed from error count > 0
    let err = dcx.steal_diagnostic(sp, k).unwrap(); // decrement error count on steal
    err.cancel();                                   // cancel error
    guar                                            // ErrorGuaranteed with no error emitted!
}
```

This commit fixes the problem in the simplest way: by not counting
stashed errors in `DiagCtxt::{err_count,has_errors}`.

However, just doing this without any other changes leads to over 40 ui
test failures. Mostly because of uninteresting extra errors (many saying
"type annotations needed" when type inference fails), and in a few
cases, due to delayed bugs causing ICEs when no normal errors are
printed.

To fix these, this commit adds `DiagCtxt::stashed_err_count`, and uses
it in three places alongside `DiagCtxt::{has_errors,err_count}`. It's
dodgy to rely on it, because unlike `DiagCtxt::err_count` it can go up
and down. But it's needed to preserve existing behaviour, and at least
the three places that need it are now obvious.
2024-02-09 13:50:03 +11:00
Michael Goulet
e32c1ddc52 Don't ice in validation when error body is created 2024-02-09 00:40:43 +00:00
Michael Goulet
698a3c7ade Don't ICE in ByMoveBody when coroutine is tainted 2024-02-09 00:36:30 +00:00
Michael Goulet
7057188c54 make it recursive 2024-02-09 00:13:52 +00:00
Michael Goulet
548929dc5e Don't unnecessarily lower associated type bounds to impl trait 2024-02-09 00:13:51 +00:00