Finish stabilization of `result_ffi_guarantees`
The internal linting has been changed, so all that is left is making sure we stabilize what we want to stabilize.
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #126588 (Added more scenarios where comma to be removed in the function arg)
- #131728 (bootstrap: extract builder cargo to its own module)
- #131968 (Rip out old effects var handling code from traits)
- #131981 (Remove the `BoundConstness::NotConst` variant)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rip out old effects var handling code from traits
Traits no longer have an effect parameter, so this removes logic associated with it. It also removes logic surrounding confirming `~const Destruct` bounds, which I added a looooong time ago, and which I don't feel like we need anymore -- if it needs to be added back, it should be rewritten :D
cc `@fee1-dead`
Added more scenarios where comma to be removed in the function arg
This is an attempt to address the problem methion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106304#issuecomment-1837273666.
Copy the annotation to explain the fix
If the next Error::Extra ("next") doesn't next to current ("current")
```
fn foo(_: (), _: u32) {}
- foo("current", (), 1u32, "next")
+ foo((), 1u32)
```
If the previous error is not a `Error::Extra`, then do not trim the next comma
```
- foo((), "current", 42u32, "next")
+ foo((), 42u32)
```
Frankly, this is a fix from a test case and may not cover all scenarios
Continue to get rid of `ty::Const::{try_}eval*`
This PR mostly does:
* Removes all of the `try_eval_*` and `eval_*` helpers from `ty::Const`, and replace their usages with `try_to_*`.
* Remove `ty::Const::eval`.
* Rename `ty::Const::normalize` to `ty::Const::normalize_internal`. This function is still used in the normalization code itself.
* Fix some weirdness around the `TransmuteFrom` goal.
I'm happy to split it out further; for example, I could probably land the first part which removes the helpers, or the changes to codegen which are more obvious than the changes to tools.
r? BoxyUwU
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130704
Remove `lower_mono_bounds`
I'm not convinced about the usefulness of `lower_mono_bounds`, especially since we have *so* many lower-bound-like fns in HIR lowering, so I've just inlined it into its callers.
`optimize` attribute applied to things other than methods/functions/c…
…losures gives an error (#128488)
Duplicate of #128943, which I had accidentally closed when rebasing.
cc. `@jieyouxu` `@compiler-errors` `@nikomatsakis` `@traviscross` `@pnkfelix.`
Make `llvm::set_section` take a `&CStr`
There's no reason to convert the section name to an intermediate `String`, when the LLVM-C API wants a C string anyway.
Follow-up to #131876.
compiler: Error on layout of enums with invalid reprs
Surprising no one, the ICEs with the same message have the same root cause.
Invalid reprs can reach layout computation for various reasons. For instance, the compiler may want to use its layout computations to discern if a combination of layout-affecting attributes results in a valid type to begin with by e.g. computing its size. When the input is bad, return an error reflecting that the answer to the question is not a useful one.
Allow `#[deny]` inside `#[forbid]` as a no-op
Forbid cannot be overriden. When someome tries to do this anyways, it results in a hard error. That makes sense.
Except it doesn't, because macros. Macros may reasonably use `#[deny]` (or `#[warn]` for an allow-by-default lint) in their expansion to assert that their expanded code follows the lint. This is doesn't work when the output gets expanded into a `forbid()` context. This is pretty silly, since both the macros and the code agree on the lint!
By making it a warning instead, we remove the problem with the macro, which is now nothing as warnings are suppressed in macro expanded code, while still telling users that something is up.
fixes#121483
Just because the code says it's OK does not mean that it actually is OK.
Nodes with the same total size were not sorted, their order relied on
hashmap iteration.
compiler: Adopt rust-analyzer impls for `LayoutCalculatorError`
We're about to massively churn the internals of `rustc_abi`. To minimize the immediate and future impact on rust-analyzer, as a subtree that depends on this crate, grow some API on `LayoutCalculatorError` that reflects their uses of it. This way we can nest the type in theirs, and they can just call functions on it without having to inspect and flatten-out its innards.
refactor fudge_inference, handle effect vars
this makes it easier to use fudging outside of `fudge_inference_if_ok`, which is likely necessary to handle inference variable leaks on rollback.
We now also uses exhaustive matches where possible and improve the code to handle effect vars.
r? `@compiler-errors` `@BoxyUwU`
Get rid of `OnlySelfBounds`
We turn `PredicateFilter` into a newtyped bool called `OnlySelfBounds`. There's no reason to lose the information of the `PredicateFilter`, so let's just pass it all the way through.
Remove unnecessary constness from `lower_generic_args_of_path`
We pass `NotConst` to all callsites of `lower_generic_args_of_path` except for `lower_poly_trait_ref`, so let's not do that.
Stop inverting expectation in normalization errors
We have some funky special case logic to invert the expectation and actual type for normalization errors depending on their cause code. IMO most of the error messages get better, except for `try {}` blocks' type expectations. I think that these need to be special cased in some other way, rather than via this hack.
Fixes#131763
Make sure that outer opaques capture inner opaques's lifetimes even with precise capturing syntax
When lowering an opaque, we must capture and duplicate all of the lifetimes in the opaque's bounds to correctly lower the opaque's bounds. We do this *even if* the lifetime is not captured according to the `+ use<>` precise capturing bound; in that case, we will later reject that captured lifetime. For example, Given an opaque like `impl Sized + 'a + use<>`, we will still duplicate `'a` but later error that it is not mentioned in the `use<>` bound.
The current heuristic was not properly handling cases like:
```
//@ edition: 2024
fn foo<'a>() -> impl Trait<Assoc = impl Trait2> + use<> {}
```
Which forces the outer `impl Trait` to capture `'a` since `impl Trait2` *implicitly* captures `'a` due to the new lifetime capture rules for edition 2024. We were only capturing lifetimes syntactically mentioned in the bounds. (Note that this still is an error; we just need to capture `'a` so it is handled later in the compiler correctly -- hence the ICE in #131769 where a late-bound lifetime was being referenced outside of its binder).
This PR reworks the way we collect lifetimes to capture and duplicate in AST lowering to fix this.
Fixes#131769
warn less about non-exhaustive in ffi
Bindgen allows generating `#[non_exhaustive] #[repr(u32)]` enums. This results in nonintuitive nonlocal `improper_ctypes` warnings, even when the types are otherwise perfectly valid in C.
Adjust for actual tooling expectations by avoiding warning on simple enums with only unit variants.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116831
Migrate `llvm::set_comdat` and `llvm::SetUniqueComdat` to LLVM-C FFI.
Note, now we can call `llvm::set_comdat` only when the target actually
supports adding comdat. As this has no convenient LLVM-C API, we
implement this as `TargetOptions::supports_comdat`.
Co-authored-by: Stuart Cook <Zalathar@users.noreply.github.com>
small interpreter error cleanup
- Add `InterpretResult::map_err_kind` for the common case of swapping out the error kind (while preserving the backtrace pointing to the original error source)
- Rename `InterpError` -> `InterpErrorKind` to be consistent with the `kind` field name, and make it more clear that this is not the final error type
Return values larger than 2 registers using a return area pointer
LLVM and Cranelift disagree about how to return values that don't fit in the registers designated for return values. LLVM will force the entire return value to be passed by return area pointer, while Cranelift will look at each IR level return value independently and decide to pass it in a register or not, which would result in the return value being passed partially in registers and partially through a return area pointer.
While Cranelift may need to be fixed as the LLVM behavior is generally more correct with respect to the surface language, forcing this behavior in rustc itself makes it easier for other backends to conform to the Rust ABI and for the C ABI rustc already handles this behavior anyway.
In addition LLVM's decision to pass the return value in registers or using a return area pointer depends on how exactly the return type is lowered to an LLVM IR type. For example `Option<u128>` can be lowered as `{ i128, i128 }` in which case the x86_64 backend would use a return area pointer, or it could be passed as `{ i32, i128 }` in which case the x86_64 backend would pass it in registers by taking advantage of an LLVM ABI extension that allows using 3 registers for the x86_64 sysv call conv rather than the officially specified 2 registers.
This adjustment is only necessary for the Rust ABI as for other ABI's the calling convention implementations in rustc_target already ensure any return value which doesn't fit in the available amount of return registers is passed in the right way for the current target.
Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc_codegen_cranelift/issues/1525
cc https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/9250
Forbid cannot be overriden. When someome tries to do this anyways,
it results in a hard error. That makes sense.
Except it doesn't, because macros. Macros may reasonably use `#[deny]`
in their expansion to assert
that their expanded code follows the lint. This is doesn't work when the
output gets expanded into a `forbid()` context. This is pretty silly,
since both the macros and the code agree on the lint!
Therefore, we allow `#[deny(..)]`ing a lint that's already forbidden,
keeping the level at forbid.
Never emit `vptr` for empty/auto traits
Emiting `vptr`s for empty/auto traits is unnecessary (#114942) and causes unsoundness in `trait_upcasting` (#131813). This PR should ensure that we never emit vtables for such traits. See the linked issues for more details.
I'm not sure if I can add tests for the vtable layout. So this PR only adds tests for the soundness hole (i.e., the segmentation fault will disappear after this PR).
Fixes#114942Fixes#131813
Cc #65991 (tracking issue for `trait_upcasting`)
r? `@WaffleLapkin` (per https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131813#issuecomment-2419969745)
Default to the medium code model on OpenHarmony LoongArch target
The context for this is #130266: setting the medium code model for the `loongarch64-linux-ohos` target.
r? ```@jieyouxu```
Dont ICE when computing coverage of synthetic async closure body
I'm not totally certain if this is *right*, but at least it doesn't ICE.
The issue is that we end up generating two MIR bodies for each async closure, since the `FnOnce` and `Fn`/`FnMut` implementations have different borrowing behavior of their captured variables. They should ideally both contribute to the coverage, since those MIR bodies are (*to the user*) the same code and should have no behavioral differences.
This PR at least suppresses the ICEs, and then I guess worst case we can fix this the right way later.
r? Zalathar or re-roll
Fixes#131190
Allow dropping dyn principal
Revival of #126660, which was a revival of #114679. Fixes#126313.
Allows dropping principal when coercing trait objects, e.g. `dyn Debug + Send` -> `dyn Send`.
cc `@compiler-errors` `@Jules-Bertholet`
r? `@lcnr`
compiler: use `is_none_or` where it is clearly better
heuristic was: if it easily allows removing bangs entirely? worth it. if it requires more effort or just moves the bang? not.
cleanup canonical queries
best reviewed commit by commit. adding `CanonicalQueryInput` to stop returning `defining_opaque_types` in query responses is the most involved change here.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Setting up indirect access to external data for loongarch64-linux-{musl,ohos}
In issue #118053, the `loongarch64-unknown-linux-gnu` target needs indirection to access external data, and so do the `loongarch64-unknown-linux-musl` and `loongarch64-unknown-linux-ohos` targets.
Make destructors on `extern "C"` frames to be executed
This would make the example in #123231 print "Noisy Drop". I didn't mark this as fixing the issue because the behaviour is yet to be spec'ed.
Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74990
Fix needless_lifetimes in stable_mir
Hi,
This PR fixes the following clippy warning
```
warning: the following explicit lifetimes could be elided: 'a
--> compiler/stable_mir/src/mir/visit.rs:490:6
|
490 | impl<'a> PlaceRef<'a> {
| ^^ ^^
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_lifetimes
= note: `#[warn(clippy::needless_lifetimes)]` on by default
help: elide the lifetimes
|
490 - impl<'a> PlaceRef<'a> {
490 + impl PlaceRef<'_> {
|
```
Best regards,
Michal
Fix trivially_copy_pass_by_ref in stable_mir
Hi,
This PR fixes the following clippy warnings
```
warning: this argument (8 byte) is passed by reference, but would be more efficient if passed by value (limit: 8 byte)
--> compiler/stable_mir/src/mir/body.rs:1042:34
|
1042 | fn subslice_ty(ty: Ty, from: &u64, to: &u64, from_end: &bool) -> Result<Ty, Error> {
| ^^^^ help: consider passing by value instead: `u64`
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#trivially_copy_pass_by_ref
= note: requested on the command line with `-W clippy::trivially-copy-pass-by-ref`
warning: this argument (8 byte) is passed by reference, but would be more efficient if passed by value (limit: 8 byte)
--> compiler/stable_mir/src/mir/body.rs:1042:44
|
1042 | fn subslice_ty(ty: Ty, from: &u64, to: &u64, from_end: &bool) -> Result<Ty, Error> {
| ^^^^ help: consider passing by value instead: `u64`
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#trivially_copy_pass_by_ref
warning: this argument (1 byte) is passed by reference, but would be more efficient if passed by value (limit: 8 byte)
--> compiler/stable_mir/src/mir/body.rs:1042:60
|
1042 | fn subslice_ty(ty: Ty, from: &u64, to: &u64, from_end: &bool) -> Result<Ty, Error> {
| ^^^^^ help: consider passing by value instead: `bool`
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#trivially_copy_pass_by_ref
```
Best regards,
Michal
Rename `can_coerce` to `may_coerce`, and then structurally resolve correctly in the probe
We need to structurally resolve the lhs and rhs of the coercion. Also, renaming the method so it's less ambiguous about what it's doing... the word "may" gives more clear signal that it has false positives imo.
r? lcnr
Don't check unsize goal in MIR validation when opaques remain
Similarly to `mir_assign_valid_types`, let's just skip when there are opaques. Fixes#130921.
Fix explicit_iter_loop in rustc_serialize
Hi,
This PR fixes some clippy warnings
```
warning: it is more concise to loop over references to containers instead of using explicit iteration methods
--> compiler/rustc_serialize/src/serialize.rs:675:18
|
675 | for e in self.iter() {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ help: to write this more concisely, try: `self`
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#explicit_iter_loop
```
Best regards,
Michal
Try to improve error messages involving aliases in the solver
1. Treat aliases as rigid only if it may not be defined and it's well formed (i.e. for projections, its trait goal is satisfied).
2. Record goals that are related to alias normalization under a new `GoalKind`, so we can look into them in the `BestObligation` visitor.
3. Try to deduplicate errors due to self types of goals that are un-normalizable aliases.
r? lcnr
Add fast-path when computing the default visibility
This PR adds (or more correctly re-adds the) fast-path when computing the default visibility, by taking advantage of the fact that the "interposable" requested visibility always return the "default" codegen visibility.
Should address the small regression observed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131111#issuecomment-2402273967.
r? `@lqd`
Implement edition 2024 match ergonomics restrictions
This implements the minimalest version of [match ergonomics for edition 2024](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3627-match-ergonomics-2024.html). This minimal version makes it an error to ever reset the default binding mode. The implemented proposal is described precisely [here](https://hackmd.io/zUqs2ISNQ0Wrnxsa9nhD0Q#RFC-3627-nano), where it is called "RFC 3627-nano".
Rules:
- Rule 1C: When the DBM (default binding mode) is not `move` (whether or not behind a reference), writing `mut`, `ref`, or `ref mut` on a binding is an error.
- Rule 2C: Reference patterns can only match against references in the scrutinee when the DBM is `move`.
This minimal version is forward-compatible with the main proposals for match ergonomics 2024: [RFC3627](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3627-match-ergonomics-2024.html) itself, the alternative [rule 4-early variant](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3627-match-ergonomics-2024.html), and [others](https://hackmd.io/zUqs2ISNQ0Wrnxsa9nhD0Q). The idea is to give us more time to iron out a final proposal.
This includes a migration lint that desugars any offending pattern into one that doesn't make use of match ergonomics. Such patterns have identical meaning across editions.
This PR insta-stabilizes the proposed behavior onto edition 2024.
r? `@ghost`
Tracking:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123076
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #131582 (Add wasm32-unknown-emscripten platform support document)
- #131694 (Make fuchsia-test-runner.py compatible with new JSON output from llvm-readelf)
- #131700 (Fix match_same_arms in stable_mir)
- #131712 (Mark the unstable LazyCell::into_inner const)
- #131746 (Relax a memory order in `once_box`)
- #131754 (Don't report bivariance error when nesting a struct with field errors into another struct)
- #131760 (llvm: Match aarch64 data layout to new LLVM layout)
- #131764 (Fix unnecessary nesting in run-make test output directories)
- #131766 (Add mailmap entry for my dev-desktop setup)
- #131771 (Handle gracefully true/false in `cfg(target(..))` compact)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Handle gracefully true/false in `cfg(target(..))` compact
This PR handles gracefully `true`/`false` in `cfg(target(..))` compact instead of ICE.
r? `@nnethercote`
Fixes#131759
llvm: Match aarch64 data layout to new LLVM layout
LLVM has added 3 new address spaces to support special Windows use cases. These shouldn't trouble us for now, but LLVM requires matching data layouts.
See llvm/llvm-project#111879 for details
Don't report bivariance error when nesting a struct with field errors into another struct
We currently have logic to avoid reporting lifetime bivariance ("lifetime parameter ... is never used") errors when a struct has field resolution errors. However, this doesn't apply transitively. This PR implements a simple visitor to do so.
This was reported [here](https://twitter.com/fasterthanlime/status/1846257921086165033) since a `derive(Deserialize, Serialize)` ends up generating helper structs which have bivariant lifetimes due to containing the offending struct (that's being derived on).
Fix match_same_arms in stable_mir
Hi,
This PR fixes some clippy warnings
(Reopened https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131688)
```
warning: this match arm has an identical body to another arm
--> compiler/stable_mir/src/mir/visit.rs:197:13
|
197 | / StatementKind::FakeRead(_, place) => {
198 | | self.visit_place(place, PlaceContext::NON_MUTATING, location);
199 | | }
| |_____________^
|
= help: try changing either arm body
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#match_same_arms
help: or try merging the arm patterns
|
197 | StatementKind::FakeRead(_, place) | StatementKind::PlaceMention(place) => {
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
help: and remove this obsolete arm
|
209 - StatementKind::PlaceMention(place) => {
210 - self.visit_place(place, PlaceContext::NON_MUTATING, location);
211 - }
|
```
Best regards,
Michal
Remove `GenKillAnalysis`
There are two kinds of dataflow analysis in the compiler: `Analysis`, which is the basic kind, and `GenKillAnalysis`, which is a more specialized kind for gen/kill analyses that is intended as an optimization. However, it turns out that `GenKillAnalysis` is actually a pessimization! It's faster (and much simpler) to do all the gen/kill analyses via `Analysis`. This lets us remove `GenKillAnalysis`, and `GenKillSet`, and a few other things, and also merge `AnalysisDomain` into `Analysis`. The PR removes 500 lines of code and improves performance.
r? `@tmiasko`
Use `ThinVec` for PredicateObligation storage
~~I noticed while profiling clippy on a project that a large amount of time is being spent allocating `Vec`s for `PredicateObligation`, and the `Vec`s are often quite small. This is an attempt to optimise this by using SmallVec to avoid heap allocations for these common small Vecs.~~
This PR turns all the `Vec<PredicateObligation>` into a single type alias while avoiding referring to `Vec` around it, then swaps the type over to `ThinVec<PredicateObligation>` and fixes the fallout. This also contains an implementation of `ThinVec::extract_if`, copied from `Vec::extract_if` and currently being upstreamed to https://github.com/Gankra/thin-vec/pull/66.
This leads to a small (0.2-0.7%) performance gain in the latest perf run.
LLVM has added 3 new address spaces to support special Windows use
cases. These shouldn't trouble us for now, but LLVM requires matching
data layouts.
See llvm/llvm-project#111879 for details
Fix uninlined_format_args in stable_mir
Hi,
This PR fixes some clippy warnings
```
warning: variables can be used directly in the `format!` string
--> compiler/stable_mir/src/mir/pretty.rs:362:13
|
362 | write!(writer, "{kind}{:?}", place)
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#uninlined_format_args
= note: requested on the command line with `-W clippy::uninlined-format-args`
help: change this to
|
362 - write!(writer, "{kind}{:?}", place)
362 + write!(writer, "{kind}{place:?}")
|
```
Best regards,
Michal
Don't report `on_unimplemented` message for negative traits
Kinda useless change but it was affecting my ability to read error messages when experimenting with negative bounds.