improve pretty printing for associated items in trait objects
* Don't print a binder in front of associated items, because it's not valid syntax.
* e.g. print `dyn for<'a> Trait<'a, Assoc = &'a u8>` instead of `dyn for<'a> Trait<'a, for<'a> Assoc = &'a u8>`.
* Don't print associated items that are implied by a supertrait bound.
* e.g. if we have `trait Sub: Super<Assoc = u8> {}`, then just print `dyn Sub` instead of `dyn Sub<Assoc = u8>`.
I've added the test in the first commit, so you can see the diff of the compiler output in the second commit.
exhaustiveness: Prefer "`0..MAX` not covered" to "`_` not covered"
There was an exception when reporting integer ranges as missing, it's been there for as long as I can remember. This PR removes it. I think it's nicer to report "`0..MAX` not covered" than "`_` not covered". This also makes it consistent with enums, where we report individual enum variants in this case (as showcased in the rest of the `empty-match.rs` test).
r? ``@estebank``
docs: also check the inline stmt during redundant link check
Fixes#120444
This issue was brought about by querying `root::webdavfs::A`, a key that doesn't exist in `doc_link_resolutions`. To avoid a panic, I've altered the gating mechanism to allow this lint pass to be skipped.
I'm not certain if this is the best solution. An alternative approach might be to leverage other info from the name resolutions instead of `doc_link_resolutions`. After all, all we need is to get the resolution from a combination of `(module, name)`. However, I believe they would yield the same outcome, both skipping this lint.
match lowering: consistently lower bindings deepest-first
Currently when lowering match expressions to MIR, we do a funny little dance with the order of bindings. I attempt to explain it in the third commit: we handle refutable (i.e. needing a test) patterns differently than irrefutable ones. This leads to inconsistencies, as reported in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120210. The reason we need a dance at all is for situations like:
```rust
fn foo1(x: NonCopyStruct) {
let y @ NonCopyStruct { copy_field: z } = x;
// the above should turn into
let z = x.copy_field;
let y = x;
}
```
Here the `y ```````@```````` binding will move out of `x`, so we need to copy the field first.
I believe that the inconsistency came about when we fixed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69971, and didn't notice that the fix didn't extend to refutable patterns. My guess then is that ordering bindings by "deepest-first, otherwise source order" is a sound choice. This PR implements that (at least I hope, match lowering is hard to follow 🥲).
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120210
r? ```````@oli-obk``````` since you merged the original fix to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/69971
cc ```````@matthewjasper```````
Make it so that async-fn-in-trait is compatible with a concrete future in implementation
There's no technical reason why an AFIT like `async fn foo()` cannot be satisfied with an implementation signature like `fn foo() -> Pin<Box<dyn Future<Output = ()> + 'static>>`.
We rejected this previously because we were uncertain about how AFITs worked with refinement, but I don't believe this needs to be a restriction any longer.
r? oli-obk
resolve: Unload speculatively resolved crates before freezing cstore
Name resolution sometimes loads additional crates to improve diagnostics (e.g. suggest imports).
Not all of these diagnostics result in errors, sometimes they are just warnings, like in #117772.
If additional crates loaded speculatively stay and gets listed by things like `query crates` then they may produce further errors like duplicated lang items, because lang items from speculatively loaded crates are as good as from non-speculatively loaded crates.
They can probably do things like adding unintended impls from speculatively loaded crates to method resolution as well.
The extra crates will also get into the crate's metadata as legitimate dependencies.
In this PR I remove the speculative crates from cstore when name resolution is finished and cstore is frozen.
This is better than e.g. filtering away speculative crates in `query crates` because things like `DefId`s referring to these crates and leaking to later compilation stages can produce ICEs much easier, allowing to detect them.
The unloading could potentially be skipped if any errors were reported (to allow using `DefId`s from speculatively loaded crates for recovery), but I didn't do it in this PR because I haven't seen such cases of recovery. We can reconsider later if any relevant ICEs are reported.
Unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117772.
Stop bailing out from compilation just because there were incoherent traits
fixes#120343
but also has a lot of "type annotations needed" fallout. Some are fixed in the second commit.
Make `NonZero` constructors generic.
This makes `NonZero` constructors generic, so that `NonZero::new` can be used without turbofish syntax.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120257
~~I cannot figure out how to make this work with `const` traits. Not sure if I'm using it wrong or whether there's a bug:~~
```rust
101 | if n == T::ZERO {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `host`, found `true`
|
= note: expected constant `host`
found constant `true`
```
r? `@dtolnay`
Reconstify `Add`
r? project-const-traits
I'm not happy with the ui test changes (or failures because I did not bless them and include the diffs in this PR). There is at least some bugs I need to look and try fix:
1. A third duplicated diagnostic when a consumer crate that does not have `effects` enabled has a trait selection error for an upstream const_trait trait. See tests/ui/ufcs/ufcs-qpath-self-mismatch.rs.
2. For some reason, making `Add` a const trait would stop us from suggesting `T: Add` when we try to add two `T`s without that bound. See tests/ui/suggestions/issue-97677.rs
```
error: equality constraints are not yet supported in `where` clauses
--> $DIR/equality-bound.rs:50:9
|
LL | IntoIterator::Item = A,
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ not supported
|
= note: see issue #20041 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/20041> for more information
help: if `IntoIterator::Item` is an associated type you're trying to set, use the associated type binding syntax
|
LL ~ fn from_iter<T: IntoIterator<Item = A>>(_: T) -> Self
LL | where
LL ~
|
error: equality constraints are not yet supported in `where` clauses
--> $DIR/equality-bound.rs:63:9
|
LL | T::Item = A,
| ^^^^^^^^^^^ not supported
|
= note: see issue #20041 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/20041> for more information
help: if `IntoIterator::Item` is an associated type you're trying to set, use the associated type binding syntax
|
LL ~ fn from_iter<T: IntoIterator<Item = A>>(_: T) -> Self
LL | where
LL ~
|
```
Fix#68982.
Record coroutine kind in coroutine generics
Oops, added a new substitution (the "kind" ty) to coroutines but forgot to record it in the `generics_of`. I'm surprised I left this out of the coroutine-closure PR -- I thought I made this change; I possibly rebased it out by accident.
Fixes#120732
r? oli-obk
Add parallel rustc ui tests
Updates #118698
Add some ui tests for parallel rustc front end
This is a relatively large feature so I think it's worth creating a new entity in tests/ui folder, so we need to modify the limit in tidy.
Suggest turning `if let` into irrefutable `let` if appropriate
When encountering an `if let` tail expression without an `else` arm for an enum with a single variant, suggest writing an irrefutable `let` binding instead.
```
error[E0317]: `if` may be missing an `else` clause
--> $DIR/irrefutable-if-let-without-else.rs:8:5
|
LL | fn foo(x: Enum) -> i32 {
| --- expected `i32` because of this return type
LL | / if let Enum::Variant(value) = x {
LL | | value
LL | | }
| |_____^ expected `i32`, found `()`
|
= note: `if` expressions without `else` evaluate to `()`
= help: consider adding an `else` block that evaluates to the expected type
help: consider using an irrefutable `let` binding instead
|
LL ~ let Enum::Variant(value) = x;
LL ~ value
|
```
Fix#61788.
Mark "unused binding" suggestion as maybe incorrect
Ignoring unused bindings should be a determination made by a human, `rustfix` shouldn't auto-apply the suggested change.
Fix#54196.
Add FileCheck annotations to MIR-opt SROA tests
Part of #116971, adds FileCheck annotations to SROA MIR-opt tests in `tests/mir-opt/sroa` and a few uncategorized files.
r? cjgillot
Use the same mir-opt bless targets on all platforms
This undoes some of the implementation in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119035, but not the effect. Sorry for the churn, I've learned a lot about how all this works over the past few weeks.
The objective here is to make `x test mir-opt --bless` use the same set of targets on all platforms. It didn't do that from the start because bootstrap assumes that a target linker is available, so the availability of cross-linkers is how we ended up with `MIR_OPT_BLESS_TARGET_MAPPING` and poor support for blessing mir-opt tests from Aarch64 MacOS. This PR corrects that.
So I've adjusted the bless targets for mir-opt tests, as well as tweaked some of the logic in bootstrap about linker configuration so that we don't try to access the cache of cc/linker configuration when doing the mir-opt builds.
While working on that I realized that if I swapped from the `cargo rustc -p std` strategy to `cargo check` on the sysroot, I could use the existing code for check builds to bypass some linker logic. Sweet.
But just doing that doesn't work, because then mir-opt tests complain that they can't find an rlib for any of the standard library crates. That happens because nearly all the mir-opt tests are attempting to build `CrateType::Executable`. We already have all the MIR required for mir-opt tests from the rmeta files, but since rustc think we're trying to build an executable it demands we have access to all the upstream monomorphizations that only exist in rlibs, not the meta files in a MIR-only sysroot.
So to fix that, I've swapped all the mir-opt tests be passed `--crate-type=rlib`. That works, but leaves us with a few broken mir-opt tests which I've blessed or fixed up; we also lose MIR for some functions so I added `-Clink-dead-code` to paper over that. The inlining changes are because changing the crate-type perturbs the hashes that are compared here to sometimes let us do inlining even in a possibly-recursive call: 4cb17b4e78/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/inline.rs (L332-L341)
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #119939 (Improve 'generic param from outer item' error for `Self` and inside `static`/`const` items)
- #120331 (pattern_analysis: use a plain `Vec` in `DeconstructedPat`)
- #120396 (Account for unbounded type param receiver in suggestions)
- #120423 (update indirect structural match lints to match RFC and to show up for dependencies)
- #120435 (Suggest name value cfg when only value is used for check-cfg)
- #120502 (Remove `ffi_returns_twice` feature)
- #120507 (Account for non-overlapping unmet trait bounds in suggestion)
- #120513 (Normalize type outlives obligations in NLL for new solver)
- #120707 (Don't expect early-bound region to be local when reporting errors in RPITIT well-formedness)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Don't expect early-bound region to be local when reporting errors in RPITIT well-formedness
The implicit lifetime in the example code gets replaced with `ReError`, which fails a `sub_regions` check in the lexical region solver. Error reporting ends up calling `is_suitable_region` on an early bound region in the *trait* definition. This causes an ICE because we `expect_local()`.
This is kind of a bad explanation, but this code just makes diagnostics reporting a bit more gracefully fallible. If the reviewer wants a thorough investigation of exactly where we get this region outlives obligation, I can write one up. Doesn't really seem worth it, though, imo.
Fixes#120638Fixes#120648
Normalize type outlives obligations in NLL for new solver
Normalize the type outlives assumptions and obligations in MIR borrowck. This should fix any of the lazy-norm-related MIR borrowck problems.
Also some cleanups from last PR:
1. Normalize obligations in a loop in lexical region resolution
2. Use `deeply_normalize_with_skipped_universes` in lexical resolution since we may have, e.g. `for<'a> Alias<'a>: 'b`.
r? lcnr
Account for non-overlapping unmet trait bounds in suggestion
When a method not found on a type parameter could have been provided by any
of multiple traits, suggest each trait individually, instead of a single
suggestion to restrict the type parameter with *all* of them.
Before:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
help: consider restricting the type parameters to satisfy the trait bounds
|
LL | fn g<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering where T: Iterator, T: Ord {
| +++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
After:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn g<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn g<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix#108428.
Follow up to #120396, only last commit is relevant.
update indirect structural match lints to match RFC and to show up for dependencies
This is a large step towards implementing https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3535.
We currently have five lints related to "the structural match situation":
- nontrivial_structural_match
- indirect_structural_match
- pointer_structural_match
- const_patterns_without_partial_eq
- illegal_floating_point_literal_pattern
This PR concerns the first 3 of them. (The 4th already is set up to show for dependencies, and the 5th is removed by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116284.) nontrivial_structural_match is being removed as per the RFC; the other two are enabled to show up in dependencies.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73448 by removing the affected analysis.
Account for unbounded type param receiver in suggestions
When encountering
```rust
fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
a.cmp(&b) //~ ERROR E0599
}
```
output
```
error[E0599]: no method named `cmp` found for type parameter `T` in the current scope
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:2:7
|
LL | fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| - method `cmp` not found for this type parameter
LL | a.cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn f<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn f<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix#120186.
revert stabilization of const_intrinsic_copy
`@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` I don't know what we were thinking when we approved https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97276... const-eval isn't supposed to be able to mutate anything yet! It's also near impossible to actually call `copy` in const on stable since `&mut` expressions are generally unstable. However, there's one exception...
```rust
static mut INT: i32 = unsafe {
let val = &mut [1]; // `&mut` on arrays is allowed in `static mut`
(val as *mut [i32; 1]).copy_from(&[42], 1);
val[0]
};
fn main() { unsafe {
dbg!(INT);
} }
```
Inside `static mut`, we accept some `&mut` since ~forever, to make `static mut FOO: &mut [T] = &mut [...];` work. We reject any attempt to actually write to that mutable reference though... except for the `copy` functions.
I think we should revert stabilizing these functions that take `*mut`, and then re-stabilize them together with `ptr.write` once mutable references are stable.
(This will likely fail on PowerPC until https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/1497 lands. But we'll need a crater run first anyway.)
Suggest `[tail @ ..]` on `[..tail]` and `[...tail]` where `tail` is unresolved
Fixes#120591.
~~Will conflict with #120570~~ (rebased).
r? estebank or compiler
Some cleanups around diagnostic levels.
Plus some refactoring in and around diagnostic levels and emission. Details in the individual commit logs.
r? ````@oli-obk````
Rework support for async closures; allow them to return futures that borrow from the closure's captures
This PR implements a new lowering for async closures via `TyKind::CoroutineClosure` which handles the curious relationship between the closure and the coroutine that it returns.
I wrote up a bunch in [this hackmd](https://hackmd.io/`@compiler-errors/S1HvqQxca)` which will be copied to the dev guide after this PR lands, and hopefully left sufficient comments in the source code explaining why this change is as large as it is.
This also necessitates that they begin implementing the `AsyncFn`-family of traits, rather than the `Fn`-family of traits -- if you need `Fn` implementations, you should probably use the non-sugar `|| async {}` syntax instead.
Notably this PR does not yet implement `async Fn()` syntax sugar for bounds, but I expect to add those soon (**edit:** #120392). For now, users must use `AsyncFn()` traits directly, which necessitates adding the `async_fn_traits` feature gate as well. I will add this as a follow-up very soon.
r? oli-obk
This is based on top of #120322, but that PR is minimal.
Actually abort in -Zpanic-abort-tests
When a test fails in panic=abort, it can be useful to have a debugger or other tooling hook into the `abort()` call for debugging. Doing this some other way would require it to hard code details of Rust's panic machinery.
There's no reason we couldn't have done this in the first place; using a single exit code for "success" or "failed" was just simpler. Now we are aware of the special exit codes for posix and windows platforms, logging a special error if an unrecognized code is used on those platforms, and falling back to just "failure" on other platforms.
This continues to account for `#[should_panic]` inside the test process itself, so there's no risk of misinterpreting a random call to `abort()` as an expected panic. Any exit code besides `TR_OK` is logged as a test failure.
As an added benefit, this would allow us to support panic=immediate_abort (but not `#[should_panic]`), without noise about unexpected exit codes when a test fails.
When encountering an `if let` tail expression without an `else` arm for an
enum with a single variant, suggest writing an irrefutable `let` binding
instead.
```
error[E0317]: `if` may be missing an `else` clause
--> $DIR/irrefutable-if-let-without-else.rs:8:5
|
LL | fn foo(x: Enum) -> i32 {
| --- expected `i32` because of this return type
LL | / if let Enum::Variant(value) = x {
LL | | value
LL | | }
| |_____^ expected `i32`, found `()`
|
= note: `if` expressions without `else` evaluate to `()`
= help: consider adding an `else` block that evaluates to the expected type
help: consider using an irrefutable `let` binding instead
|
LL ~ let Enum::Variant(value) = x;
LL ~ value
|
```
Fix#61788.
Introduce support for `async` bound modifier on `Fn*` traits
Adds `async` to the list of `TraitBoundModifiers`, which instructs AST lowering to map the trait to an async flavor of the trait. For now, this is only supported for `Fn*` to `AsyncFn*`, and I expect that this manual mapping via lang items will be replaced with a better system in the future.
The motivation for adding these bounds is to separate the users of async closures from the exact trait desugaring of their callable bounds. Instead of users needing to be concerned with the `AsyncFn` trait, they should be able to write `async Fn()` and it will desugar to whatever underlying trait we decide is best for the lowering of async closures.
Note: rustfmt support can be done in the rustfmt repo after a subtree sync.
make matching on NaN a hard error, and remove the rest of illegal_floating_point_literal_pattern
These arms would never be hit anyway, so the pattern makes little sense. We have had a future-compat lint against float matches in general for a *long* time, so I hope we can get away with immediately making this a hard error.
This is part of implementing https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3535.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/41620 by removing the lint.
https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1456 updates the reference to match.
coverage: Improve handling of function/closure spans
This is a combination of some loosely-related changes that touch the same code:
1. Make unexpansion of closure bodies more precise, by unexpanding back to the context of the closure declaration, instead of unexpanding all the way back to the top-level context. This preserves the way we handle async desugaring and closures containing a single bang-macro, while also giving better results for closures defined in macros.
2. Skip the normal span-refinement code when dealing with the trivial outer part of an async function.
3. Be more explicit about the fact that `fn_sig_span` has been extended to the start of the function body, and is not necessarily present.
---
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
The two kinds of delayed bug have quite different semantics so a
stronger conceptual separation is nice. (`is_error` is a good example,
because the two kinds have different behaviour.)
The commit also moves the `DelayedBug` variant after `Error` in `Level`,
to reflect the fact that it's weaker than `Error` -- it might trigger an
error but also might not. (The pre-existing `downgrade_to_delayed_bug`
function also reflects the notion that delayed bugs are lower/after
normal errors.)
Plus it condenses some of the comments on `Level` into a table, for
easier reading, and introduces `can_be_top_or_sub` to indicate which
levels can be used in top-level diagnostics vs. subdiagnostics.
Finally, it renames `DiagCtxtInner::span_delayed_bugs` as
`DiagCtxtInner::delayed_bugs`. The `span_` prefix is unnecessary because
some delayed bugs don't have a span.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #119759 (Add FileCheck annotations to dataflow-const-prop tests)
- #120323 (On E0277 be clearer about implicit `Sized` bounds on type params and assoc types)
- #120473 (Only suggest removal of `as_*` and `to_` conversion methods on E0308)
- #120540 (add test for try-block-in-match-arm)
- #120547 (`#![feature(inline_const_pat)]` is no longer incomplete)
- #120552 (Correctly check `never_type` feature gating)
- #120555 (put pnkfelix (me) back on the review queue.)
- #120556 (Improve the diagnostics for unused generic parameters)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #120484 (Avoid ICE when is_val_statically_known is not of a supported type)
- #120516 (pattern_analysis: cleanup manual impls)
- #120517 (never patterns: It is correct to lower `!` to `_`.)
- #120523 (Improve `io::Read::read_buf_exact` error case)
- #120528 (Store SHOULD_CAPTURE as AtomicU8)
- #120529 (Update data layouts in custom target tests for LLVM 18)
- #120531 (Remove a bunch of `has_errors` checks that have no meaningful or the wrong effect)
- #120533 (Correct paths for hexagon-unknown-none-elf platform doc)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Improve the diagnostics for unused generic parameters
* Don't emit two errors (namely E0091 *and* E0392) for unused type parameters on *lazy* type aliases
* Fix the diagnostic help message of E0392 for *lazy* type aliases: Don't talk about the “fields” of lazy type aliases (use the term “body” instead) and don't suggest `PhantomData` for them, it doesn't make much sense
* Consolidate the diagnostics for E0091 (unused type parameters in type aliases) and E0392 (unused generic parameters due to bivariance) and make it translatable
* Still keep the error codes distinct (for now)
* Naturally leads to better diagnostics for E0091
r? ```@oli-obk``` (to ballast your review load :P) or compiler
Correctly check `never_type` feature gating
Fixes#120542.
The feature wasn't tested on return type of a generic function type, so it got under the radar in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120316.
r? ```@compiler-errors```
`#![feature(inline_const_pat)]` is no longer incomplete
Now that borrow checking and safety checking is implemented for inline constant patterns, the incomplete feature status is not necessary. Stabilizing this feature requires more testing and has some of the same unresolved questions as inline constants.
cc #76001
add test for try-block-in-match-arm
This is noted as an implementation concern under the tracking issue for `?` and `try` blocks. (Issue 31436)
Refs: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/31436
On E0277 be clearer about implicit `Sized` bounds on type params and assoc types
```
error[E0277]: the size for values of type `[i32]` cannot be known at compilation time
--> f100.rs:2:33
|
2 | let _ = std::mem::size_of::<[i32]>();
| ^^^^^ doesn't have a size known at compile-time
|
= help: the trait `Sized` is not implemented for `[i32]`
note: required by an implicit `Sized` bound in `std::mem::size_of`
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/mem/mod.rs:312:22
|
312 | pub const fn size_of<T>() -> usize {
| ^ required by the implicit `Sized` requirement on this bound in `size_of`
```
Fix#120178.
Avoid ICE when is_val_statically_known is not of a supported type
2 ICE with 1 stone!
1. Implement `llvm.is.constant.ptr` to avoid first ICE in linked issue.
2. return `false` when the argument is not one of `i*`/`f*`/`ptr` to avoid second ICE.
fixes#120480
Suggest changing type to const parameters if we encounter a type in the trait bound position
The first commit is just drive-by cleanup.
Provide a structured suggestion if the user forgot to prefix a “const parameter” with `const`, e.g., in `struct Tagged<TAG: u64>;`. This happens to me from time to time. Maybe C++ devs are also prone to this mistake given template syntax looks like `template<typename T, uint32_t N>`.
coverage: Use normal `edition:` headers in coverage tests
Some of these tests were originally written as part of a custom `run-make` test, so at that time they weren't able to use the normal compiletest header directive parser.
Now that they're properly integrated, there's no need for them to use `compile-flags` to specify the edition, since they can use `edition` instead.
In most cases the `.cov-map` snapshot isn't affected at all, but in a few cases we add or remove a line, which slightly disturbs the first line number in each instrumented function.
Some of these tests were originally written as part of a custom `run-make`
test, so at that time they weren't able to use the normal compiletest header
directive parser.
Now that they're properly integrated, there's no need for them to use
`compile-flags` to specify the edition, since they can use `edition` instead.
In #119972 the code should have become `E0123` rather than `0123`. This
fix doesn't affect the outcome because the proc macro errors out before
the type of the code is checked, but the fix makes the test's code
consistent with other similar code elsewhere.
Given the previous change to add implicit `Sized` bounds only if there
isn't already an explicit `Sized` bound, now the incr comp machinery
doesn't consider adding the explicit bound as being dirty, as long as
`-Zincremental-ignore-spans` is set.
```
error[E0277]: the size for values of type `[i32]` cannot be known at compilation time
--> f100.rs:2:33
|
2 | let _ = std::mem::size_of::<[i32]>();
| ^^^^^ doesn't have a size known at compile-time
|
= help: the trait `Sized` is not implemented for `[i32]`
note: required by an implicit `Sized` bound in `std::mem::size_of`
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/mem/mod.rs:312:22
|
312 | pub const fn size_of<T>() -> usize {
| ^ required by the implicit `Sized` requirement on this bound in `size_of`
```
Fix#120178.
rustdoc: Correctly handle attribute merge if this is a glob reexport
Fixes#120487.
The regression was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113091. Only non-glob reexports should have been impacted.
cc `````@Nemo157`````
r? `````@notriddle`````
Don't hash lints differently to non-lints.
`Diagnostic::keys`, which is used for hashing and equating diagnostics, has a surprising behaviour: it ignores children, but only for lints. This was added in #88493 to fix some duplicated diagnostics, but it doesn't seem necessary any more.
This commit removes the special case and only four tests have changed output, with additional errors. And those additional errors aren't exact duplicates, they're just similar. For example, in src/tools/clippy/tests/ui/same_name_method.rs we currently have this error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:79:9
|
LL | impl T1 for S {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
and with this change we also get this error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:81:9
|
LL | impl T2 for S {}
|
```
I think printing this second argument is reasonable, possibly even preferable to hiding it. And the other cases are similar.
r? `@estebank`
Provide more context on derived obligation error primary label
Expand the primary span of E0277 when the immediate unmet bound is not what the user wrote:
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `i32: Bar` is not satisfied
--> f100.rs:6:6
|
6 | <i32 as Foo>::foo();
| ^^^ the trait `Bar` is not implemented for `i32`, which is required by `i32: Foo`
|
help: this trait has no implementations, consider adding one
--> f100.rs:2:1
|
2 | trait Bar {}
| ^^^^^^^^^
note: required for `i32` to implement `Foo`
--> f100.rs:3:14
|
3 | impl<T: Bar> Foo for T {}
| --- ^^^ ^
| |
| unsatisfied trait bound introduced here
```
Fix#40120.
Further improve `space_between`
`space_between` is used by `print_tts` to decide when spaces should be put between tokens. This PR improves it in two ways:
- avoid unnecessary spaces before semicolons, and
- don't omit some necessary spaces before/after some punctuation symbols.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Expand the primary span of E0277 when the immediate unmet bound is not what the user wrote:
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `i32: Bar` is not satisfied
--> f100.rs:6:6
|
6 | <i32 as Foo>::foo();
| ^^^ the trait `Bar` is not implemented for `i32`, which is required by `i32: Foo`
|
help: this trait has no implementations, consider adding one
--> f100.rs:2:1
|
2 | trait Bar {}
| ^^^^^^^^^
note: required for `i32` to implement `Foo`
--> f100.rs:3:14
|
3 | impl<T: Bar> Foo for T {}
| --- ^^^ ^
| |
| unsatisfied trait bound introduced here
```
Fix#40120.
`Diagnostic::keys`, which is used for hashing and equating diagnostics,
has a surprising behaviour: it ignores children, but only for lints.
This was added in #88493 to fix some duplicated diagnostics, but it
doesn't seem necessary any more.
This commit removes the special case and only four tests have changed
output, with additional errors. And those additional errors aren't
exact duplicates, they're just similar. For example, in
src/tools/clippy/tests/ui/same_name_method.rs we currently have this
error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:79:9
|
LL | impl T1 for S {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
and with this change we also get this error:
```
error: method's name is the same as an existing method in a trait
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:75:13
|
LL | fn foo() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
|
note: existing `foo` defined here
--> $DIR/same_name_method.rs:81:9
|
LL | impl T2 for S {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
I think printing this second argument is reasonable, possibly even
preferable to hiding it. And the other cases are similar.
When a method not found on a type parameter could have been provided by any
of multiple traits, suggest each trait individually, instead of a single
suggestion to restrict the type parameter with *all* of them.
Before:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
help: consider restricting the type parameters to satisfy the trait bounds
|
LL | fn g<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering where T: Iterator, T: Ord {
| +++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
After:
```
error[E0599]: the method `cmp` exists for reference `&T`, but its trait bounds were not satisfied
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:5:10
|
LL | (&a).cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `&T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`T: Ord`
which is required by `&T: Ord`
`&T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut &T: Iterator`
`T: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut T: Iterator`
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn g<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn g<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix#108428.
Normalize region obligation in lexical region resolution with next-gen solver
This normalizes region obligations when we `resolve_regions`, since they may be unnormalized with deferred projection equality.
It's pretty hard to add tests that exercise this without also triggering MIR borrowck errors (because we don't normalize there yet). I've added one test with two revisions that should test that we both 1. normalize region obligations in the param env, and 2. normalize registered region obligations during lexical region resolution.
When encountering
```rust
fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
a.cmp(&b) //~ ERROR E0599
}
```
output
```
error[E0599]: no method named `cmp` found for type parameter `T` in the current scope
--> $DIR/method-on-unbounded-type-param.rs:2:7
|
LL | fn f<T>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| - method `cmp` not found for this type parameter
LL | a.cmp(&b)
| ^^^ method cannot be called on `T` due to unsatisfied trait bounds
|
= help: items from traits can only be used if the type parameter is bounded by the trait
help: the following traits define an item `cmp`, perhaps you need to restrict type parameter `T` with one of them:
|
LL | fn f<T: Ord>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| +++++
LL | fn f<T: Iterator>(a: T, b: T) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
| ++++++++++
```
Fix#120186.
Remove some unnecessary check logic for lang items in HIR typeck
Obvious bugs with `#[no_core]` do not deserve customized recovery logic, since they are bugs we do not expect users to ever encounter, and if users are experimenting with `#[no_core]`, they should really be familiar with the compiler implementation.
These error recoveries are implemented now only where issues have been reported in the past, rather than systematically validating lang items.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/620
> In particular, one-off fixes for particular assumptions about lang items or intrinsics that introduce additional complexity into the compiler are not accepted.
r? Nilstrieb
Revert outdated version of "Add the wasm32-wasi-preview2 target"
An outdated version of #119616 was merged in rollup #120309.
This reverts those changes to enable #119616 to “retain the intended diff” after a rebase.
```@rylev``` has agreed that this would be the cleanest approach with respect to the history.
Unblocks #119616.
r? ```@petrochenkov``` or compiler or libs
Remove various `has_errors` or `err_count` uses
follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119895
r? `@nnethercote` since you recently did something similar.
There are so many more of these, but I wanted to get a PR out instead of growing the commit list indefinitely. The commits all work on their own and can be reviewed commit by commit.
Deduplicate more sized errors on call exprs
Change the implicit `Sized` `Obligation` `Span` for call expressions to include the whole expression. This aids the existing deduplication machinery to reduce the number of errors caused by a single unsized expression.
Suppress unhelpful diagnostics for unresolved top level attributes
Fixes#118455, unresolved top level attribute error didn't imported prelude and already have emitted an error, report builtin macro and attributes error by the way, so `check_invalid_crate_level_attr` in can ignore them.
Also fixes#89566, fixes#67107.
r? `@petrochenkov`
The query accept arbitrary DefIds, not just owner DefIds.
The return can be an `Option` because if there are no nodes, then it doesn't matter whether it's due to NonOwner or Phantom.
Also rename the query to `opt_hir_owner_nodes`.
Be more careful about interpreting a label/lifetime as a mistyped char literal.
Currently the parser interprets any label/lifetime in certain positions as a mistyped char literal, on the assumption that the trailing single quote was accidentally omitted. In such cases it gives an error with a suggestion to add the trailing single quote, and then puts the appropriate char literal into the AST. This behaviour was introduced in #101293.
This is reasonable for a case like this:
```
let c = 'a;
```
because `'a'` is a valid char literal. It's less reasonable for a case like this:
```
let c = 'abc;
```
because `'abc'` is not a valid char literal.
Prior to #120329 this could result in some sub-optimal suggestions in error messages, but nothing else. But #120329 changed `LitKind::from_token_lit` to assume that the char/byte/string literals it receives are valid, and to assert if not. This is reasonable because the lexer does not produce invalid char/byte/string literals in general. But in this "interpret label/lifetime as unclosed char literal" case the parser can produce an invalid char literal with contents such as `abc`, which triggers an assertion failure.
This PR changes the parser so it's more cautious about interpreting labels/lifetimes as unclosed char literals.
Fixes#120397.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Fixes footnote handling in rustdoc
Fixes#100638.
You can now declare footnotes like this:
```rust
//! Reference to footnotes A[^1], B[^2] and C[^3].
//!
//! [^1]: Footnote A.
//! [^2]: Footnote B.
//! [^3]: Footnote C.
```
r? `@notriddle`
Move UI issue tests to subdirectories
I've moved issue tests numbered 1920, 3668, 5997, 23302, 32122, 40510, 57741, 71676, and 76077 to relevant better-named subdirectories (tracking issue #73494). The issues were chosen by having the highest number of files per issue.
I adjusted the `ISSUES_ENTRY_LIMIT` because `tidy` was shouting at me.
raw pointer metadata API: data address -> data pointer
A pointer consists of [more than just an address](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3559), so let's not equate "pointer" and "address" in these docs.
Make the coroutine def id of an async closure the child of the closure def id
Adjust def collection to make the (inner) coroutine returned by an async closure be a def id child of the (outer) closure. This makes it easy to map from coroutine -> closure by using `tcx.parent`, since currently it's not trivial to do this.
only assemble alias bound candidates for rigid aliases
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/77
This also causes `<Wrapper<?0> as Trait>::Unwrap: Trait` to always be ambig, as we now normalize the self type before checking whether it is an inference variable.
I cannot think of an approach to the underlying issues here which does not require the "may-define means must-define" restriction for opaque types. Going to go ahead with this and added this restriction to the tracking issue for the new solver to make sure we don't stabilize it without getting types + lang signoff here.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Issue tests numbered 1920, 3668, 5997, 23302, 32122, 40510, 57741, 71676, and 76077 were moved to relevant better-named subdirectories. ISSUES_ENTRY_LIMIT was adjusted to match new number of files and FIXME note was expanded.
The test was using an internal feature which doesn't really matter, but
more importantly, we're now fatally exiting after the duplicate lang
item, so this tests nothing.
Do not attempt to provide an accurate suggestion for `impl Trait`
in bare trait types when linting. Instead, only do the object
safety check when an E0782 is already going to be emitted in the
2021 edition.
Fix#120241.
Borrow check inline const patterns
Add type annotations to MIR so that borrowck can pass constraints from inline constants in patterns to the containing function.
Also enables some inline constant pattern tests that were fixed by the THIR unsafeck stabilization.
cc #76001
Improve handling of expressions in patterns
Closes#112593.
Methodcalls' dots in patterns are silently recovered as commas (e.g. `Foo("".len())` -> `Foo("", len())`) so extra diagnostics are emitted:
```rs
struct Foo(u8, String, u8);
fn bar(foo: Foo) -> bool {
match foo {
Foo(4, "yippee".yeet(), 7) => true,
_ => false
}
}
```
```
error: expected one of `)`, `,`, `...`, `..=`, `..`, or `|`, found `.`
--> main.rs:5:24
|
5 | Foo(4, "yippee".yeet(), 7) => true,
| ^
| |
| expected one of `)`, `,`, `...`, `..=`, `..`, or `|`
| help: missing `,`
error[E0531]: cannot find tuple struct or tuple variant `yeet` in this scope
--> main.rs:5:25
|
5 | Foo(4, "yippee".yeet(), 7) => true,
| ^^^^ not found in this scope
error[E0023]: this pattern has 4 fields, but the corresponding tuple struct has 3 fields
--> main.rs:5:13
|
1 | struct Foo(u8, String, u8);
| -- ------ -- tuple struct has 3 fields
...
5 | Foo(4, "yippee".yeet(), 7) => true,
| ^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^ expected 3 fields, found 4
error: aborting due to 3 previous errors
```
This PR checks for patterns that ends with a dot and a lowercase ident (as structs/variants should be uppercase):
```
error: expected a pattern, found a method call
--> main.rs:5:16
|
5 | Foo(4, "yippee".yeet(), 7) => true,
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ method calls are not allowed in patterns
error: aborting due to 1 previous error
```
Also check for expressions:
```rs
fn is_idempotent(x: f32) -> bool {
match x {
x * x => true,
_ => false,
}
}
fn main() {
let mut t: [i32; 5];
let t[0] = 1;
}
```
```
error: expected a pattern, found an expression
--> main.rs:3:9
|
3 | x * x => true,
| ^^^^^ arbitrary expressions are not allowed in patterns
error: expected a pattern, found an expression
--> main.rs:10:9
|
10 | let t[0] = 1;
| ^^^^ arbitrary expressions are not allowed in patterns
```
Would be cool if the compiler could suggest adding a guard for `match`es, but I've no idea how to do it.
---
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics +A-parser +A-patterns +C-enhancement
Currently the parser will interpret any label/lifetime in certain
positions as a mistyped char literal, on the assumption that the
trailing single quote was accidentally omitted. This is reasonable for a
something like 'a (because 'a' would be valid) but not reasonable for a
something like 'abc (because 'abc' is not valid).
This commit restricts this behaviour only to labels/lifetimes that would
be valid char literals, via the new `could_be_unclosed_char_literal`
function. The commit also augments the `label-is-actually-char.rs` test
in a couple of ways:
- Adds testing of labels/lifetimes with identifiers longer than one
char, e.g. 'abc.
- Adds a new match with simpler patterns, because the
`recover_unclosed_char` call in `parse_pat_with_range_pat` was not
being exercised (in this test or any other ui tests).
Fixes#120397, an assertion failure, which was caused by this behaviour
in the parser interacting with some new stricter char literal checking
added in #120329.
Error codes are integers, but `String` is used everywhere to represent
them. Gross!
This commit introduces `ErrCode`, an integral newtype for error codes,
replacing `String`. It also introduces a constant for every error code,
e.g. `E0123`, and removes the `error_code!` macro. The constants are
imported wherever used with `use rustc_errors::codes::*`.
With the old code, we have three different ways to specify an error code
at a use point:
```
error_code!(E0123) // macro call
struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg"); // bare ident arg to macro call
\#[diag(name, code = "E0123")] // string
struct Diag;
```
With the new code, they all use the `E0123` constant.
```
E0123 // constant
struct_span_code_err!(dcx, span, E0123, "msg"); // constant
\#[diag(name, code = E0123)] // constant
struct Diag;
```
The commit also changes the structure of the error code definitions:
- `rustc_error_codes` now just defines a higher-order macro listing the
used error codes and nothing else.
- Because that's now the only thing in the `rustc_error_codes` crate, I
moved it into the `lib.rs` file and removed the `error_codes.rs` file.
- `rustc_errors` uses that macro to define everything, e.g. the error
code constants and the `DIAGNOSTIC_TABLES`. This is in its new
`codes.rs` file.
llvm: change data layout bug to an error and make it trigger more
Fixes#33446.
Don't skip the inconsistent data layout check for custom LLVMs or non-built-in targets.
With #118708, all targets will have a simple test that would trigger this error if LLVM's data layouts do change - so data layouts would be corrected during the LLVM upgrade. Therefore, with builtin targets, this error won't happen with our LLVM because each target will have been confirmed to work. With non-builtin targets, this error is probably useful to have because you can change the data layout in your target and if it is wrong then that could lead to bugs.
When using a custom LLVM, the same justification makes sense for non-builtin targets as with our LLVM, the user can update their target to match their LLVM and that's probably a good thing to do. However, with a custom LLVM, the user cannot change the builtin target data layouts if they don't match - though given that the compiler's data layout is used for layout computation and a bunch of other things - you could get some bugs because of the mismatch and probably want to know about that. I'm not sure if this is something that people do and is okay, but I doubt it?
`CFG_LLVM_ROOT` was also always set during local development with `download-ci-llvm` so this bug would never trigger locally.
In #33446, two points are raised:
- In the issue itself, changing this from a `bug!` to a proper error is what is suggested, by using `isCompatibleDataLayout` from LLVM, but that function still just does the same thing that we do and check for equality, so I've avoided the additional code necessary to do that FFI call.
- `@Mark-Simulacrum` suggests a different check is necessary to maintain backwards compatibility with old LLVM versions. I don't know how often this comes up, but we can do that with some simple string manipulation + LLVM version checks as happens already for LLVM 17 just above this diff.
Properly recover from trailing attr in body
When encountering an attribute in a body, we try to recover from an attribute on an expression (as opposed to a statement). We need to properly clean up when the attribute is at the end of the body where a tail expression would be.
Fix#118164, fix#118575.
Add the unstable option to reduce the binary size of dynamic library…
# Motivation
The average length of symbol names in the rust standard library is about 100 bytes, while the average length of symbol names in the C++ standard library is about 65 bytes. In some embedded environments where dynamic library are widely used, rust dynamic library symbol name space hash become one of the key bottlenecks of application, Especially when the existing C/C++ module is reconstructed into the rust module.
The unstable option `-Z symbol_mangling_version=hashed` is added to solve the bottleneck caused by too long dynamic library symbol names.
## Test data
The following is a set of test data on the ubuntu 18.04 LTS environment. With this plug-in, the space saving rate of dynamic libraries can reach about 20%.
The test object is the standard library of rust (built based on Xargo), tokio crate, and hyper crate.
The contents of the Cargo.toml file in the construction project of the three dynamic libraries are as follows:
```txt
# Cargo.toml
[profile.release]
panic = "abort"
opt-leve="z"
codegen-units=1
strip=true
debug=true
```
The built dynamic library also removes the `.rustc` segments that are not needed at run time and then compares the size. The detailed data is as follows:
1. libstd.so
> | symbol_mangling_version | size | saving rate |
> | --- | --- | --- |
> | legacy | 804896 ||
> | hashed | 608288 | 0.244 |
> | v0 | 858144 ||
> | hashed | 608288 | 0.291 |
2. libhyper.so
> | symbol_mangling_version(libhyper.so) | symbol_mangling_version(libstd.so) | size | saving rate |
> | --- | --- | --- | --- |
> | legacy | legacy | 866312 ||
> | hashed | legacy | 645128 |0.255|
> | legacy | hashed | 854024 ||
> | hashed | hashed | 632840 |0.259|
When encountering an attribute in a body, we try to recover from an
attribute on an expression (as opposed to a statement). We need to
properly clean up when the attribute is at the end of the body where a
tail expression would be.
Fix#118164.
Classify closure arguments in refutable pattern in argument error
You can call it a function (and people may or may not agree with that), but it's better to just say those are closure arguments instead.
core: add `From<core::ascii::Char>` implementations
Introduce `From<core::ascii::Char>` implementations for all unsigned
numeric types and `char`. This matches the API of `char` type.
Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110998
Normalize field types before checking validity
I forgot to normalize field types when checking ADT-like aggregates in the MIR validator.
This normalization is needed due to a crude check for opaque types in `mir_assign_valid_types` which prevents opaque type cycles -- if we pass in an unnormalized type, we may not detect that the destination type is an opaque, and therefore will call `type_of(opaque)` later on, which causes a cycle error -> ICE.
Fixes#120253
Rename `pointer` field on `Pin`
A few days ago, I was helping another user create a self-referential type using `PhantomPinned`. However, I noticed an odd behavior when I tried to access one of the type's fields via `Pin`'s `Deref` impl:
```rust
use std::{marker::PhantomPinned, ptr};
struct Pinned {
data: i32,
pointer: *const i32,
_pin: PhantomPinned,
}
fn main() {
let mut b = Box::pin(Pinned {
data: 42,
pointer: ptr::null(),
_pin: PhantomPinned,
});
{
let pinned = unsafe { b.as_mut().get_unchecked_mut() };
pinned.pointer = &pinned.data;
}
println!("{}", unsafe { *b.pointer });
}
```
```rust
error[E0658]: use of unstable library feature 'unsafe_pin_internals'
--> <source>:19:30
|
19 | println!("{}", unsafe { *b.pointer });
| ^^^^^^^^^
error[E0277]: `Pinned` doesn't implement `std::fmt::Display`
--> <source>:19:20
|
19 | println!("{}", unsafe { *b.pointer });
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ `Pinned` cannot be formatted with the default formatter
|
= help: the trait `std::fmt::Display` is not implemented for `Pinned`
= note: in format strings you may be able to use `{:?}` (or {:#?} for pretty-print) instead
= note: this error originates in the macro `$crate::format_args_nl` which comes from the expansion of the macro `println` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
Since the user named their field `pointer`, it conflicts with the `pointer` field on `Pin`, which is public but unstable since Rust 1.60.0 with #93176. On versions from 1.33.0 to 1.59.0, where the field on `Pin` is private, this program compiles and prints `42` as expected.
To avoid this confusing behavior, this PR renames `pointer` to `__pointer`, so that it's less likely to conflict with a `pointer` field on the underlying type, as accessed through the `Deref` impl. This is technically a breaking change for anyone who names their field `__pointer` on the inner type; if this is undesirable, it could be renamed to something more longwinded. It's also a nightly breaking change for any external users of `unsafe_pin_internals`.
Don't fire `OPAQUE_HIDDEN_INFERRED_BOUND` on sized return of AFIT
Conceptually, we should probably not fire `OPAQUE_HIDDEN_INFERRED_BOUND` for methods like:
```
trait Foo { async fn bar() -> Self; }
```
Even though we technically cannot prove that `Self: Sized`, which is one of the item bounds of the `Output` type in the `-> impl Future<Output = Sized>` from the async desugaring.
This is somewhat justifiable along the same lines as how we allow regular methods to return `-> Self` even though `Self` isn't sized.
Fixes#113538
(side-note: some days i wonder if we should just remove the `OPAQUE_HIDDEN_INFERRED_BOUND` lint... it does make me sad that we have non-well-formed types in signatures, though.)
interpret: project_downcast: do not ICE for uninhabited variants
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120337
This assertion was already under discussion for a bit; I think the [example](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120337#issuecomment-1911076292) `@tmiasko` found is the final nail in the coffin. One could argue maybe MIR building should read the discriminant before projecting, but even then MIR optimizations should be allowed to remove that read, so the downcast should still not ICE. Maybe the downcast should be UB, but in this example UB already arises earlier when a value of type `E` is constructed.
r? `@oli-obk`
Don't manually resolve async closures in `rustc_resolve`
There's a comment here that talks about doing this "[so] closure [args] are detected as upvars rather than normal closure arg usages", but we do upvar analysis on the HIR now:
cd6d8f2a04/compiler/rustc_passes/src/upvars.rs (L21-L29)
Removing this ad-hoc logic makes it so that `async |x: &str|` now introduces an implicit binder, like regular closures.
r? ```@oli-obk```
Split assembly tests for ELF and MachO
On ELF, the text section is opened with ".text", on MachO with ".section __TEXT,__text".
Previously, on ELF this test was actually matching a GNU note section, which is no longer emitted on Solaris starting with LLVM 18.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120105.
r? ```@davidtwco```
Add the `min_exhaustive_patterns` feature gate
## Motivation
Pattern-matching on empty types is tricky around unsafe code. For that reason, current stable rust conservatively requires arms for empty types in all but the simplest case. It has long been the intention to allow omitting empty arms when it's safe to do so. The [`exhaustive_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51085) feature allows the omission of all empty arms, but hasn't been stabilized because that was deemed dangerous around unsafe code.
## Proposal
This feature aims to stabilize an uncontroversial subset of exhaustive_patterns. Namely: when `min_exhaustive_patterns` is enabled and the data we're matching on is guaranteed to be valid by rust's operational semantics, then we allow empty arms to be omitted. E.g.:
```rust
let x: Result<T, !> = foo();
match x { // ok
Ok(y) => ...,
}
let Ok(y) = x; // ok
```
If the place is not guaranteed to hold valid data (namely ptr dereferences, ref dereferences (conservatively) and union field accesses), then we keep stable behavior i.e. we (usually) require arms for the empty cases.
```rust
unsafe {
let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...;
match *ptr {
Ok(x) => { ... }
Err(_) => { ... } // still required
}
}
let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...;
match foo {
Ok(x) => { ... }
Err(&_) => { ... } // still required because of the dereference
}
unsafe {
let ptr: *const ! = ...;
match *ptr {} // already allowed on stable
}
```
Note that we conservatively consider that a valid reference can point to invalid data, hence we don't allow arms of type `&!` and similar cases to be omitted. This could eventually change depending on [opsem decisions](https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/413). Whenever opsem is undecided on a case, we conservatively keep today's stable behavior.
I proposed this behavior in the [`never_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118155) feature gate but it makes sense on its own and could be stabilized more quickly. The two proposals nicely complement each other.
## Unresolved Questions
Part of the question is whether this requires an RFC. I'd argue this doesn't need one since there is no design question beyond the intent to omit unreachable patterns, but I'm aware the problem can be framed in ways that require design (I'm thinking of the [original never patterns proposal](https://smallcultfollowing.com/babysteps/blog/2018/08/13/never-patterns-exhaustive-matching-and-uninhabited-types-oh-my/), which would frame this behavior as "auto-nevering" happening).
EDIT: I initially proposed a future-compatibility lint as part of this feature, I don't anymore.
remove StructuralEq trait
The documentation given for the trait is outdated: *all* function pointers implement `PartialEq` and `Eq` these days. So the `StructuralEq` trait doesn't really seem to have any reason to exist any more.
One side-effect of this PR is that we allow matching on some consts that do not implement `Eq`. However, we already allowed matching on floats and consts containing floats, so this is not new, it is just allowed in more cases now. IMO it makes no sense at all to allow float matching but also sometimes require an `Eq` instance. If we want to require `Eq` we should adjust https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115893 to check for `Eq`, and rule out float matching for good.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115881
Remove coroutine info when building coroutine drop body
Coroutine drop shims are not themselves coroutines, so erase the "`coroutine`" field from the body so that helper fns like `yield_ty` and `coroutine_kind` properly return `None` for the drop shim.