Stashed errors used to be counted as errors, but could then be
cancelled, leading to `ErrorGuaranteed` soundness holes. #120828 changed
that, closing the soundness hole. But it introduced other difficulties
because you sometimes have to account for pending stashed errors when
making decisions about whether errors have occured/will occur and it's
easy to overlook these.
This commit aims for a middle ground.
- Stashed errors (not warnings) are counted immediately as emitted
errors, avoiding the possibility of forgetting to consider them.
- The ability to cancel (or downgrade) stashed errors is eliminated, by
disallowing the use of `steal_diagnostic` with errors, and introducing
the more restrictive methods `try_steal_{modify,replace}_and_emit_err`
that can be used instead.
Other things:
- `DiagnosticBuilder::stash` and `DiagCtxt::stash_diagnostic` now both
return `Option<ErrorGuaranteed>`, which enables the removal of two
`delayed_bug` calls and one `Ty::new_error_with_message` call. This is
possible because we store error guarantees in
`DiagCtxt::stashed_diagnostics`.
- Storing the guarantees also saves us having to maintain a counter.
- Calls to the `stashed_err_count` method are no longer necessary
alongside calls to `has_errors`, which is a nice simplification, and
eliminates two more `span_delayed_bug` calls and one FIXME comment.
- Tests are added for three of the four fixed PRs mentioned below.
- `issue-121108.rs`'s output improved slightly, omitting a non-useful
error message.
Fixes#121451.
Fixes#121477.
Fixes#121504.
Fixes#121508.
Add `StructurallyRelateAliases` to allow instantiating infer vars with rigid aliases.
Change `instantiate_query_response` to be infallible in the new solver. This requires canonicalization to not hide any information used by the query, so weaken
universe compression. It also modifies `term_is_fully_unconstrained` to allow
region inference variables in a higher universe.
Add newtypes for bool fields/params/return types
Fixed all the cases of this found with some simple searches for `*/ bool` and `bool /*`; probably many more
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #121435 (Account for RPITIT in E0310 explicit lifetime constraint suggestion)
- #121490 (Rustdoc: include crate name in links for local primitives)
- #121520 (delay cloning of iterator items)
- #121522 (check that simd_insert/extract indices are in-bounds)
- #121531 (Ignore less tests in debug builds)
- #121539 (compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/base/apple/tests.rs: Avoid unnecessary large move)
- #121542 (update stdarch)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
remove `sub_relations` from the `InferCtxt`
While doing so, I tried to remove the `delay_span_bug` in `rematch_impl` again, which lead me to discover another `freshen` bug, fixing that one in the second commit. See commit descriptions for the reasoning behind each change.
r? `@compiler-errors`
No need to `validate_alias_bound_self_from_param_env` in `assemble_alias_bound_candidates`
We already fully normalize the self type before we reach `assemble_alias_bound_candidates`, so there's no reason to double check that a projection is truly rigid by checking param-env bounds.
I think this is also blocked on us making sure to always normalize opaques: #120549.
r? lcnr
Without doing so we use the same candidate cache entry
for `?0: Trait<?1>` and `?0: Trait<?0>`. These goals are different
and we must not use the same entry for them.
we don't track them when canonicalizing or when freshening,
resulting in instable caching in the old solver, and issues when
instantiating query responses in the new one.
Make --verbose imply -Z write-long-types-to-disk=no
When shortening the type it is necessary to take into account the `--verbose` flag, if it is activated, we must always show the entire type and not write it in a file.
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119130
Convert `delayed_bug`s to `bug`s.
I have a suspicion that quite a few delayed bug paths are impossible to reach, so I did an experiment.
I converted every `delayed_bug` to a `bug`, ran the full test suite, then converted back every `bug` that was hit. A surprising number were never hit.
This is too dangerous to merge. Increased coverage (fuzzing or a crater run) would likely hit more cases. But it might be useful for people to look at and think about which paths are genuinely unreachable.
r? `@ghost`
I have a suspicion that quite a few delayed bug paths are impossible to
reach, so I did an experiment.
I converted every `delayed_bug` to a `bug`, ran the full test suite,
then converted back every `bug` that was hit. A surprising number were
never hit.
The next commit will convert some more back, based on human judgment.
Don't ICE when hitting overflow limit in fulfillment loop in next solver
As the title says, let's not ICE when hitting the overflow limit in fulfill. On the other hand, we don't want to treat these as true errors, since it means that whether something is considered a true error or an ambiguity is dependent on overflow handling in the solver, which seems not worth it.
Now that we use the presence of true errors in fulfillment for implicit negative coherence, we especially don't want to tie together coherence and overflow.
I guess I could also drain these errors out of fulfillment and put them into some `ambiguities` storage so we could return them in `select_all_or_error` without having to re-process them every time we call `select_where_possible`. Let me know if that's desired.
r? lcnr
Overhaul `Diagnostic` and `DiagnosticBuilder`
Implements the first part of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/722, which moves functionality and use away from `Diagnostic`, onto `DiagnosticBuilder`.
Likely follow-ups:
- Move things around, because this PR was written to minimize diff size, so some things end up in sub-optimal places. E.g. `DiagnosticBuilder` has impls in both `diagnostic.rs` and `diagnostic_builder.rs`.
- Rename `Diagnostic` as `DiagInner` and `DiagnosticBuilder` as `Diag`.
r? `@davidtwco`
Drive-by `DUMMY_SP` -> `Span` and fmt changes
Noticed these while doing something else. There's no practical change, but it's preferable to use `DUMMY_SP` as little as possible, particularly when we have perfectlly useful `Span`s available.
Currently many diagnostic modifier methods are available on both
`Diagnostic` and `DiagnosticBuilder`. This commit removes most of them
from `Diagnostic`. To minimize the diff size, it keeps them within
`diagnostic.rs` but changes the surrounding `impl Diagnostic` block to
`impl DiagnosticBuilder`. (I intend to move things around later, to give
a more sensible code layout.)
`Diagnostic` keeps a few methods that it still needs, like `sub`,
`arg`, and `replace_args`.
The `forward!` macro, which defined two additional methods per call
(e.g. `note` and `with_note`), is replaced by the `with_fn!` macro,
which defines one additional method per call (e.g. `with_note`). It's
now also only used when necessary -- not all modifier methods currently
need a `with_*` form. (New ones can be easily added as necessary.)
All this also requires changing `trait AddToDiagnostic` so its methods
take `DiagnosticBuilder` instead of `Diagnostic`, which leads to many
mechanical changes. `SubdiagnosticMessageOp` gains a type parameter `G`.
There are three subdiagnostics -- `DelayedAtWithoutNewline`,
`DelayedAtWithNewline`, and `InvalidFlushedDelayedDiagnosticLevel` --
that are created within the diagnostics machinery and appended to
external diagnostics. These are handled at the `Diagnostic` level, which
means it's now hard to construct them via `derive(Diagnostic)`, so
instead we construct them by hand. This has no effect on what they look
like when printed.
There are lots of new `allow` markers for `untranslatable_diagnostics`
and `diagnostics_outside_of_impl`. This is because
`#[rustc_lint_diagnostics]` annotations were present on the `Diagnostic`
modifier methods, but missing from the `DiagnosticBuilder` modifier
methods. They're now present.
Noticed these while doing something else. There's no practical change, but it's preferable to use `DUMMY_SP` as little as possible, particularly when we have perfectlly useful `Span`s available.
There are lots of functions that modify a diagnostic. This can be via a
`&mut Diagnostic` or a `&mut DiagnosticBuilder`, because the latter type
wraps the former and impls `DerefMut`.
This commit converts all the `&mut Diagnostic` occurrences to `&mut
DiagnosticBuilder`. This is a step towards greatly simplifying
`Diagnostic`. Some of the relevant function are made generic, because
they deal with both errors and warnings. No function bodies are changed,
because all the modifier methods are available on both `Diagnostic` and
`DiagnosticBuilder`.
Use fulfillment in next trait solver coherence
Use fulfillment in the new trait solver's `impl_intersection_has_impossible_obligation` routine. This means that inference that falls out of processing other obligations can influence whether we can determine if an obligation is impossible to satisfy. See the committed test.
This should be completely sound, since evaluation and fulfillment both respect intercrate mode equally.
We run the risk of breaking coherence later if we were to change the rules of fulfillment and/or inference during coherence, but this is a problem which affects evaluation, as nested obligations from a trait goal are processed together and can influence each other in the same way.
r? lcnr
cc #114862
Also changed obligationctxt -> fulfillmentctxt because it feels kind of redundant to use an ocx here. I don't really care enough and can change it back if it really matters much.
errors: only eagerly translate subdiagnostics
Subdiagnostics don't need to be lazily translated, they can always be eagerly translated. Eager translation is slightly more complex as we need to have a `DiagCtxt` available to perform the translation, which involves slightly more threading of that context.
This slight increase in complexity should enable later simplifications - like passing `DiagCtxt` into `AddToDiagnostic` and moving Fluent messages into the diagnostic structs rather than having them in separate files (working on that was what led to this change).
r? ```@nnethercote```
Add and use a simple extension trait derive macro in the compiler
Adds `#[extension]` to `rustc_macros` for implementing an extension trait. This expands an impl (with an optional visibility) into two parallel trait + impl definitions.
before:
```rust
pub trait Extension {
fn a();
}
impl Extension for () {
fn a() {}
}
```
to:
```rust
#[extension]
pub impl Extension for () {
fn a() {}
}
```
Opted to just implement it by hand because I couldn't figure if there was a "canonical" choice of extension trait macro in the ecosystem. It's really lightweight anyways, and can always be changed.
I'm interested in adding this because I'd like to later split up the large `TypeErrCtxtExt` traits into several different files. This should make it one step easier.
Make `async Fn` trait kind errors better
1. Make it so that async closures with the wrong closurekind actually report a useful error
2. Explain why async closures can sometimes not implement `Fn`/`FnMut` (because they capture things)
r? oli-obk
Subdiagnostics don't need to be lazily translated, they can always be
eagerly translated. Eager translation is slightly more complex as we need
to have a `DiagCtxt` available to perform the translation, which involves
slightly more threading of that context.
This slight increase in complexity should enable later simplifications -
like passing `DiagCtxt` into `AddToDiagnostic` and moving Fluent messages
into the diagnostic structs rather than having them in separate files
(working on that was what led to this change).
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
Do not report overflow errors on ConstArgHasType goals
This is 10% of a fix for #121090, since it at least means that we no longer mention the `ConstArgHasType` goal as the cause for the overflow. Instead, now we mention:
```
overflow evaluating the requirement `{closure@$DIR/overflow-during-mono.rs:13:41: 13:44}: Sized`
```
which is not much better, but slightly.
r? oli-obk
Continue compilation after check_mod_type_wf errors
The ICEs fixed here were probably reachable through const eval gymnastics before, but now they are easily reachable without that, too.
The new errors are often bugfixes, where useful errors were missing, because they were reported after the early abort. In other cases sometimes they are just duplication of already emitted errors, which won't be user-visible due to deduplication.
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120860
Use fewer delayed bugs.
For some cases where it's clear that an error has already occurred, e.g.:
- there's a comment stating exactly that, or
- things like HIR lowering, where we are lowering an error kind
The commit also tweaks some comments around delayed bug sites.
r? `@oli-obk`
Fix suggestion span for `?Sized` when param type has default
Fixes#120878
Diagnostic suggests adding `: ?Sized` in an incorrect place if a type parameter default is present
r? `@fmease`
For some cases where it's clear that an error has already occurred,
e.g.:
- there's a comment stating exactly that, or
- things like HIR lowering, where we are lowering an error kind
The commit also tweaks some comments around delayed bug sites.
`cargo update`
Run `cargo update`, with some pinning and fixes necessitated by that. This *should* unblock #112865
There's a couple of places where I only pinned a dependency in one location - this seems like a bit of a hack, but better than duplicating the FIXME across all `Cargo.toml` where a dependency is introduced.
cc `@Nilstrieb`
Ignore own item bounds in parent alias types in `for_each_item_bound`
Fixes#120912
I want to get a vibe check on this approach, which is very obviously a hack, but I believe something that is forwards-compatible with a more thorough solution and "good enough for now".
The problem here is that for a really deep rigid associated type, we are now repeatedly considering unrelated item bounds from the parent alias types, meaning we're doing a *lot* of extra work in the MIR inliner for deeply substituted rigid projections.
This feels intimately related to #107614. In that PR, we split *supertrait* bounds (bound which share the same `Self` type as the predicate which is being elaborated) and *implied* bounds (anything that is implied by elaborating the predicate).
The problem here is related to the fact that we don't maintain the split between these two for `item_bounds`. If we did, then when recursing into a parent alias type, we'd want to consider only the bounds that are given by [`PredicateFilter::All`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_hir_analysis/astconv/enum.PredicateFilter.html#variant.SelfOnly) **except** those given by [`PredicateFilter::SelfOnly`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_hir_analysis/astconv/enum.PredicateFilter.html#variant.SelfOnly).
Do not assemble candidates for default impls
There is no reason (as far as I can tell?) that we should assemble an impl candidate for a default impl. This candidate itself does not prove that the impl holds, and any time that it *does* hold, there will be a more specializing non-default impl that also is assembled.
This is because `default impl<T> Foo for T {}` actually expands to `impl<T> Foo for T where T: Foo {}`. The only way to satisfy that where clause (without coinduction) is via *another* implementation that does hold -- precisely an impl that specializes it.
This should fix the specialization related regressions for #116494. That should lead to one root crate regression that doesn't have to do with specialization, which I think we can regress.
r? lcnr cc ``@rust-lang/types``
cc #31844
modify alias-relate to also normalize ambiguous opaques
allows a bunch of further cleanups and generally simplifies the type system. To handle https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/8 we'll have to add a some additional complexity to the `(Alias, Infer)` branches in alias-relate, so removing the opaque type special case here is really valuable.
It does worsen `deduce_closure_signature` and friends even more as they now receive an inference variable which is only constrained via an `AliasRelate` goal. These probably have to look into alias relate goals somehow. Leaving that for a future PR as this is something we'll have to tackle regardless.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Merge `impl_polarity` and `impl_trait_ref` queries
Hopefully this is perf neutral. I want to finish https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120835 and stop using the HIR in `coherent_trait`, which should then give us a perf improvement.
Dejargonize `subst`
In favor of #110793, replace almost every occurence of `subst` and `substitution` from rustc codes, but they still remains in subtrees under `src/tools/` like clippy and test codes (I'd like to replace them after this)
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #120765 (Reorder diagnostics API)
- #120833 (More internal emit diagnostics cleanups)
- #120899 (Gracefully handle non-WF alias in `assemble_alias_bound_candidates_recur`)
- #120917 (Remove a bunch of dead parameters in functions)
- #120928 (Add test for recently fixed issue)
- #120933 (check_consts: fix duplicate errors, make importance consistent)
- #120936 (improve `btree_cursors` functions documentation)
- #120944 (Check that the ABI of the instance we are inlining is correct)
- #120956 (Clean inlined type alias with correct param-env)
- #120962 (Add myself to library/std review)
- #120972 (fix ICE for deref coercions with type errors)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove a bunch of dead parameters in functions
Found this kind of issue when working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119650
I wrote a trivial toy lint and manual review to find these.
Gracefully handle non-WF alias in `assemble_alias_bound_candidates_recur`
See explanation in test. I think it's fine to delay a bug here -- I don't believe we ever construct a non-wf alias on the good path? If so, then we can just remove the delay.
Fixes#120891
r? lcnr
- improve diagnostics of field uniqueness check and representation check
- simplify the implementation of field uniqueness check
- remove some useless codes and improvement neatness