Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #132155 (Always display first line of impl blocks even when collapsed)
- #133256 (CI: use free runners for i686-gnu jobs)
- #133607 (implement checks for tail calls)
- #133821 (Replace black with ruff in `tidy`)
- #133827 (CI: rfl: move job forward to Linux v6.13-rc1)
- #133910 (Normalize target-cpus.rs stdout test for LLVM changes)
- #133921 (Adapt codegen tests for NUW inference)
- #133936 (Avoid fetching the anon const hir node that is already available)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Adapt codegen tests for NUW inference
These were broken by 462cb3cd6c
Let me know if you think we should have a FIXME / tracking issue to update the tests after the LLVM 20 upgrade to make these required.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
r? `@nikic`
Normalize target-cpus.rs stdout test for LLVM changes
LLVM has recently added support for the `lime1` CPU in 35cce408ee, so the `target-cpus.rs` test currently produces different output depending on the LLVM version.
This CL adds a normalization directive, to remove the new CPU from the output list.
Alternatives fixes I can think of:
* Add two revisions of the test (one per LLVM version)
* Ignore the test on one of the LLVM versions
* I dislike this, because it's possible that the test won't get updated for the next LLVM version.
I don't think the exact list of target CPUs is relevant for this test, so it shouldn't be too bad if the normalization sticks around longer than necessary.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
CI: rfl: move job forward to Linux v6.13-rc1
Linux v6.13-rc1 contains commit 28e848386b92 ("rust: block: fix formatting of `kernel::block::mq::request` module"), which in turn contains commit c95bbb59a9b2 ("rust: enable arbitrary_self_types and remove `Receiver`"), which is why we had a hash rather than a tag.
r? ```@Kobzol``` ```@lqd```
try-job: x86_64-rust-for-linux
```@rustbot``` label A-rust-for-linux
```@bors``` try
Replace black with ruff in `tidy`
`ruff` can both lint and format Python code (in fact, it should be a mostly drop-in replacement for `black` in terms of formatting), so it's not needed to use `black` anymore. This PR removes `black` and replaces it with `ruff`, to get rid of one Python dependency, and also to make Python formatting faster (although that's a small thing).
If we decide to merge this, we'll need to "reformat the world" - `ruff` is not perfectly compatible with `black`, and it also looks like `black` was actually ignoring some files before. I tried it locally (`./x test tidy --extra-checks=py:fmt --bless`) and it also reformatted some code in subtrees (e.g. `clippy` or `rustc_codegen_gcc`) - I'm not sure how to handle that.
implement checks for tail calls
Quoting the [RFC draft](https://github.com/phi-go/rfcs/blob/guaranteed-tco/text/0000-explicit-tail-calls.md):
> The argument to become is a function (or method) call, that exactly matches the function signature and calling convention of the callee. The intent is to ensure a matching ABI. Note that lifetimes may differ as long as they pass borrow checking, see [below](https://github.com/phi-go/rfcs/blob/guaranteed-tco/text/0000-explicit-tail-calls.md#return-type-coercion) for specifics on the return type.
> Tail calling closures and tail calling from closures is not allowed. This is due to the high implementation effort, see below, this restriction can be lifted by a future RFC.
> Invocations of operators were considered as valid targets but were rejected on grounds of being too error-prone. In any case, these can still be called as methods.
> Tail calling [variadic functions](https://doc.rust-lang.org/beta/unstable-book/language-features/c-variadic.html) and tail calling from variadic functions is not allowed. As support for variadic function is stabilized on a per target level, support for tail-calls regarding variadic functions would need to follow a similar approach. To avoid this complexity and to minimize implementation effort for backends, this interaction is currently not allowed but support can be added with a future RFC.
-----
The checks are implemented as a query, similarly to `check_unsafety`.
The code is cherry-picked straight out of #112657 which was written more than a year ago, so I expect we might need to change some things ^^"
This reverts commit 65c5c7f8cf.
It unfortunately regresses the size of the target dir by a non-trivial
amount. It could be re-enabled again once each subsection doesn't get a
unique name anymore.
skip `setup::Hook` on non-git sources
Running `setup::Hook` (with `x setup`) leads tarball sources to panic and this PR resolves that problem by skipping `Hook` step on non-git sources.
Improve bootstrap job objects
This attempts to fix a few comments on bootstrap job objects.
I also fixed an issue where if duplicating the job object handle into the python process failed, it would close the job object. This would then result in the job object closing all attached processes, which at that point includes the current process. The fix is to simply never close the job object handle at any point after the current process is assigned to it.
Improve comments for the default backtrace printer
The existing comments were misleading, confusing, and outdated.
Take this comment for example:
```
// Any frames between `__rust_begin_short_backtrace` and `__rust_end_short_backtrace`
// are omitted from the backtrace in short mode, `__rust_end_short_backtrace` will be
// called before the panic hook, so we won't ignore any frames if there is no
// invoke of `__rust_begin_short_backtrace`.
```
this is just wrong. here is an example (full) backtrace:
<details>
```
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.01s
Running `/home/jyn/.local/lib/cargo/target/debug/example`
called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value
stack backtrace:
0: 0x56499698c595 - std::backtrace_rs::backtrace::libunwind::trace::h5ef2cc16e9a7415a
1: 0x56499698c595 - std::backtrace_rs::backtrace::trace_unsynchronized::h9b5e016e9075f714
2: 0x56499698c595 - std::sys_common::backtrace::_print_fmt::h2f62c7f9ff224e93
3: 0x56499698c595 - <std::sys_common::backtrace::_print::DisplayBacktrace as core::fmt::Display>::fmt::hbe51682735731910
4: 0x5649969aa26b - core::fmt::rt::Argument::fmt::h1994ab2b310d665e
5: 0x5649969aa26b - core::fmt::write::hade58a36d63468d7
6: 0x56499698a43f - std::io::Write::write_fmt::h16145587d801a9ab
7: 0x56499698c36e - std::sys_common::backtrace::_print::ha8082e56201dadb4
8: 0x56499698c36e - std::sys_common::backtrace::print::he30f96b4e7f6cbfd
9: 0x56499698d709 - std::panicking::default_hook::{{closure}}::hf0801f6b18a968d3
10: 0x56499698d4ac - std::panicking::default_hook::hd2defec7eda5aeb0
11: 0x56499698dc31 - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook::hde93283600065c53
12: 0x56499698daf3 - std::panicking::begin_panic_handler::{{closure}}::h5e151adbdb7ec0c1
13: 0x56499698ca59 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::he36a1407e0f77700
14: 0x56499698d7d4 - rust_begin_unwind
15: 0x5649969a9503 - core::panicking::panic_fmt::h2380d41365f95412
16: 0x5649969a958c - core::panicking::panic::h38cf8db80e8c6e67
17: 0x5649969a93e9 - core::option::unwrap_failed::he72696e53ff29a05
18: 0x5649969722b6 - core::option::Option<T>::unwrap::hb574dc0dc1703062
19: 0x5649969722b6 - example::main::h7a867aafacd93d75
20: 0x5649969721db - core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once::h734f99a5e57291b7
21: 0x56499697226e - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h02f5d58c351c4756
22: 0x564996972241 - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::h8b134fe2c31a4355
23: 0x564996988662 - core::ops::function::impls::<impl core::ops::function::FnOnce<A> for &F>::call_once::h88d7bb571ee2aaf4
24: 0x564996988662 - std::panicking::try::do_call::hfb78dfb6599c871d
25: 0x564996988662 - std::panicking::try::habd041c8c4c8e50c
27: 0x564996988662 - std::rt::lang_start_internal::{{closure}}::h227591a6f9c0879e
28: 0x564996988662 - std::panicking::try::do_call::h3c5878333c38916a
29: 0x564996988662 - std::panicking::try::h5af7b3a127cdae70
31: 0x564996988662 - std::rt::lang_start_internal::hbc85e809eeace0dd
32: 0x56499697221a - std::rt::lang_start::ha1eb16922c9cb224
33: 0x5649969722ee - main
34: 0x7f031962a1ca - __libc_start_call_main
35: 0x7f031962a28b - __libc_start_main_impl
36: 0x5649969720a5 - _start
37: 0x0 - <unknown>
```
</details>
note particularly frames 13-21, from start_backtrace to end_backtrace. with PrintFmt::Short, these are the *only* frames that are printed; i.e. we are doing the exact opposite of the comment.
r? ``@saethlin``
Fix "std" support status of some tier 3 targets
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127265 marked targets with empty "std" support status as no-std targets in target-spec metadata:
> * Where a targets 'std' or 'host tools' support is listed as '?' in the rust docs, these are left as 'None' with this PR. The corresponding changes in cargo will only reject an attempt to build std if the 'std' field is 'Some(false)'. In the case it is 'None', cargo will continue trying to build
However, this is not accurate because "std" support status has a marker indicating that it is a no-std target. (empty status is just invalid.)
https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/rustc/platform-support.html#tier-3
> The `std` column in the table below has the following meanings:
>
> * ✓ indicates the full standard library is available.
> * \* indicates the target only supports [`no_std`] development.
> * ? indicates the standard library support is unknown or a work-in-progress.
>
> [`no_std`]: https://rust-embedded.github.io/book/intro/no-std.html
This PR fixes the status of targets whose "std" support status is currently set to empty and update target-spec metadata.
The new status is set based on the following criteria:
- Set to ✓ for targets that I regularly check in [rust-cross-toolchain](https://github.com/taiki-e/rust-cross-toolchain) that the `cargo test` works. (riscv32-unknown-linux-gnu,{riscv64,s390x}-unknown-linux-musl)
- Targets where `cargo run` works but `cargo test` does not work tend to have incomplete std support (e.g., riscv32 musl f3068b66e0), so I included them in the group below that means “work in progress” rather than in this group.
- Set powerpc64le FreeBSD to ✓ on both std and host_tools, because the [Rust package](https://www.freshports.org/lang/rust/) is available.
- Set to ? (which means "unknown" or “work in progress”) for all other affected targets because these are Linux, Android, FreeBSD, or Fuchsia, all of which are operating systems that support std if properly supported.
r? Noratrieb
cc ``@harmou01``
clarify simd_relaxed_fma non-determinism
This is the safer spec in the sense that it is more likely to be satisfied by the backend -- and if people are okay with a non-deterministic result, I assume they don't care whether it's the same choice across all lanes or not?
Cc ``@calebzulawski`` ``@workingjubilee``
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #118833 (Add lint against function pointer comparisons)
- #122161 (Fix suggestion when shorthand `self` has erroneous type)
- #133233 (Add context to "const in pattern" errors)
- #133761 (Update books)
- #133843 (Do not emit empty suggestion)
- #133863 (Rename `core_pattern_type` and `core_pattern_types` lib feature gates to `pattern_type_macro`)
- #133872 (No need to create placeholders for GAT args in confirm_object_candidate)
- #133874 (`fn_sig_for_fn_abi` should return a `ty::FnSig`, no need for a binder)
- #133890 (Add a new test ui/incoherent-inherent-impls/no-other-unrelated-errors to check E0116 does not cause unrelated errors)
- #133892 (Revert #133817)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Revert #133817
This reverts commit 0585134e70, reversing changes made to 5530869e0f.
#133817 unfortunately only converted the `println!` instances to `eprintln!`, meaning that some test output (via compiletest/bootstrap) was messed up because stdout/stderr output interleaved improperly when some `println!` instances were converted to `eprintln!` instances, while some `print!` instances remain unchanged. This made reading test output annoying for contributors cc #133879.
Closes#133879 by reverting.
#133817 can be relanded in the future when `print!` instances are also matched with `println!` instances.
cc `@clubby789`
This is a clean revert so I'm going to self-approve this PR.
Add a new test ui/incoherent-inherent-impls/no-other-unrelated-errors to check E0116 does not cause unrelated errors
rustc xxx (we do not know) to 1.82.0 emits unrelated errors when E0116 is present (see #125814).
We do not know what caused and fixed it, but add a test to confirm rustc does not cause the same error in the future.
No need to create placeholders for GAT args in confirm_object_candidate
We no longer need this logic to add placeholders for GAT args since with the removal of the `gat_extended` feature gate (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133768) we no longer allow GATs in dyn trait anyways.
r? oli-obk
Rename `core_pattern_type` and `core_pattern_types` lib feature gates to `pattern_type_macro`
That's what the gates are actually gating, and the single char difference in naming was not helpful either
fixes#128987
Do not emit empty suggestion
The `println!();` statement's span doesn't include the `;`, and the modified suggestions where trying to get the `;` by getting the differenece between the statement's and the expression's spans, which was an empty suggestion.
Fix#133833, fix#133834.
Update books
## rust-lang/book
12 commits in e16dd73690a6cc3ecdc5f5d94bbc3ce158a42e16..614c19cb4025636eb2ba68ebb3d44e3bd3a5e6e4
2024-12-02 16:22:15 UTC to 2024-11-26 21:15:51 UTC
- Fix more inverted uses of “shadowed” (rust-lang/book#4122)
- Fix a couple inverted uses of “shadowed” (rust-lang/book#4121)
- Fix confusion between variable `hello` and string `"hello"` (rust-lang/book#4118)
- Ch. 17: fix some wording issues (rust-lang/book#4117)
- Rephrase for clarity (rust-lang/book#3809)
- Link to tests section of rustc book for `cargo test -- --help` docs (rust-lang/book#4116)
- Drop a pedantry-triggering sentence about IEEE-754 (rust-lang/book#4114)
- Very small clarification on if let (rust-lang/book#4113)
- Ch17-05: Typos (rust-lang/book#4099)
- Ch20-01: Fix typos (rust-lang/book#4105)
- Add a short paragraph on editors and IDEs in installation (rust-lang/book#4112)
- Rust 2024: update Ch. 20 for new `unsafe` rules (rust-lang/book#4111)
## rust-lang/reference
8 commits in 5c86c739ec71b8bc839310ff47fa94e94635bba9..ede56d1bbe132bac476b5029cd6d7508ca9572e9
2024-11-25 17:23:35 +0000 to 2024-12-03 22:26:55 +0000
- Claim to follow Unicode 16 for lexing identifiers. (rust-lang/reference#1688)
- Clarify rules for on_unimplemented warnings (rust-lang/reference#1680)
- Enable triagebot merge-conflict notifications (rust-lang/reference#1682)
- Update default edition to 2024 for code examples (rust-lang/reference#1684)
- Fix weak keywords (rust-lang/reference#1685)
- `const` expression can borrow static items (rust-lang/reference#1610)
- Update function-pointer.md for stabilization of `extended_varargs_abi_support` (rust-lang/reference#1687)
- fix inconsistent spacing in example (rust-lang/reference#1686)
## edition-guide
1 commits in f48b0e842a3911c63240e955d042089e9e0894c7..128669297c8a7fdf771042eaec18b8adfaeaf0cd
2024-11-25 16:20:27 +0000 to 2024-12-03 22:02:43 +0000
- Fix `if_let_rescope` applicability (rust-lang/edition-guide#339)
## rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide
6 commits in 787b4166ccc67bd8f72a6e3ef6685ce9ce82909a..b21d99b770f9aceb0810c843847c52f86f45d2ed
2024-12-02 04:45:30 UTC to 2024-11-27 10:31:58 UTC
- Spell out `git submodule deinit -f --all` (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2153)
- Explain how to deal with exploded git submodules (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2152)
- Update `//@ proc-macro` aux build directive docs (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2149)
- Remove `pretty-expanded` as it no longer exists (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2147)
- Fix trivial typo (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2148)
- Remove -Zfuel. (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#2032)
Add context to "const in pattern" errors
*Each commit addresses specific diagnostics.*
- Add primary span labels
- Point at `const` item, and `const` generic param definition
- Reword messages and notes
- Point at generic param through which an associated `const` is being referenced
- Silence const in pattern with evaluation errors when they come from `const` items that already emit a diagnostic
- On non-structural type in const used as pattern, point at the type that should derive `PartialEq`