recursively evaluate the constants in everything that is 'mentioned'
This is another attempt at fixing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107503. The previous attempt at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112879 seems stuck in figuring out where the [perf regression](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=c55d1ee8d4e3162187214692229a63c2cc5e0f31&end=ec8de1ebe0d698b109beeaaac83e60f4ef8bb7d1&stat=instructions:u) comes from. In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122258 I learned some things, which informed the approach this PR is taking.
Quoting from the new collector docs, which explain the high-level idea:
```rust
//! One important role of collection is to evaluate all constants that are used by all the items
//! which are being collected. Codegen can then rely on only encountering constants that evaluate
//! successfully, and if a constant fails to evaluate, the collector has much better context to be
//! able to show where this constant comes up.
//!
//! However, the exact set of "used" items (collected as described above), and therefore the exact
//! set of used constants, can depend on optimizations. Optimizing away dead code may optimize away
//! a function call that uses a failing constant, so an unoptimized build may fail where an
//! optimized build succeeds. This is undesirable.
//!
//! To fix this, the collector has the concept of "mentioned" items. Some time during the MIR
//! pipeline, before any optimization-level-dependent optimizations, we compute a list of all items
//! that syntactically appear in the code. These are considered "mentioned", and even if they are in
//! dead code and get optimized away (which makes them no longer "used"), they are still
//! "mentioned". For every used item, the collector ensures that all mentioned items, recursively,
//! do not use a failing constant. This is reflected via the [`CollectionMode`], which determines
//! whether we are visiting a used item or merely a mentioned item.
//!
//! The collector and "mentioned items" gathering (which lives in `rustc_mir_transform::mentioned_items`)
//! need to stay in sync in the following sense:
//!
//! - For every item that the collector gather that could eventually lead to build failure (most
//! likely due to containing a constant that fails to evaluate), a corresponding mentioned item
//! must be added. This should use the exact same strategy as the ecollector to make sure they are
//! in sync. However, while the collector works on monomorphized types, mentioned items are
//! collected on generic MIR -- so any time the collector checks for a particular type (such as
//! `ty::FnDef`), we have to just onconditionally add this as a mentioned item.
//! - In `visit_mentioned_item`, we then do with that mentioned item exactly what the collector
//! would have done during regular MIR visiting. Basically you can think of the collector having
//! two stages, a pre-monomorphization stage and a post-monomorphization stage (usually quite
//! literally separated by a call to `self.monomorphize`); the pre-monomorphizationn stage is
//! duplicated in mentioned items gathering and the post-monomorphization stage is duplicated in
//! `visit_mentioned_item`.
//! - Finally, as a performance optimization, the collector should fill `used_mentioned_item` during
//! its MIR traversal with exactly what mentioned item gathering would have added in the same
//! situation. This detects mentioned items that have *not* been optimized away and hence don't
//! need a dedicated traversal.
enum CollectionMode {
/// Collect items that are used, i.e., actually needed for codegen.
///
/// Which items are used can depend on optimization levels, as MIR optimizations can remove
/// uses.
UsedItems,
/// Collect items that are mentioned. The goal of this mode is that it is independent of
/// optimizations: the set of "mentioned" items is computed before optimizations are run.
///
/// The exact contents of this set are *not* a stable guarantee. (For instance, it is currently
/// computed after drop-elaboration. If we ever do some optimizations even in debug builds, we
/// might decide to run them before computing mentioned items.) The key property of this set is
/// that it is optimization-independent.
MentionedItems,
}
```
And the `mentioned_items` MIR body field docs:
```rust
/// Further items that were mentioned in this function and hence *may* become monomorphized,
/// depending on optimizations. We use this to avoid optimization-dependent compile errors: the
/// collector recursively traverses all "mentioned" items and evaluates all their
/// `required_consts`.
///
/// This is *not* soundness-critical and the contents of this list are *not* a stable guarantee.
/// All that's relevant is that this set is optimization-level-independent, and that it includes
/// everything that the collector would consider "used". (For example, we currently compute this
/// set after drop elaboration, so some drop calls that can never be reached are not considered
/// "mentioned".) See the documentation of `CollectionMode` in
/// `compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/collector.rs` for more context.
pub mentioned_items: Vec<Spanned<MentionedItem<'tcx>>>,
```
Fixes#107503
Filed #122758 to track a proper fix, but this seems to solve the
problem in the meantime and is probably OK in terms of impact on
(internal) doc quality.
Adding support of quirky filesystems occuring in virtualised settings not
having full POSIX support for memory mapped files. Example: current virtiofs
with cache disabled, occuring in Incus/LXD or Kata Containers. Has been
hitting various virtualised filesystems since 2016, depending on their levels
of maturity at the time. The situation will perhaps improve when virtiofs DAX
support patches will have made it into the qemu mainline.
On a reliability level, using the MAP_PRIVATE sycall flag instead of the
MAP_SHARED syscall flag for the mmap() system call does have some undefined
behaviour when the caller update the memory mapping of the mmap()ed file, but
MAP_SHARED does allow not only the calling process but other processes to
modify the memory mapping. Thus, in the current context, using MAP_PRIVATE
copy-on-write is marginally more reliable than MAP_SHARED.
This discussion of reliability is orthogonal to the type system enforced safety
policy of rust, which does not claim to handle memory modification of memory
mapped files triggered through the operating system and not the running rust
process.
fixes#117448
For example unnecessary imports in std::prelude that can be eliminated:
```rust
use std::option::Option::Some;//~ WARNING the item `Some` is imported redundantly
use std::option::Option::None; //~ WARNING the item `None` is imported redundantly
```
Invert diagnostic lints.
That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and `untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than half of the compiler has been converted to use translated diagnostics.
This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow` attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.
r? ````@davidtwco````
That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and
`untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than
half of the compiler has be converted to use translated diagnostics.
This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow`
attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.
Pack u128 in the compiler to mitigate new alignment
This is based on #116672, adding a new `#[repr(packed(8))]` wrapper on `u128` to avoid changing any of the compiler's size assertions. This is needed in two places:
* `SwitchTargets`, otherwise its `SmallVec<[u128; 1]>` gets padded up to 32 bytes.
* `LitKind::Int`, so that entire `enum` can stay 24 bytes.
* This change definitely has far-reaching effects though, since it's public.
[rustc_data_structures] Use partition_point to find slice range end.
This PR uses approach introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114152 to find
the end of the range. It's much easier to understand and reason about invariants of such
implementation.
Technically it's possible to make it even shorter by returning `&[start..end]` unconditionally
because even if searched item is not present in the slice, `start` and `end` would point at
the same index, so the range would be empty. The reason I decided not to use this shorter
implementation is because it would involve more comparisons in case there are no elements
in the slice with key equal to `key`.
Also, not that it matters much, but this implementation also improves perf according to the
benchmark below:
https://gist.github.com/ttsugriy/63c0ed39ae132b131931fa1f8a3dea55
The results on my M1 macbook air are:
```
Running benches/bin_search_slice_benchmark.rs (target/release/deps/bin_search_slice_benchmark-90fa6d68c3bd1298)
Benchmarking multiply add/binary_search_slice: Collecting 100 samples in estimated 5.0002 s (1
multiply add/binary_search_slice
time: [44.719 ns 44.918 ns 45.158 ns]
No change in performance detected.
Found 3 outliers among 100 measurements (3.00%)
1 (1.00%) high mild
2 (2.00%) high severe
Benchmarking multiply add/binary_search_slice_new: Collecting 100 samples in estimated 5.0001
multiply add/binary_search_slice_new
time: [36.955 ns 37.060 ns 37.221 ns]
No change in performance detected.
Found 7 outliers among 100 measurements (7.00%)
3 (3.00%) high mild
4 (4.00%) high severe
```
rustc_mir_transform: Make DestinationPropagation stable for queries
By using `FxIndexMap` instead of `FxHashMap`, so that the order of visiting of locals is deterministic.
We also need to bless
`copy_propagation_arg.foo.DestinationPropagation.panic*.diff`. Do not review the diff of the diff. Instead look at the diff files before and after this commit. Both before and after this commit, 3 statements are replaced with nop. It's just that due to change in ordering, different statements are replaced. But the net result is the same. In other words, compare this diff (before fix):
* 090d5eac72/tests/mir-opt/dest-prop/copy_propagation_arg.foo.DestinationPropagation.panic-unwind.diff
With this diff (after fix):
* f603babd63/tests/mir-opt/dest-prop/copy_propagation_arg.foo.DestinationPropagation.panic-unwind.diff
and you can see that both before and after the fix, we replace 3 statements with `nop`s.
I find it _slightly_ surprising that the test this PR affects did not previously fail spuriously due to the indeterminism of `FxHashMap`, but I guess in can be explained with the predictability of small `FxHashMap`s with `usize` (`Local`) keys, or something along those lines.
This should fix [this](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119252#discussion_r1436101791) comment, but I wanted to make a separate PR for this fix for a simpler development and review process.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84447 which is E-help-wanted.
r? `@cjgillot` who is reviewer for the highly related PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119252.
Avoid specialization in the metadata serialization code
With the exception of a perf-only specialization for byte slices and byte vectors.
This uses the same trick of introducing a new trait and having the Encodable and Decodable derives add a bound to it as used for TyEncoder/TyDecoder. The new code is clearer about which encoder/decoder uses which impl and it reduces the dependency of rustc on specialization, making it easier to remove support for specialization entirely or turn it into a construct that is only allowed for perf optimizations if we decide to do this.
By using FxIndexMap instead of FxHashMap, so that the order of visiting
of locals is deterministic.
We also need to bless
copy_propagation_arg.foo.DestinationPropagation.panic*.diff. Do not
review the diff of the diff. Instead look at the diff file before and
after this commit. Both before and after this commit, 3 statements are
replaced with nop. It's just that due to change in ordering, different
statements are replaced. But the net result is the same.
StableCompare is a companion trait to `StableOrd`. Some types like `Symbol` can be compared in a cross-session stable way, but their `Ord` implementation is not stable. In such cases, a `StableOrd` implementation can be provided to offer a lightweight way for stable sorting. (The more heavyweight option is to sort via `ToStableHashKey`, but then sorting needs to have access to a stable hashing context and `ToStableHashKey` can also be expensive as in the case of `Symbol` where it has to allocate a `String`.)
This involves lots of breaking changes. There are two big changes that
force changes. The first is that the bitflag types now don't
automatically implement normal derive traits, so we need to derive them
manually.
Additionally, bitflags now have a hidden inner type by default, which
breaks our custom derives. The bitflags docs recommend using the impl
form in these cases, which I did.