Commit Graph

597 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Oli Scherer
7ba82d61eb Use a dedicated type instead of a reference for the diagnostic context
This paves the way for tracking more state (e.g. error tainting) in the diagnostic context handle
2024-06-18 15:42:11 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
75b164d836 Use tidy to sort crate attributes for all compiler crates.
We already do this for a number of crates, e.g. `rustc_middle`,
`rustc_span`, `rustc_metadata`, `rustc_span`, `rustc_errors`.

For the ones we don't, in many cases the attributes are a mess.
- There is no consistency about order of attribute kinds (e.g.
  `allow`/`deny`/`feature`).
- Within attribute kind groups (e.g. the `feature` attributes),
  sometimes the order is alphabetical, and sometimes there is no
  particular order.
- Sometimes the attributes of a particular kind aren't even grouped
  all together, e.g. there might be a `feature`, then an `allow`, then
  another `feature`.

This commit extends the existing sorting to all compiler crates,
increasing consistency. If any new attribute line is added there is now
only one place it can go -- no need for arbitrary decisions.

Exceptions:
- `rustc_log`, `rustc_next_trait_solver` and `rustc_type_ir_macros`,
  because they have no crate attributes.
- `rustc_codegen_gcc`, because it's quasi-external to rustc (e.g. it's
  ignored in `rustfmt.toml`).
2024-06-12 15:49:10 +10:00
Oli Scherer
c7ced1ba53 Make the panic info more useful 2024-06-06 09:47:10 +00:00
Ben Kimock
95150d7246 Add a footer in FileEncoder and check for it in MemDecoder 2024-05-21 20:12:29 -04:00
Nicholas Nethercote
9b3ef5404c Remove some unneeded Cargo.toml dependencies.
I found these with a hacky shell script.
2024-05-03 15:33:52 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
6341935a13 Remove extern crate tracing from numerous crates. 2024-04-30 16:47:49 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
f3e05d1609 Remove extern crate rustc_data_structures from rustc_query_system. 2024-04-29 15:40:29 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4814fd0a4b Remove extern crate rustc_macros from numerous crates. 2024-04-29 10:21:54 +10:00
Guillaume Gomez
a60ccc1876
Rollup merge of #124252 - michaelwoerister:better-forbidden-read-ice, r=oli-obk
Improve ICE message for forbidden dep-graph reads.

The new message mentions the main context that the ICE might occur in and it mentions the query/dep-node that is being read.

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123781, where this would have been helpful.
2024-04-22 20:26:00 +02:00
Markus Reiter
33e68aadc9
Stabilize generic NonZero. 2024-04-22 18:48:47 +02:00
Michael Woerister
6146a51f17 Add more context to the forbidden dep-graph read ICE error message. 2024-04-22 14:54:28 +02:00
Michael Woerister
c373ec07c4 Improve ICE message for forbidden dep-graph reads. 2024-04-22 12:11:07 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
f9ca213510 remove some things that do not need to be 2024-04-11 21:09:52 +02:00
Mark Rousskov
668b3188ab Remove sharding for VecCache
This sharding is never used (per the comment in code). If we re-add
sharding at some point in the future this is cheap to restore, but for
now no need for the extra complexity.
2024-04-06 10:49:31 -04:00
bors
4563f70c3b Auto merge of #122070 - Zoxc:dep-edges-from-previous, r=cjgillot
Encode dep graph edges directly from the previous graph when promoting

This encodes dep graph edges directly from the previous graph when promoting nodes from a previous session, avoiding allocations / copies.

~~Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122064 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116375.~~

<table><tr><td rowspan="2">Benchmark</td><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th></tr><tr><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">%</th></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>clap</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.4177s</td><td align="right">0.4072s</td><td align="right">💚  -2.52%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.1430s</td><td align="right">0.1420s</td><td align="right"> -0.69%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.3106s</td><td align="right">0.3038s</td><td align="right">💚  -2.19%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.5823s</td><td align="right">0.5688s</td><td align="right">💚  -2.33%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">1.3992s</td><td align="right">1.3692s</td><td align="right">💚  -2.14%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">2.8528s</td><td align="right">2.7910s</td><td align="right">💚  -2.17%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">0.9803s</td><td align="right">💚  -1.97%</td></tr></table>
2024-04-05 11:11:17 +00:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
b40ea03f8a rustc_index: Add a ZERO constant to index types
It is commonly used.
2024-04-03 19:06:22 +03:00
Oli Scherer
3b94f33c23 Remove CacheSelector trait now that we can use GATs 2024-03-26 11:03:23 +00:00
John Kåre Alsaker
aa9c9a36c0 Add some comments and do some renames 2024-03-23 20:23:25 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
6119763e19 Encode dep graph edges directly from the previous graph when promoting 2024-03-23 20:03:55 +01:00
Jubilee
f54350a9ba
Rollup merge of #122245 - saethlin:check-dep-graph-size, r=petrochenkov
Detect truncated DepGraph files

I suspect that the following issues are caused by truncated incr comp files:

* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120582
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121499
* https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122210

We fail with an allocation failure or capacity overflow in this case because we assume that the ending bytes of an DepGraph file are the lengths of arrays. If the file has somehow been truncated then the ending bytes are probably some of our varint encoding, which tries to eliminate zero bytes, so interpreting a random 8 bytes as an array length has a very high chance of producing a byte capacity over `isize::MAX`.

Now theoretically since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119510 merged I have fixed the out-of-disk issues and yet in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120894#issuecomment-1945126700 I still see some decoding failures that look like out-of-disk ICEs, for example https://crater-reports.s3.amazonaws.com/beta-1.77-1/beta-2024-02-10/gh/scottfones.aoc_2022/log.txt

So this PR should ensure that we get an ICE that clearly identifies if the file in question is truncated.
2024-03-12 09:04:00 -07:00
bors
094a6204f5 Auto merge of #122064 - Zoxc:dep-graph-encode-tweaks, r=cjgillot
Dep node encoding cleanups

This does some cleanups around dep node encoding.

Performance change with `-Zthreads=2`:

<table><tr><td rowspan="2">Benchmark</td><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th></tr><tr><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">%</th><td align="right">Memory</td><td align="right">Memory</td><td align="right">%</th></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>clap</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.4337s</td><td align="right">0.4306s</td><td align="right"> -0.72%</td><td align="right">88.90 MiB</td><td align="right">89.04 MiB</td><td align="right"> 0.15%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.1541s</td><td align="right">0.1528s</td><td align="right"> -0.86%</td><td align="right">51.99 MiB</td><td align="right">52.03 MiB</td><td align="right"> 0.07%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.3286s</td><td align="right">0.3248s</td><td align="right">💚  -1.15%</td><td align="right">71.89 MiB</td><td align="right">71.74 MiB</td><td align="right"> -0.21%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">0.6118s</td><td align="right">0.6057s</td><td align="right">💚  -1.01%</td><td align="right">106.59 MiB</td><td align="right">106.66 MiB</td><td align="right"> 0.06%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check:unchanged</td><td align="right">1.4570s</td><td align="right">1.4463s</td><td align="right"> -0.74%</td><td align="right">197.29 MiB</td><td align="right">197.33 MiB</td><td align="right"> 0.02%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">2.9852s</td><td align="right">2.9601s</td><td align="right"> -0.84%</td><td align="right">516.66 MiB</td><td align="right">516.80 MiB</td><td align="right"> 0.03%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">0.9911s</td><td align="right"> -0.89%</td><td align="right">1 byte</td><td align="right">1.00 bytes</td><td align="right"> 0.02%</td></tr></table>

r? `@cjgillot`
2024-03-10 06:27:41 +00:00
Ben Kimock
11f8866ca8 Detect truncated incr comp files 2024-03-09 15:43:50 -05:00
John Kåre Alsaker
87ab9e8c6e Some tweaks to the parallel query cycle handler 2024-03-09 00:24:14 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
9707e103ea Avoid the double lock around EncoderState 2024-03-06 04:40:39 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
a2499bdfbe Remove profiling from intern_node 2024-03-06 04:31:56 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
29cc76f0fc Add a profiler reference to GraphEncoder 2024-03-06 04:17:17 +01:00
John Kåre Alsaker
dd0004a129 Don't panic when waiting on poisoned queries 2024-03-02 19:51:56 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
260ae70140 Overhaul how stashed diagnostics work, again.
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.
2024-02-29 11:08:27 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
899cb40809 Rename DiagnosticBuilder as Diag.
Much better!

Note that this involves renaming (and updating the value of)
`DIAGNOSTIC_BUILDER` in clippy.
2024-02-28 08:55:35 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
6588f5b749 Rename Diagnostic as DiagInner.
I started by changing it to `DiagData`, but that didn't feel right.
`DiagInner` felt much better.
2024-02-28 08:33:25 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
47bf8a6c28
Rollup merge of #121401 - eltociear:patch-25, r=nnethercote
Fix typo in serialized.rs

accomodate -> accommodate
2024-02-22 18:09:54 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
46f4983356 Adjust the has_errors* methods.
Currently `has_errors` excludes lint errors. This commit changes it to
include lint errors.

The motivation for this is that for most places it doesn't matter
whether lint errors are included or not. But there are multiple places
where they must be includes, and only one place where they must not be
included. So it makes sense for `has_errors` to do the thing that fits
the most situations, and the new `has_errors_excluding_lint_errors`
method in the one exceptional place.

The same change is made for `err_count`. Annoyingly, this requires the
introduction of `err_count_excluding_lint_errs` for one place, to
preserve existing error printing behaviour. But I still think the change
is worthwhile overall.
2024-02-22 08:03:47 +11:00
Ikko Eltociear Ashimine
00234f0f68
Fix typo in serialized.rs
accomodate -> accommodate
2024-02-22 00:33:23 +09:00
Markus Reiter
746a58d435
Use generic NonZero internally. 2024-02-15 08:09:42 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
05849e8c2f 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.
2024-02-14 20:30:37 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
c1ffb0b675 Remove force_print_diagnostic.
There are a couple of places where we call
`inner.emitter.emit_diagnostic` directly rather than going through
`inner.emit_diagnostic`, to guarantee the diagnostic is printed. This
feels dubious to me, particularly the bypassing of `TRACK_DIAGNOSTIC`.

This commit removes those.
- In `print_error_count`, it uses `ForceWarning` instead of `Warning`.
- It removes `DiagCtxtInner::failure_note`, because it only has three
  uses and direct use of `emit_diagnostic` is consistent with other
  similar locations.
- It removes `force_print_diagnostic`, and adds `struct_failure_note`,
  and updates `print_query_stack` accordingly, which makes it more
  normal. That location doesn't seem to need forced printing anyway.
2024-02-14 07:51:53 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
46a0448405
Rollup merge of #120693 - nnethercote:invert-diagnostic-lints, r=davidtwco
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````
2024-02-09 14:41:50 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0ac1195ee0 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 be converted to use translated diagnostics.

This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow`
attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.
2024-02-06 13:12:33 +11:00
Michael Goulet
6b2a8249c1 Remove dead args from functions 2024-02-02 22:47:26 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5d9dfbd08f Stop using String for error codes.
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.
2024-01-29 07:41:41 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
1f9fa2305a Tweak error counting.
We have several methods indicating the presence of errors, lint errors,
and delayed bugs. I find it frustrating that it's very unclear which one
you should use in any particular spot. This commit attempts to instill a
basic principle of "use the least general one possible", because that
reflects reality in practice -- `has_errors` is the least general one
and has by far the most uses (esp. via `abort_if_errors`).

Specifics:
- Add some comments giving some usage guidelines.
- Prefer `has_errors` to comparing `err_count` to zero.
- Remove `has_errors_or_span_delayed_bugs` because it's a weird one: in
  the cases where we need to count delayed bugs, we should really be
  counting lint errors as well.
- Rename `is_compilation_going_to_fail` as
  `has_errors_or_lint_errors_or_span_delayed_bugs`, for consistency with
  `has_errors` and `has_errors_or_lint_errors`.
- Change a few other `has_errors_or_lint_errors` calls to `has_errors`,
  as per the "least general" principle.

This didn't turn out to be as neat as I hoped when I started, but I
think it's still an improvement.
2024-01-22 10:14:01 +11:00
bors
159bdc1e93 Auto merge of #108359 - Zoxc:side-effects-tweak, r=cjgillot
Avoid code generation for ThinVec<Diagnostic>'s destructor in the query system

This avoids 2 instances of the destructor of `ThinVec<Diagnostic>` from being included in `execute_job`. It also outlines the cold branch in `store_side_effects` / `store_side_effects_for_anon_node`.
2024-01-20 15:20:15 +00:00
John Kåre Alsaker
862011e1ca Avoid code generation for ThinVec<Diagnostic>'s destructor in the query system 2024-01-20 13:43:05 +01:00
bors
d3c9082a44 Auto merge of #120006 - cjgillot:no-hir-owner, r=wesleywiser
Get rid of the hir_owner query.

This query was meant as a firewall between `hir_owner_nodes` which is supposed to change often, and the queries that only depend on the item signature. That firewall was inefficient, leaking the contents of the HIR body through `HirId`s.

`hir_owner` incurs a significant cost, as we need to hash HIR twice in multiple modes. This PR proposes to remove it, and simplify the hashing scheme.

For the future, `def_kind`, `def_span`... are much more efficient for incremental decoupling, and should be preferred.
2024-01-19 02:36:13 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
d59968b5f6 Simplify BodyId hashing. 2024-01-16 23:52:30 +00:00
bors
098d4fd74c Auto merge of #119977 - Mark-Simulacrum:defid-cache, r=cjgillot
Cache local DefId-keyed queries without hashing

This caches local DefId-keyed queries using just an IndexVec. This costs ~5% extra max-rss at most but brings significant runtime improvement, up to 13% cycle counts (mean: 4%) on primary benchmarks. It's possible that further tweaks could reduce the memory overhead further but this win seems worth landing despite the increased memory, particularly with regards to eliminating the present set in non-incr or storing it inline (skip list?) with the main data.

We tried applying this scheme to all keys in the [first perf run] but found that it carried a significant memory hit (50%). instructions/cycle counts were also much more mixed, though that may have been due to the lack of the present set optimization (needed for fast iter() calls in incremental scenarios).

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/45275

[first perf run]: https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=30dfb9e046aeb878db04332c74de76e52fb7db10&end=6235575300d8e6e2cc6f449cb9048722ef43f9c7&stat=instructions:u
2024-01-16 21:58:10 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
37849643c6 Cache local DefId-keyed queries without hashing
Foreign maps are used to cache external DefIds, typically backed by
metadata decoding. In the future we might skip caching `V` there (since
loading from metadata usually is already cheap enough), but for now this
cuts down on the impact to memory usage and time to None-init a bunch of
memory. Foreign data is usually much sparser, since we're not usually
loading *all* entries from the foreign crate(s).
2024-01-15 17:16:45 -05:00
Camille GILLOT
c6f83b8ff6 Inline 2 functions that appear in dep-graph profiles. 2024-01-14 12:57:13 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2ea7a37e11 Add DiagCtxt::delayed_bug.
We have `span_delayed_bug` and often pass it a `DUMMY_SP`. This commit
adds `delayed_bug`, which matches pairs like `err`/`span_err` and
`warn`/`span_warn`.
2024-01-10 07:33:07 +11:00
Guillaume Gomez
d3574beb5d
Rollup merge of #119527 - klensy:ordering, r=compiler-errors
don't reexport atomic::ordering via rustc_data_structures, use std import

This looks simpler.
2024-01-09 13:23:17 +01:00