Make hidden type registration opt-in, so that each site can be reviewed on its own and we have the right defaults for trait solvers
r? `@lcnr`
pulled out of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107891 as it is the uncontroversial part
The GNU linker accepts -z<params>, but this is undocumented, and
not supported by other linkers.
In particular, `zig cc`, when used as the C compiler/linker
(e.g. when using `cargo-zigbuild`), will not accept this
undocumented syntax.
In `linker.rs`, both syntaxes are also used inconsistently.
The Go compiler used to have the same issue, but fixed it:
38607c5538
Move `Fn*` traits malformedness protections to typeck
I found it strange that we were doing a custom well-formedness check just for the `Fn*` traits' `call_*` fn items. My understanding from the git history is that this is just to avoid ICEs later on in typeck.
Well, that well-formedness check isn't even implemented correctly for `FnOnce::call_once`, or `FnMut::call_mut` for that matter. Instead, this PR just makes the typeck checks more robust, and leaves it up to the call-site to report errors when lang items are implemented in funny ways.
This coincidentally fixes another ICE where a the `Add` lang item is implemented with a `add` item that's a const instead of a method.
Name placeholder in some region errors
Also don't print `ReVar` or `ReLateBound` as debug... these error messages are super uncommon anyways, but in the case they do trigger, let's be slightly more helpful.
remove unstable `pick_stable_methods_before_any_unstable` flag
This flag was only added in #90329 in case there was any issue with the impl so that it would be easy to tell nightly users to use the flag to disable the new logic to fix their code. It's now been enabled for two years and also I can't find any issues corresponding to this new functionality? This flag made it way harder to understand how this code works so it would be nice to remove it and simplify what's going on.
cc `@nbdd0121`
r? `@oli-obk`
Add rpitit queries
This is part of the changes we are making to lower RPITITs as an associated type. The rest of the stuff will follow under a `-Z` flag.
I still need to add comments to the code, explain stuff and also I'd need to avoid encoding in metadata when rpitit queries return `&[]`
r? `@compiler-errors`
lint: don't suggest MaybeUninit::assume_init for uninhabited types
Creating a zeroed uninhabited type such as `!` or an empty enum with `mem::zeroed()` (or transmuting `()` to `!`) currently triggers this lint:
```rs
warning: the type `!` does not permit zero-initialization
--> test.rs:5:23
|
5 | let _val: ! = mem::zeroed();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| this code causes undefined behavior when executed
| help: use `MaybeUninit<T>` instead, and only call `assume_init` after initialization is done
|
= note: the `!` type has no valid value
```
The `MaybeUninit` suggestion in the help message seems confusing/useless for uninhabited types, as such a type cannot be fully initialized in the first place (as the note implies).
This PR limits this help message to inhabited types which can be initialized
Miri: basic dyn* support
As usual I am very unsure about the dynamic dispatch stuff, but it passes even the `Pin<&mut dyn* Trait>` test so that is something.
TBH I think it was a mistake to make `dyn Trait` and `dyn* Trait` part of the same `TyKind` variant. Almost everywhere in Miri this lead to the wrong default behavior, resulting in strange ICEs instead of nice "unimplemented" messages. The two types describe pretty different runtime data layout after all.
Strangely I did not need to do the equivalent of [this diff](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106532#discussion_r1087095963) in Miri. Maybe that is because the unsizing logic matches on `ty::Dynamic(.., ty::Dyn)` already? In `unsized_info` I don't think the `target_dyn_kind` can be `DynStar`, since then it wouldn't be unsized!
r? `@oli-obk` Cc `@eholk` (dyn-star) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102425
Remove old FIXME that no longer applies
it looks like Encodable was fallible at some point, but that was changed which means that this FIXME is no longer applicable
Remove old FIXMEs referring to #19596
Having an inner function that accepts a mutable reference seems to be the only way this can be expressed. Taking a mutable reference would call the same function with a new type &mut F which then causes the infinite recursion error in #19596.
Refine error span for trait error into borrowed expression
Extends the error span refinement in #106477 to drill into borrowed expressions just like tuples/struct/enum literals. For example,
```rs
trait Fancy {}
trait Good {}
impl <'a, T> Fancy for &'a T where T: Good {}
impl <S> Good for Option<S> where S: Iterator {}
fn want_fancy<F>(f: F) where F: Fancy {}
fn example() {
want_fancy(&Some(5));
// (BEFORE) ^^^^^^^^ `{integer}` is not an iterator
// (AFTER) ^ `{integer}` is not an iterator
}
```
Existing heuristics try to find the right part of the expression to "point at"; current heuristics look at e.g. struct constructors and tuples. This PR adds a new check for borrowed expressions when looking into a borrowed type.
Use restricted Damerau-Levenshtein distance for diagnostics
This replaces the existing Levenshtein algorithm with the Damerau-Levenshtein algorithm. This means that "ab" to "ba" is one change (a transposition) instead of two (a deletion and insertion). More specifically, this is a _restricted_ implementation, in that "ca" to "abc" cannot be performed as "ca" → "ac" → "abc", as there is an insertion in the middle of a transposition. I believe that errors like that are sufficiently rare that it's not worth taking into account.
This was first brought up [on IRLO](https://internals.rust-lang.org/t/18227) when it was noticed that the diagnostic for `prinltn!` (transposed L and T) was `print!` and not `println!`. Only a single existing UI test was effected, with the result being an objective improvement.
~~I have left the method name and various other references to the Levenshtein algorithm untouched, as the exact manner in which the edit distance is calculated should not be relevant to the caller.~~
r? ``@estebank``
``@rustbot`` label +A-diagnostics +C-enhancement
create dummy placeholder crate to prevent compiler from panicing
This PR is to address the panic found in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105700.
There are 2 separate things going on with this panic.
First the code could not generate a dummy response for crate fragment types when it hits the recursion limit.
This PR adds the method to the trait implementation for `DymmyResult` to be able to create a dummy crate node.
This stops the panic from happening.
The second thing that is not addressed (and maybe does not need addressing? 🤷🏻)
is that when you have multiple attributes it ends up treating attributes that follow another as being the result of expanding the former (maybe there is a better way to say that). So you end up hitting the recursion limit. Even though you would think there is no expansion happening here.
If you did not hit the recursion limit the compiler would output that `invalid_attribute` does not exists. But it currently exits before the resolution step when the recursion limit is reached here.
Type-directed probing for inherent associated types
When probing for inherent associated types (IATs), equate the Self-type found in the projection with the Self-type of the relevant inherent impl blocks and check if all predicates are satisfied.
Previously, we didn't look at the Self-type or at the bounds and just picked the first inherent impl block containing an associated type with the name we were searching for which is obviously incorrect.
Regarding the implementation, I basically copied what we do during method probing (`assemble_inherent_impl_probe`, `consider_probe`). Unfortunately, I had to duplicate a lot of the diagnostic code found in `rustc_hir_typeck::method::suggest` which we don't have access to in `rustc_hir_analysis`. Not sure if there is a simple way to unify the error handling. Note that in the future, `rustc_hir_analysis::astconv` might not actually be the place where we resolve inherent associated types (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/103621#issuecomment-1304309565) but `rustc_hir_typeck` (?) in which case the duplication may naturally just disappear. While inherent associated *constants* are currently resolved during "method" probing, I did not find a straightforward way to incorporate IAT lookup into it as types and values (functions & constants) are two separate entities for which distinct code paths are taken.
Fixes#104251 (incl. https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104251#issuecomment-1338501171).
Fixes#105305.
Fixes#107468.
`@rustbot` label T-types F-inherent_associated_types
r? types
Make codegen choose whether to emit overflow checks
ConstProp and DataflowConstProp currently have a specific code path not to propagate constants when they overflow. This is meant to have the correct behaviour when inlining from a crate with overflow checks (like `core`) into a crate compiled without.
This PR shifts the behaviour change to the `Assert(Overflow*)` MIR terminators: if the crate is compiled without overflow checks, just skip emitting the assertions. This is already what happens with `OverflowNeg`.
This allows ConstProp and DataflowConstProp to transform `CheckedBinaryOp(Add, u8::MAX, 1)` into `const (0, true)`, and let codegen ignore the `true`.
The interpreter is modified to conform to this behaviour.
Fixes#35310
NB: Since we are using the same InferCtxt in each iteration,
we essentially *spoil* the inference variables and we only
ever get at most *one* applicable candidate (only the 1st candidate
has clean variables that can still unify correctly).
Fix RPITITs in default trait methods (by assuming projection predicates in param-env)
Instead of having special projection logic that allows us to turn `ProjectionTy(RPITIT, [Self#0, ...])` into `OpaqueTy(RPITIT, [Self#0, ...])`, we can instead augment the param-env of default trait method bodies to assume these as projection predicates. This should allow us to only project where we're allowed to!
In order to make this work without introducing a bunch of cycle errors, we additionally tweak the `OpaqueTypeExpander` used by `ParamEnv::with_reveal_all_normalized` to not normalize the right-hand side of projection predicates. This should be fine, because if we use the projection predicate to normalize some other projection type, we'll continue to normalize the opaque that it gets projected to.
This also makes it possible to support default trait methods with RPITITs in an associated-type based RPITIT lowering strategy without too much extra effort.
Fixes#107002
Alternative to #108142
Correctly handle links starting with whitespace
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/107995.
I just got this issue, wrote a fix and then saw the issue. So here's the PR. ^^'
r? `@petrochenkov`
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104659 (reflow the stack size story)
- #106933 (Update documentation of select_nth_unstable and select_nth_unstable_by to state O(n^2) complexity)
- #107783 (rustdoc: simplify DOM for `.item-table`)
- #107951 (resolve: Fix doc links referring to other crates when documenting proc macro crates directly)
- #108130 ("Basic usage" is redundant for there is just one example)
- #108146 (rustdoc: hide `reference` methods in search index)
- #108189 (Fix some more `non_lifetime_binders` stuff with higher-ranked trait bounds)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix some more `non_lifetime_binders` stuff with higher-ranked trait bounds
1. When assembling candidates for `for<T> T: Sized`, we can't ICE because the self-type is a bound type.
2. Fix an issue where, when canonicalizing in non-universe preserving mode, we don't actually set the universe for placeholders to the root even though we do the same for region vars.
3. Make `Placeholder("T")` format like `T` in error messages.
Fixes#108180Fixes#108182
r? types
Make `dyn*`'s value backend type a pointer
One tweak on top of Ralf's commit should fix using `usize` as a `dyn*`-coercible type, and should fix when we're using various other pointer types when LLVM opaque pointers is disabled.
r? `@eholk` but feel free to reassign
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107728#issuecomment-1421231823 `@RalfJung`
Check that built-in callable types validate their output type is `Sized` (in new solver)
Working on parity with old solver. Putting this up for consideration, it's not *really* needed or anything just yet. Maybe it's better to approach this from another direction (like always checking the item bounds when calling `consider_assumption`? we may need that for coinduction to be sound though?)
This basically implements #100096 for the new solver.
Don't call `with_reveal_all_normalized` in const-eval when `param_env` has inference vars in it
**what:** This slightly shifts the order of operations from an existing hack:
5b6ed253c4/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/consts/kind.rs (L225-L230)
in order to avoid calling a tcx query (`TyCtxt::reveal_opaque_types_in_bounds`, via `ParamEnv::with_reveal_all_normalized`) when a param-env has inference variables in it.
**why:** This allows us to enable fingerprinting of query keys/values outside of incr-comp in deubg mode, to make sure we catch other places where we're passing infer vars and other bad things into query keys. Currently that (bbf33836b9) crashes because we introduce inference vars into a param-env in the blanket-impl finder in rustdoc 😓5b6ed253c4/src/librustdoc/clean/blanket_impl.rs (L43)
See the CI failure here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/actions/runs/4058194838/jobs/6984834619
Deny non-lifetime bound vars in `for<..> ||` closure binders
Moves the check for illegal bound var types from astconv to resolve_bound_vars. If a binder is defined to have a type or const late-bound var that's not allowed, we'll resolve any usages to ty error or const error values, so we shouldn't ever see late-bound types or consts in places they aren't expected.
Fixes#108184Fixes#108181Fixes#108192
Don't eagerly convert principal to string
Fixes#108155
~~I haven't yet been able to reproduce the ICE in a minimal example unfortunately.~~ Added a test
Don't allow evaluating queries that were fed in a previous compiler run
r? `@cjgillot`
this code was already unreachable. Also we removed the no_hash + feeding restriction in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/105220.
Don't recover lifetimes/labels containing emojis as character literals
Fixes#108019.
Note that at the time of this commit, `unic-emoji-char` seems to have data tables only up to Unicode 5.0, but Unicode is already newer than this.
A newer emoji such as `🥺` will not be recognized as an emoji but older emojis such as `🐱` will.
This PR leaves a couple of FIXMEs where `unic_emoji_char::is_emoji` is used.
Add sanitizer support for modern iOS platforms
asan and tsan generally support iOS, but that previously wasn't configured in rust. This only adds support for the simulator architectures, and arm64 device architecture, not the older 32 bit architectures.
Add `kernel-address` sanitizer support for freestanding targets
This PR adds support for KASan (kernel address sanitizer) instrumentation in freestanding targets. I included the minimal set of `x86_64-unknown-none`, `riscv64{imac, gc}-unknown-none-elf`, and `aarch64-unknown-none` but there's likely other targets it can be added to. (`linux_kernel_base.rs`?) KASan uses the address sanitizer attributes but has the `CompileKernel` parameter set to `true` in the pass creation.
Enable instcombine for mutable reborrows
`instcombine` used to contain this comment, which is no longer accurate because there it is fine to copy `&mut _` in MIR:
```rust
// The dereferenced place must have type `&_`, so that we don't copy `&mut _`.
```
So let's try replacing that check with something much more permissive...
Default `repr(C)` enums to `c_int` size
This is what ISO C strongly implies this is correct, and
many processor-specific ABIs imply or mandate this size, so
"everyone" (LLVM, gcc...) defaults to emitting enums this way.
However, this is by no means guaranteed by ISO C,
and the bare-metal Arm targets show it can be overridden,
which rustc supports via `c-enum-min-bits` in a target.json.
The override is a flag named `-fshort-enums` in clang and gcc,
but introducing a CLI flag is probably unnecessary for rustc.
This flag can be used by non-Arm microcontroller targets,
like AVR and MSP430, but it is not enabled for them by default.
Rust programmers who know the size of a target's enums
can use explicit reprs, which also lets them match C23 code.
This change is most relevant to 16-bit targets: AVR and MSP430.
Most of rustc's targets use 32-bit ints, but ILP64 does exist.
Regardless, rustc should now correctly handle enums for
both very small and very large targets.
Thanks to William for confirming MSP430 behavior,
and to Waffle for better style and no-core `size_of` asserts.
Fixesrust-lang/rust#107361Fixesrust-lang/rust#77806
Add `Clause::ConstArgHasType`
Currently the way that we check that a const arg has the correct type for the const param it is an argument for is by setting the expected type of `typeck` on the anon const of the argument to be the const param's type.
In the future for a potential `min_generic_const_exprs` we will allow providing const arguments that do not have an associated anon const that can be typeck'd which will require us to actually check that the const argument has the correct type. While it would potentially be possible to just call `eq` when creating substs this would not work if we support generics of the form `const N: T, T` (the const parameters type referencing generics declared after itself).
Additionally having `ConstArgHasType` will allow us to potentially make progress on removing the `ty` field of `Const` which may be desirable. Once progress has been made on this, `ConstArgHasType` will also be helpful in ensuring we do not make mistakes in trait/impl checking by declaring functions with the wrong const parameter types as the checks that the param env is compatible would catch it. (We have messed this up in the past, and with generic const parameter types these checks will get more complex)
There is a [document](https://hackmd.io/wuCS6CJBQ9-fWbwaW7nQRw?view) about the types of const generics that may provide some general information on this subject
---
This PR shouldn't have any impact on whether code compiles or not on stable, it primarily exists to make progress on unstable const generics features that are desirable.
This function has this line twice:
```
let bound_vars = tcx.intern_bound_variable_kinds(&bound_vars);
```
The second occurrence is effectively a no-op, because the first
occurrence interned any that needed it.
There are two traits, `InternAs` and `InternIteratorElement`. I found
them confusing to use, particularly this:
```
pub fn mk_tup<I: InternAs<Ty<'tcx>, Ty<'tcx>>>(self, iter: I) -> I::Output {
iter.intern_with(|ts| self.intern_tup(ts))
}
```
where I thought there might have been two levels of interning going on
(there isn't) due to the `intern_with`/`InternAs` + `intern_tup` naming.
And then I found the actual traits and impls themselves *very*
confusing.
- `InternAs` has a single impl, for iterators, with four type variables.
- `InternAs` is only implemented for iterators because it wouldn't
really make sense to implement for any other type. And you can't
really understand the trait without seeing that single impl, which is
suspicious.
- `InternAs` is basically just a wrapper for `InternIteratorElement`
which does all the actual work.
- Neither trait actually does any interning. They just have `Intern` in
their name because they are used *by* interning code.
- There are no comments.
So this commit improves things.
- It removes `InternAs` completely. This makes the `mk_*` function
signatures slightly more verbose -- two trait bounds instead of one --
but much easier to read, because you only need to understand one trait
instead of two.
- It renames `InternIteratorElement` as `CollectAndApply`. Likewise, it
renames its method `intern_with` as `collect_and_apply`. These names
describe better what's going on: we collect the iterator elements into
a slice and then apply a function to the slice.
- It adds comments, making clear that all this is all there just to
provide an optimized version of `f(&iter.collect::<Vec<_>>())`.
It took me a couple of attempts to come up with this commit. My initial
attempt kept `InternAs` around, but renamed things and added comments,
and I wasn't happy with it. I think this version is much better. The
resulting code is shorter, despite the addition of the comments.
`InternIteratorElement` is a trait used to intern values produces by
iterators. There are three impls, corresponding to iterators that
produce different types:
- One for `T`, which operates straightforwardly.
- One for `Result<T, E>`, which is fallible, and will fail early with an
error result if any of the iterator elements are errors.
- One for `&'a T`, which clones the items as it iterates.
That last one is bad: it's extremely easy to use it without realizing
that it clones, which goes against Rust's normal "explicit is better"
approach to cloning.
So this commit just removes it. In practice, there weren't many use
sites. For all but one of them `into_iter()` could be used, which avoids
the need for cloning. And for the one remaining case `copied()` is
used.
There are several `mk_foo`/`intern_foo` pairs, where the former takes an
iterator and the latter takes a slice. (This naming convention is bad,
but that's a fix for another PR.)
This commit changes several `mk_foo` occurrences into `intern_foo`,
avoiding the need for some `.iter()`/`.into_iter()` calls. Affected
cases:
- mk_type_list
- mk_tup
- mk_substs
- mk_const_list
Switch to `EarlyBinder` for `type_of` query
Part of the work to finish #105779 and implement https://github.com/rust-lang/types-team/issues/78.
Several queries `X` have a `bound_X` variant that wraps the output in `EarlyBinder`. This adds `EarlyBinder` to the return type of the `type_of` query and removes `bound_type_of`.
r? `@lcnr`
Do not ICE on unmet trait alias impl bounds
Fixes#108132
I've also added some documentation to the `impl_def_id` field of `DerivedObligationCause` to try and minimise the risk of such errors in future.
r? `@compiler-errors`
wasm: Register the `relaxed-simd` target feature
This WebAssembly proposal is likely to reach stage 4 soon so this starts the support in Rust for the proposal by adding a target feature that can be enabled via attributes for the stdarch project to bind the intrinsics.
Implement partial support for non-lifetime binders
This implements support for non-lifetime binders. It's pretty useless currently, but I wanted to put this up so the implementation can be discussed.
Specifically, this piggybacks off of the late-bound lifetime collection code in `rustc_hir_typeck::collect::lifetimes`. This seems like a necessary step given the fact we don't resolve late-bound regions until this point, and binders are sometimes merged.
Q: I'm not sure if I should go along this route, or try to modify the earlier nameres code to compute the right bound var indices for type and const binders eagerly... If so, I'll need to rename all these queries to something more appropriate (I've done this for `resolve_lifetime::Region` -> `resolve_lifetime::ResolvedArg`)
cc rust-lang/types-team#81
r? `@ghost`
This is what ISO C strongly implies this is correct, and
many processor-specific ABIs imply or mandate this size, so
"everyone" (LLVM, gcc...) defaults to emitting enums this way.
However, this is by no means guaranteed by ISO C,
and the bare-metal Arm targets show it can be overridden,
which rustc supports via `c-enum-min-bits` in a target.json.
The override is a flag named `-fshort-enums` in clang and gcc,
but introducing a CLI flag is probably unnecessary for rustc.
This flag can be used by non-Arm microcontroller targets,
like AVR and MSP430, but it is not enabled for them by default.
Rust programmers who know the size of a target's enums
can use explicit reprs, which also lets them match C23 code.
This change is most relevant to 16-bit targets: AVR and MSP430.
Most of rustc's targets use 32-bit ints, but ILP64 does exist.
Regardless, rustc should now correctly handle enums for
both very small and very large targets.
Thanks to William for confirming MSP430 behavior,
and to Waffle for better style and no-core size_of asserts.
Co-authored-by: William D. Jones <thor0505@comcast.net>
Co-authored-by: Waffle Maybe <waffle.lapkin@gmail.com>
Factor query arena allocation out from query caches
This moves the logic for arena allocation out from the query caches into conditional code in the query system. The specialized arena caches are removed. A new `QuerySystem` type is added in `rustc_middle` which contains the arenas, providers and query caches.
Performance seems to be slightly regressed:
<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</td><td align="right">1.8053s</td><td align="right">1.8109s</td><td align="right"> 0.31%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.2600s</td><td align="right">0.2597s</td><td align="right"> -0.10%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.9973s</td><td align="right">1.0006s</td><td align="right"> 0.34%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check</td><td align="right">1.6048s</td><td align="right">1.6051s</td><td align="right"> 0.02%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check</td><td align="right">6.2992s</td><td align="right">6.3159s</td><td align="right"> 0.26%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">10.9664s</td><td align="right">10.9922s</td><td align="right"> 0.23%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">1.0017s</td><td align="right"> 0.17%</td></tr></table>
Incremental performance is a bit worse:
<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:initial</td><td align="right">2.2103s</td><td align="right">2.2247s</td><td align="right"> 0.65%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">0.3335s</td><td align="right">0.3349s</td><td align="right"> 0.41%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">1.2597s</td><td align="right">1.2650s</td><td align="right"> 0.42%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">2.0521s</td><td align="right">2.0613s</td><td align="right"> 0.45%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check:initial</td><td align="right">7.8275s</td><td align="right">7.8583s</td><td align="right"> 0.39%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">13.6832s</td><td align="right">13.7442s</td><td align="right"> 0.45%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">1.0046s</td><td align="right"> 0.46%</td></tr></table>
It does seem like LLVM optimizers struggle a bit with the current state of the query system.
Based on top of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107782 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107802.
r? `@cjgillot`
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #106347 (More accurate spans for arg removal suggestion)
- #108057 (Prevent some attributes from being merged with others on reexports)
- #108090 (`if $c:expr { Some($r:expr) } else { None }` =>> `$c.then(|| $r)`)
- #108092 (note issue for feature(packed_bundled_libs))
- #108099 (use chars instead of strings where applicable)
- #108115 (Do not ICE on unmet trait alias bounds)
- #108125 (Add new people to the compiletest review rotation)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Optimize `mk_region`
PR #107869 avoiding some interning under `mk_ty` by special-casing `Ty` variants with simple (integer) bodies. This PR does something similar for regions.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Remove save-analysis.
Most tests involving save-analysis were removed, but I kept a few where the `-Zsave-analysis` was an add-on to the main thing being tested, rather than the main thing being tested.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43606
Fix index out of bounds ICE in `point_at_expr_source_of_inferred_type`
There might be more type params than args to a method call, which leads to an index out of bounds panic.
I'm not familiar with this code at all, so unsure whether this is the right fix, but at least this patch fixes#108042 for me (I hit the same issue with similar code)
Most tests involving save-analysis were removed, but I kept a few where
the `-Zsave-analysis` was an add-on to the main thing being tested,
rather than the main thing being tested.
For `x.py install`, the `rust-analysis` target has been removed.
For `x.py dist`, the `rust-analysis` target has been kept in a
degenerate form: it just produces a single file `reduced.json`
indicating that save-analysis has been removed. This is necessary for
rustup to keep working.
Closes#43606.
Don't ICE in `might_permit_raw_init` if reference is polymorphic
Emitting optimized MIR for a polymorphic function may require computing layout of a type that isn't (yet) known. This happens in the instcombine pass, for example. Let's fail gracefully in that condition.
cc `@saethlin`
fixes#107999
Don't suggest `#[doc(hidden)]` trait methods with matching return type
Fixes#107983, addressing the bad suggestion.
The test can probably be made more specific to this case, but I'm unsure how.
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics
Use `target` instead of `machine` for mir interpreter integer handling.
The naming of `machine` only makes sense from a mir interpreter internals perspective, but outside users talk about the `target` platform. As per https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108029#issuecomment-1429791015
r? `@RalfJung`
Avoid accessing HIR when it can be avoided
Experiment to see if it helps some incremental cases.
Will be rebased once https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107942 gets merged.
r? `@ghost`