interpret, miri: uniform treatments of intrinsics/functions with and without return block
A long time ago we didn't have a `dest: &MPlaceTy<'tcx, Self::Provenance>` for diverging functions, and since `dest` is used so often we special-cased these non-returning intrinsics and functions so that we'd have `dest` available everywhere else. But this has changed a while ago, now only the return block `ret` is optional, and there's a convenient `return_to_block` function for dealing with the `None` case.
So there no longer is any reason to treat diverging intrinsics/functions any different from those that do return.
Various improvements to entrypoint code
This moves some code around and adds some documentation comments to make it easier to understand what's going on with the entrypoint logic, which is a bit complicated.
The only change in behavior is consolidating the error messages for unix_sigpipe to make the code slightly simpler.
This moves some code around and adds some documentation comments to make
it easier to understand what's going on with the entrypoint logic, which
is a bit complicated.
The only change in behavior is consolidating the error messages for
unix_sigpipe to make the code slightly simpler.
Set non-leaf frame pointers on Fuchsia targets
This is part of our work to enable shadow call stack sanitization on Fuchsia, see [this Fuchsia issue](https://g-issues.fuchsia.dev/issues/327643884).
r? ``@tmandry``
Make `Bounds.clauses` private
Construct it through `Bounds::default()`, then consume the clauses via the method `Bounds::clauses()`.
This helps with effects desugaring where `clauses()` is not only the clauses within the `clauses` field.
Trim crate graph
This PR removes some unnecessary `Cargo.toml` entries, and makes some other small related cleanups that I found while looking at this stuff.
r? ```@pnkfelix```
Change `SIGPIPE` ui from `#[unix_sigpipe = "..."]` to `-Zon-broken-pipe=...`
In the stabilization [attempt](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120832) of `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]`, a concern was [raised ](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120832#issuecomment-2007394609) related to using a language attribute for the feature: Long term, we want `fn lang_start()` to be definable by any crate, not just libstd. Having a special language attribute in that case becomes awkward.
So as a first step towards the next stabilization attempt, this PR changes the `#[unix_sigpipe = "..."]` attribute to a compiler flag `-Zon-broken-pipe=...` to remove that concern, since now the language is not "contaminated" by this feature.
Another point was [also raised](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120832#issuecomment-1987023484), namely that the ui should not leak **how** it does things, but rather what the **end effect** is. The new flag uses the proposed naming. This is of course something that can be iterated on further before stabilization.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97889
Use a proof tree visitor to refine the `Obligation` for error reporting in new solver
With the magic of `ProofTreeVisitor`, we can close the gap that we have on `ObligationCause`s being not as descriptive in the new trait solver.
r? lcnr
Needs some work and obviously documentation.
This argument isn't necessary for WebAssembly targets since `wasm-ld` is
the only linker for the targets. Passing it otherwise interferes with
Clang's linker selection on `wasm32-wasip2` so avoid it altogether.
Now that branch and MC/DC mappings have been split out into separate types and
vectors, this enum is no longer needed, since it only represents ordinary
"code" regions.
(We can revisit this decision if we ever add support for other region kinds,
such as skipped regions or expansion regions. But at that point, we might just
add new structs/vectors for those kinds as well.)
Some hir cleanups
It seemed odd to not put `AnonConst` in the arena, compared with the other types that we did put into an arena. This way we can also give it a `Span` without growing a lot of other HIR data structures because of the extra field.
r? compiler
This commit changes the LLVM target of for the Rust `wasm32-wasip2`
target to `wasm32-wasip2` as well. LLVM does a bit of detection on the
target string to know when to call `wasm-component-ld` vs `wasm-ld` so
otherwise clang is invoking the wrong linker.
Account for immutably borrowed locals in MIR copy-prop and GVN
For the most part, we consider that immutably borrowed `Freeze` locals still fulfill SSA conditions. As the borrow is immutable, any use of the local will have the value given by the single assignment, and there can be no surprise.
This allows copy-prop to merge a non-borrowed local with a borrowed local. We chose to keep copy-classes heads unborrowed, as those may be easier to optimize in later passes.
This also allows to GVN the value behind an immutable borrow. If a SSA local is borrowed, dereferencing that borrow is equivalent to copying the local's value: re-executing the assignment between the borrow and the dereference would be UB.
r? `@ghost` for perf
coverage: Clean up creation of MC/DC condition bitmaps
This PR improves the code for creating and initializing [MC/DC](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modified_condition/decision_coverage) condition bitmap variables, as introduced by #123409 and modified by #124255.
- The condition bitmap variables are now created eagerly at the start of per-function codegen, via a new `init_coverage` method in `CoverageInfoBuilderMethods`. This avoids having to retroactively create the bitmaps while doing codegen for an individual coverage statement.
- As a result, we can now create and initialize those bitmaps using existing safe APIs, instead of having to perform our own unsafe call to `llvm::LLVMBuildAlloca`.
- This PR also tweaks the way we count the number of condition bitmaps needed, by tracking the total number of bitmaps needed (max depth + 1), instead of only tracking the maximum depth. This reduces the potential for subtle off-by-one confusion.
Stabilize the size of incr comp object file names
The current implementation does not produce stable-length paths, and we create the paths in a way that makes our allocation behavior is nondeterministic. I think `@eddyb` fixed a number of other cases like this in the past, and this PR fixes another one. Whether that actually matters I have no idea, but we still have bimodal behavior in rustc-perf and the non-uniformity in `find` and `ls` was bothering me.
I've also removed the truncation of the mangled CGU names. Before this PR incr comp paths look like this:
```
target/debug/incremental/scratch-38izrrq90cex7/s-gux6gz0ow8-1ph76gg-ewe1xj434l26w9up5bedsojpd/261xgo1oqnd90ry5.o
```
And after, they look like this:
```
target/debug/incremental/scratch-035omutqbfkbw/s-gux6borni0-16r3v1j-6n64tmwqzchtgqzwwim5amuga/55v2re42sztc8je9bva6g8ft3.o
```
On the one hand, I'm sure this will break some people's builds because they're on Windows and only a few bytes from the path length limit. But if we're that seriously worried about the length of our file names, I have some other ideas on how to make them smaller. And last time I deleted some hash truncations from the compiler, there was a huge drop in the number if incremental compilation ICEs that were reported: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110367https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110367
---
Upon further reading, this PR actually fixes a bug. This comment says the CGU names are supposed to be a fixed-length hash, and before this PR they aren't: ca7d34efa9/compiler/rustc_monomorphize/src/partitioning.rs (L445-L448)
Generalize `adjust_from_tcx` for `Allocation`
Previously, `adjust_from_tcx` would take an `Allocation` and "adjust allocation from the ones in `tcx` to a custom Machine instance [...]".
This PR generalizes this so the Machine instance can also determine the `Bytes` type of the output `Allocation`.
r? `@RalfJung`
There are a few common abbreviations like `use rustc_ast as ast` and
`use rust_hir as hir` for names that are used a lot. But there are also
some cases where a crate is renamed just once in the whole codebase, and
that ends up making things harder to read rather than easier. This
commit removes them.
It is currently an enum and the `tts` and `idx` fields are repeated
across the two variants.
This commit splits it into a struct `Frame` and an enum `FrameKind`, to
factor out the duplication. The commit also renames `Frame::new` as
`Frame::new_delimited` and adds `Frame::new_sequence`. I.e. both
variants now have a constructor.
Control flow never gets past the end of the `ExpandResult::Retry` match
arm, due to the `span_bug` and the `continue`. Therefore, the code after
the match can only be reached from the `ExpandResult::Ready` arm.
This commit moves that code after the match into the
`ExpandResult::Ready` arm, avoiding the need for the `continue` in the
`ExpandResult::Retry` arm.
`ConstKind::Value` is the only variant where control flow leaves the
first match on `impl_ct.kind()`, so there is no need for a second match
on the same expression later on.
In the stabilization attempt of `#[unix_sigpipe = "sig_dfl"]`, a concern
was raised related to using a language attribute for the feature: Long
term, we want `fn lang_start()` to be definable by any crate, not just
libstd. Having a special language attribute in that case becomes
awkward.
So as a first step towards towards the next stabilization attempt, this
PR changes the `#[unix_sigpipe = "..."]` attribute to a compiler flag
`-Zon-broken-pipe=...` to remove that concern, since now the language
is not "contaminated" by this feature.
Another point was also raised, namely that the ui should not leak
**how** it does things, but rather what the **end effect** is. The new
flag uses the proposed naming. This is of course something that can be
iterated on further before stabilization.
Use `tcx.types.unit` instead of `Ty::new_unit(tcx)`
I don't think there is any need for the function, given that we can just access the `.types`, similarly to all other primitives?
remove extraneous note on `UnableToRunDsymutil` diagnostic
If I understand [this FIXME](1367827eac/compiler/rustc_macros/src/diagnostics/diagnostic.rs (L205)) correctly, it seems we don't yet validate subdiagnostics, so `#[note]` and co in the `#[derive(Diagnostic]` item could be out-of-sync with the fluent message, without causing compile errors.
It was the case for `rustc_codegen_ssa::errors::UnableToRunDsymutil`, causing the ICE in #124392.
I've grepped and scripted my way through most of our diagnostics structs and fluent bundles and the above was the only such extraneous `#[note]`/`#[note(name)]`/`#[help]`/`#[warning]` I could find, so hopefully there aren't many others like it.
I haven't checked if the opposite can happen, a `.note = ` in a fluent message that is lacking a corresponding `#[note]` on the struct and not causing an error, but maybe it's possible?
r? ``@davidtwco``
fixes#124392
always print nice 'std not found' error when std is not found
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/3529
Arguably Miri is doing something odd by letting people create no-std sysroots for arbitrary targets -- but equally arguably, there's no good reason for rustc to special-case the host triple here. Being a non-host triple does not imply the target is a no-std target, after all.
Adjust `#[macro_export]`/doctest help suggestion for non_local_defs lint
This PR adjust the help suggestion of the `non_local_definitions` lint when encountering a `#[macro_export]` at top-level doctest.
So instead of a non-sentential help suggestion to move the `macro_rules!` up above the `rustdoc`-generated function. We now suggest users to declare their own function.
Fixes *(partially, needs backport)* #124534
Add a lint against never type fallback affecting unsafe code
~~I'm not very happy with the code quality... `VecGraph` not allowing you to get predecessors is very annoying. This should work though, so there is that.~~ (ended up updating `VecGraph` to support getting predecessors)
~~First few commits are from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123934https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123980~~
This is a workaround for #122758, but it's not clear why 1.79 requires a
more extensive amount of no_inline than the previous release. Seems like
there's something relatively subtle happening here.
Rewrite select (in the new solver) to use a `ProofTreeVisitor`
We can use a proof tree visitor rather than collecting and recomputing all the nested goals ourselves.
Based on #124415
Cleanup: Replace item names referencing GitHub issues or error codes with something more meaningful
**lcnr** in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117164#pullrequestreview-1969935387:
> […] while I know that there's precendent to name things `Issue69420`, I really dislike this as it requires looking up the issue to figure out the purpose of such a variant. Actually referring to the underlying issue, e.g. `AliasMayNormToUncovered` or whatever and then linking to the issue in a doc comment feels a lot more desirable to me. We should ideally rename all the functions and enums which currently use issue numbers.
I've grepped through `compiler/` like crazy and think that I've found all instances of this pattern.
However, I haven't renamed `compute_2229_migrations_*`. Should I?
The first commit introduces an abhorrent and super long name for an item because naming is hard but also scary looking / unwelcoming names are good for things related to temporary-ish backcompat hacks. I'll let you discover it by yourself.
Contains a bit of drive-by cleanup and a diag migration bc that was the simplest option.
r? lcnr or compiler
Because this now always takes place at the start of the function, we can just
use the normal `alloca` method and then initialize each bitmap immediately.
This patch also moves bitmap setup out of the `mcdc_parameters` method, because
there is no longer any particular reason for it to be there.
Lazily normalize inside trait ref during orphan check & consider ty params in rigid alias types to be uncovered
Fixes#99554, fixesrust-lang/types-team#104.
Fixes#114061.
Supersedes #100555.
Tracking issue for the future compatibility lint: #124559.
r? lcnr
Remove many `#[macro_use] extern crate foo` items
This requires the addition of more `use` items, which often make the code more verbose. But they also make the code easier to read, because `#[macro_use]` obscures where macros are defined.
r? `@fee1-dead`
Mention Both HRTB and Generic Lifetime Param in `E0637` documentation
The compiler (rustc 1.77.0) error for `and_without_explicit_lifetime()` in the erroneous code example suggests using a HRTB. But, the corrected example uses an explicit lifetime parameter.
This PR fixes it so that the documentation and the compiler suggestion for error code `E0637` are consistent with each other.
coverage: Split off `mappings.rs` from `spans.rs` and `from_mir.rs`
Originally, `spans.rs` was mainly concerned with extracting and post-processing spans from MIR, so that they could be used for block coverage instrumentation.
Over time it has organically expanded to include more responsibilities, especially relating to branch coverage and MC/DC coverage, that don't really fit its current name.
This PR therefore takes all the extra code that is *not* part of the old span-refinement engine, and moves it out into a new `mappings.rs` file.
---
No functional changes. I have deliberately avoided doing any follow-up (such as renaming types or functions), because this particular change is very rot-prone, and I want it to be as simple and self-contained as possible.
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
because we are already marking unions `NoPropagation` in
`CanConstProp::check()`. That is enough to prevent any attempts
at const propagating unions and this second check is not needed.
Also improve a comment in `CanConstProp::check()`
Split mcdc code to a sub module of coverageinfo
A further work from #124217 . I have made relatively large changes when working on #124278 so that it would better split them from `coverageinfo.rs` to avoid potential troubling merge work with improved branch coverage by `@Zalathar` .
Besides `BlockMarkerGenerator` is added to avoid ownership problems (mostly needed for following change of #124278 )
All code changes are done in [a37d737a](a3d737a086) while the second commit just renames the file.
cc `@RenjiSann` `@Zalathar`
This will impact your current work.
and replace it with a simple note suggesting
returning a value.
The type mismatch error was never due to
how many times the loop iterates. It is more
because of the peculiar structure of what the for
loop desugars to. So the note talking about
iteration count didn't make sense
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #124519 (adapt a codegen test for llvm 19)
- #124524 (Add StaticForeignItem and use it on ForeignItemKind)
- #124540 (Give proof tree visitors the ability to instantiate nested goals directly)
- #124543 (codegen tests: Tolerate `range()` qualifications in enum tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Give proof tree visitors the ability to instantiate nested goals directly
Useful when we want to look at the nested goals but not necessarily visit them (e.g. in select).
r? lcnr
Add StaticForeignItem and use it on ForeignItemKind
This is in preparation for unsafe extern blocks that adds a safe variant for functions inside extern blocks.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@compiler-errors`
coverage: Replace boolean options with a `CoverageLevel` enum
After #123409, and some discussion at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79649#issuecomment-2042093553 and #124120, it became clear to me that we should have a unified concept of “coverage level”, instead of having several separate boolean flags that aren't actually independent.
This PR therefore introduces a `CoverageLevel` enum, to replace the existing boolean flags for `branch` and `mcdc`.
The `no-branch` value (for `-Zcoverage-options`) has been renamed to `block`, instructing the compiler to only instrument for block coverage, with no branch coverage or MD/DC instrumentation.
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
cc `@ZhuUx` `@Lambdaris` `@RenjiSann`
Add a note to the ArbitraryExpressionInPattern error
The current "arbitrary expressions aren't allowed in patterns" error is confusing, as it fires for code where it *looks* like a pattern but the compiler still treats it as an expression. That this is due to the `:expr` fragment specifier forcing the expression-ness property on the code.
In the test suite, the "arbitrary expressions aren't allowed in patterns" error can only be found in combination with macro_rules macros that force expression-ness of their content, namely via `:expr` metavariables. I also can't come up with cases where there would be an expression instead of a pattern, so I think it's always coming from an `:expr`.
In order to make the error less confusing, this adds a note explaining the weird `:expr` fragment behaviour.
Fixes#99380
Remove optionality from MoveData::base_local
This is an artifact from when Places could be based on statics and not just locals. Now, all move paths either are locals or have parents, so this doesn't need to return Option anymore.
[Refactor] Rename `Lint` and `LintGroup`'s `is_loaded` to `is_externally_loaded`
The field being named `is_loaded` was very confusing. Turns out it's true for lints that are registered by external tools like Clippy (I had to look at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116412 to know what the variable meant). So I renamed `is_loaded` to `is_externally_loaded` and added some docs.
coverage: Avoid hard-coded values when visiting logical ops
This is a tiny little thing that I noticed during the final review of #123409, and I didn't want to hold up the whole PR just for this.
Instead of separately hard-coding the operation being visited, we can get it from the match arm pattern by using an as-pattern.
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
Mark unions non-const-propagatable in `KnownPanicsLint` without calling layout
Fixes#123710
The ICE occurs during the layout calculation of the union `InvalidTag` in #123710 because the following assert fails:5fe8b697e7/compiler/rustc_abi/src/layout.rs (L289-L292)
The layout calculation is invoked by `KnownPanicsLint` when it is trying to figure out which locals it can const prop. Since `KnownPanicsLint` is never actually going to const props unions thanks to PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121628 there's no point calling layout to check if it can. So in this fix I skip the call to layout and just mark the local non-const propagatable if it is a union.
Fix#124478 - offset_of! returns a temporary
This was due to the must_use() call. Adding HIR's `OffsetOf` to the must_use checking within the compiler avoids this issue while maintaining the lint output.
Fixes#124478. `@tgross35`
Use probes more aggressively in new solver
....so that we have the right candidate information when assembling trait and normalizes-to goals.
Also gets rid of misc probes.
r? lcnr
MCDC coverage: support nested decision coverage
#123409 provided the initial MCDC coverage implementation.
As referenced in #124144, it does not currently support "nested" decisions, like the following example :
```rust
fn nested_if_in_condition(a: bool, b: bool, c: bool) {
if a && if b || c { true } else { false } {
say("yes");
} else {
say("no");
}
}
```
Note that there is an if-expression (`if b || c ...`) embedded inside a boolean expression in the decision of an outer if-expression.
This PR proposes a workaround for this cases, by introducing a Decision context stack, and by handing several `temporary condition bitmaps` instead of just one.
When instrumenting boolean expressions, if the current node is a leaf condition (i.e. not a `||`/`&&` logical operator nor a `!` not operator), we insert a new decision context, such that if there are more boolean expressions inside the condition, they are handled as separate expressions.
On the codegen LLVM side, we allocate as many `temp_cond_bitmap`s as necessary to handle the maximum encountered decision depth.
Add decision_depth field to TVBitmapUpdate/CondBitmapUpdate statements
Add decision_depth field to BcbMappingKinds MCDCBranch and MCDCDecision
Add decision_depth field to MCDCBranchSpan and MCDCDecisionSpan
Rename `inhibit_union_abi_opt()` to `inhibits_union_abi_opt()`
`inihibit` seems to suggest that this function will inhibit optimizations whereas `inhibits` correctly indicates that it will merely _check_ that. With `inhibits` if conditions read more naturally e.g.:
```rust
if repr.inhibits_union_abi_opt() {
}
```
Record certainty of `evaluate_added_goals_and_make_canonical_response` call in candidate
Naming subject to bikeshedding, but I will need this when moving `select` to a proof tree visitor.
r? lcnr
Do not ICE on invalid consts when walking mono-reachable blocks
The `bug!` here was written under the logic of "this condition is impossible, right?" except that of course, if the compiler is given code that results in an compile error, then the situation is possible.
So now we just direct errors into the already-existing path for when we can't do a mono-time optimization.
Fix ICE on invalid const param types
Fixes ICE #123863 which occurs because the const param has a type which is not a `bool`, `char` or an integral type.
The ICEing code path begins here in `typeck_with_fallback`: cb3752d20e/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/lib.rs (L167)
The `fallback` invokes the `type_of` query and that eventually ends up calling `ct_infer` from the lowering code over here:
cb3752d20e/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/hir_ty_lowering/mod.rs (L561) and `ct_infer` ICEs at this location: cb3752d20e/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/collect.rs (L392)
To fix the ICE it I'm triggering a `span_delayed_bug` before we hit `ct_infer` if the type of the const param is not one of the supported types
### Edit
On `@lcnr's` suggestion I've changed the approach to not let `ReStatic` region hit the `bug!` in `ct_infer` instead of triggering a `span_delayed_bug`.
Fix substitution parts having a shifted underline in some cases
If two suggestions parts are side by side, the underline's offset:
(WIP PR as an example, not yet pushed)
```
error: expected a pattern, found an expression
--> ./main.rs:4:9
|
4 | 1 + 2 => 3
| ^^^^^ arbitrary expressions are not allowed in patterns
|
help: check the value in an arm guard
|
4 | n if n == 1 + 2 => 3
| ~ +++++++++++++
```
The emitter didn't take into account that the string had shrunk/grown if two substitution parts were side-by-side (surprisingly, there was only one case in the ui testsuite.)
```
help: check the value in an arm guard
|
4 | n if n == 1 + 2 => 3
| ~ +++++++++++++
```
``@rustbot`` label +A-suggestion-diagnostics
ast: Generalize item kind visiting
And avoid duplicating logic for visiting `Item`s with different kinds (regular, associated, foreign).
The diff is better viewed with whitespace ignored.
resolve: Remove two cases of misleading macro call visiting
Macro calls are ephemeral, they should not add anything to the definition tree, even if their AST could contains something with identity.
Thankfully, macro call AST cannot contain anything like that, so these walks are just noops.
In majority of other places in def_collector / build_reduced_graph they are already not visited.
(Also, a minor match reformatting is included.)
`obligations_for_self_ty`: use `ProofTreeVisitor` for nested goals
As always, dealing with proof trees continues to be a hacked together mess. After this PR and #124380 the only remaining blocker for core is https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/90. There is also a `ProofTreeVisitor` issue causing an ICE when compiling `alloc` which I will handle in a separate PR. This issue likely affects coherence diagnostics more generally.
The core idea is to extend the proof tree visitor to support visiting nested candidates without using a `probe`. We then simply recurse into nested candidates if they are the only potentially applicable candidate for a given goal and check whether the self type matches the expected one.
For that to work, we need to improve `CanonicalState` to also handle unconstrained inference variables created inside of the trait solver. This is done by extending the `var_values` of `CanoncalState` with each fresh inference variables. Furthermore, we also store the state of all inference variables at the end of each probe. When recursing into `InspectCandidates` we then unify the values of all these states.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Remove special-casing for `SimplifiedType` for next solver
It's unnecessary due to the way that we fully normalize the self type before assembly begins.
r? lcnr
These functions are only used in `rustc_builtin_macros`, so it makes
sense for them to live there. This allows them to be changed from `pub`
to `pub(crate)`.
uses a `ProofTreeVisitor` to look into nested
goals when looking at the pending obligations
during hir typeck. Used by closure signature
inference, coercion, and for async functions.
`-Z debug-macros` is "stabilized" by enabling it by default and removing.
`-Z collapse-macro-debuginfo` is stabilized as `-C collapse-macro-debuginfo`.
It now supports all typical boolean values (`parse_opt_bool`) in addition to just yes/no.
Default value of `collapse_debuginfo` was changed from `false` to `external` (i.e. collapsed if external, not collapsed if local).
`#[collapse_debuginfo]` attribute without a value is no longer supported to avoid guessing the default.
Don't ICE when `codegen_select_candidate` returns ambiguity in new solver
Because we merge identical candidates, we may have >1 impl candidate to in `codegen_select_error` but *not* have a trait error.
r? lcnr
Detect borrow error involving sub-slices and suggest `split_at_mut`
```
error[E0499]: cannot borrow `foo` as mutable more than once at a time
--> $DIR/suggest-split-at-mut.rs:13:18
|
LL | let a = &mut foo[..2];
| --- first mutable borrow occurs here
LL | let b = &mut foo[2..];
| ^^^ second mutable borrow occurs here
LL | a[0] = 5;
| ---- first borrow later used here
|
= help: use `.split_at_mut(position)` or similar method to obtain two mutable non-overlapping sub-slices
```
Address most of #58792.
For follow up work, we should emit a structured suggestion for cases where we can identify the exact `let (a, b) = foo.split_at_mut(2);` call that is needed.
Improved code with clippy
I haven't used the bootstrapped compiler, but I think I have made some improvements using clippy. I have already made the following changes to the compiler:
Replaced `self.first().is_digit(10)` with `self.first().is_ascii_digit()` on lines 633, 664, and 680 of compiler/rust_lexer/src/lib.rs.
Removed unnecessary cast on line 262 of compiler/rustc_lexer/src/unescape.rs
Replaced ok_or_else with ok_or on line 303 of compiler/rustc_lexer/src/unescape.rs
Replaced `!std::env::var("RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP").is_ok()` with `std::env::var("RUSTC_BOOTSTRAP").is_err()` on line 4 of compiler/rustc_macros/build.rs
Removed needless borrow for generic argument `env`on line 53 of compiler/rust_llvm/build.rs
```
error[E0499]: cannot borrow `foo` as mutable more than once at a time
--> $DIR/suggest-split-at-mut.rs:13:18
|
LL | let a = &mut foo[..2];
| --- first mutable borrow occurs here
LL | let b = &mut foo[2..];
| ^^^ second mutable borrow occurs here
LL | a[0] = 5;
| ---- first borrow later used here
|
= help: use `.split_at_mut(position)` or similar method to obtain two mutable non-overlapping sub-slices
```
Address most of #58792.
For follow up work, we should emit a structured suggestion for cases where we can identify the exact `let (a, b) = foo.split_at_mut(2);` call that is needed.
Enforce closure args + return type are WF
I found this out when investigating https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123461#issuecomment-2040894359. Turns out we don't register WF obligations for closure args and return types, leading to the ICE.
~~I think this is a useful thing to check for, but I'd like to check what the fallout is.~~ crater is complete.
~~Worst case, I think we should enforce this across an edition boundary (and possibly eventually migrate this for all editions) -- this should be super easy to do, since this is a check in HIR wfcheck, so it can be made edition dependent.~~ I believe the regressions are manageable enough to not necessitate edition-specific behavior.
Fixes#123461
Set writable and dead_on_unwind attributes for sret arguments
Set the `writable` and `dead_on_unwind` attributes for `sret` arguments. This allows call slot optimization to remove more memcpy's.
See https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#parameter-attributes for the specification of these attributes. In short, the statement we're making here is that:
* The return slot is writable.
* The return slot will not be read if the function unwinds.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90595.
Provide more context and suggestions in borrowck errors involving closures
Start pointing to where bindings where declared when they are captured in closures:
```
error[E0597]: `x` does not live long enough
--> $DIR/suggest-return-closure.rs:23:9
|
LL | let x = String::new();
| - binding `x` declared here
...
LL | |c| {
| --- value captured here
LL | x.push(c);
| ^ borrowed value does not live long enough
...
LL | }
| -- borrow later used here
| |
| `x` dropped here while still borrowed
```
Suggest cloning in more cases involving closures:
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `foo` in pattern guard
--> $DIR/issue-27282-move-ref-mut-into-guard.rs:11:19
|
LL | if { (|| { let mut bar = foo; bar.take() })(); false } => {},
| ^^ --- move occurs because `foo` has type `&mut Option<&i32>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
| |
| `foo` is moved here
|
= note: variables bound in patterns cannot be moved from until after the end of the pattern guard
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | if { (|| { let mut bar = foo.clone(); bar.take() })(); false } => {},
| ++++++++
```
Mention when type parameter could be Clone
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `t`
--> $DIR/use_of_moved_value_copy_suggestions.rs:7:9
|
LL | fn duplicate_t<T>(t: T) -> (T, T) {
| - move occurs because `t` has type `T`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
...
LL | (t, t)
| - ^ value used here after move
| |
| value moved here
|
help: if `T` implemented `Clone`, you could clone the value
--> $DIR/use_of_moved_value_copy_suggestions.rs:4:16
|
LL | fn duplicate_t<T>(t: T) -> (T, T) {
| ^ consider constraining this type parameter with `Clone`
...
LL | (t, t)
| - you could clone this value
help: consider restricting type parameter `T`
|
LL | fn duplicate_t<T: Copy>(t: T) -> (T, T) {
| ++++++
```
The `help` is new. On ADTs, we also extend the output with span labels:
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of static item `FOO`
--> $DIR/issue-17718-static-move.rs:6:14
|
LL | let _a = FOO;
| ^^^ move occurs because `FOO` has type `Foo`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
note: if `Foo` implemented `Clone`, you could clone the value
--> $DIR/issue-17718-static-move.rs:1:1
|
LL | struct Foo;
| ^^^^^^^^^^ consider implementing `Clone` for this type
...
LL | let _a = FOO;
| --- you could clone this value
help: consider borrowing here
|
LL | let _a = &FOO;
| +
```
Suggest cloning captured binding in move closure
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `bar`, a captured variable in an `FnMut` closure
--> $DIR/borrowck-move-by-capture.rs:9:29
|
LL | let bar: Box<_> = Box::new(3);
| --- captured outer variable
LL | let _g = to_fn_mut(|| {
| -- captured by this `FnMut` closure
LL | let _h = to_fn_once(move || -> isize { *bar });
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ----
| | |
| | variable moved due to use in closure
| | move occurs because `bar` has type `Box<isize>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
| `bar` is moved here
|
help: clone the value before moving it into the closure 1
|
LL ~ let value = bar.clone();
LL ~ let _h = to_fn_once(move || -> isize { value });
|
```
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `bar`, a captured variable in an `FnMut` closure
--> $DIR/borrowck-move-by-capture.rs:9:29
|
LL | let bar: Box<_> = Box::new(3);
| --- captured outer variable
LL | let _g = to_fn_mut(|| {
| -- captured by this `FnMut` closure
LL | let _h = to_fn_once(move || -> isize { *bar });
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ----
| | |
| | variable moved due to use in closure
| | move occurs because `bar` has type `Box<isize>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
| `bar` is moved here
|
help: clone the value before moving it into the closure
|
LL ~ let value = bar.clone();
LL ~ let _h = to_fn_once(move || -> isize { value });
|
```
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `t`
--> $DIR/use_of_moved_value_copy_suggestions.rs:7:9
|
LL | fn duplicate_t<T>(t: T) -> (T, T) {
| - move occurs because `t` has type `T`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
...
LL | (t, t)
| - ^ value used here after move
| |
| value moved here
|
help: if `T` implemented `Clone`, you could clone the value
--> $DIR/use_of_moved_value_copy_suggestions.rs:4:16
|
LL | fn duplicate_t<T>(t: T) -> (T, T) {
| ^ consider constraining this type parameter with `Clone`
...
LL | (t, t)
| - you could clone this value
help: consider restricting type parameter `T`
|
LL | fn duplicate_t<T: Copy>(t: T) -> (T, T) {
| ++++++
```
The `help` is new. On ADTs, we also extend the output with span labels:
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of static item `FOO`
--> $DIR/issue-17718-static-move.rs:6:14
|
LL | let _a = FOO;
| ^^^ move occurs because `FOO` has type `Foo`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
note: if `Foo` implemented `Clone`, you could clone the value
--> $DIR/issue-17718-static-move.rs:1:1
|
LL | struct Foo;
| ^^^^^^^^^^ consider implementing `Clone` for this type
...
LL | let _a = FOO;
| --- you could clone this value
help: consider borrowing here
|
LL | let _a = &FOO;
| +
```
Start pointing to where bindings were declared when they are captured in closures:
```
error[E0597]: `x` does not live long enough
--> $DIR/suggest-return-closure.rs:23:9
|
LL | let x = String::new();
| - binding `x` declared here
...
LL | |c| {
| --- value captured here
LL | x.push(c);
| ^ borrowed value does not live long enough
...
LL | }
| -- borrow later used here
| |
| `x` dropped here while still borrowed
```
Suggest cloning in more cases involving closures:
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `foo` in pattern guard
--> $DIR/issue-27282-move-ref-mut-into-guard.rs:11:19
|
LL | if { (|| { let mut bar = foo; bar.take() })(); false } => {},
| ^^ --- move occurs because `foo` has type `&mut Option<&i32>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
| |
| `foo` is moved here
|
= note: variables bound in patterns cannot be moved from until after the end of the pattern guard
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | if { (|| { let mut bar = foo.clone(); bar.take() })(); false } => {},
| ++++++++
```
Improve diagnostic for unknown `--print` request
This PR improves the diagnostic when encountering a unknown `--print` request.
It also moves the run-make test to a simple UI test.
Stabilise inline_const
# Stabilisation Report
## Summary
This PR will stabilise `inline_const` feature in expression position. `inline_const_pat` is still unstable and will *not* be stabilised.
The feature will allow code like this:
```rust
foo(const { 1 + 1 })
```
which is roughly desugared into
```rust
struct Foo;
impl Foo {
const FOO: i32 = 1 + 1;
}
foo(Foo::FOO)
```
This feature is from https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2920 and is tracked in #76001 (the tracking issue should *not* be closed as it needs to track inline const in pattern position). The initial implementation is done in #77124.
## Difference from RFC
There are two major differences (enhancements) as implemented from the RFC. First thing is that the RFC says that the type of an inline const block inferred from the content *within* it, but we currently can infer the type using the information from outside the const block as well. This is a frequently requested feature to the initial implementation (e.g. #89964). The inference is implemented in #89561 and is done by treating inline const similar to a closure and therefore share inference context with its parent body.
This allows code like:
```rust
let v: Vec<i32> = const { Vec::new() };
```
Another enhancement that differs from the RFC is that we currently allow inline consts to reference generic parameters. This is implemented in #96557.
This allows code like:
```rust
fn create_none_array<T, const N: usize>() -> [Option<T>; N] {
[const { None::<T> }; N]
}
```
This enhancement also makes inline const usable as static asserts:
```rust
fn require_zst<T>() {
const { assert!(std::mem::size_of::<T>() == 0) }
}
```
## Documentation
Reference: rust-lang/reference#1295
## Unresolved issues
We still have a few issues that are not resolved, but I don't think it necessarily has to block stabilisation:
* expr fragment specifier issue: #86730
* ~~`const {}` behaves similar to `async {}` but not to `{}` and `unsafe {}` (they are treated as `ExpressionWithoutBlock` rather than `ExpressionWithBlock`): https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/213817-t-lang/topic/const.20blocks.20differ.20from.20normal.20and.20from.20unsafe.20blocks/near/290229453~~
## Tests
There are a few tests in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/tree/master/src/test/ui/inline-const
Macro calls are ephemeral, they should not add anything to the definition tree, even if their AST could contains something with identity.
Thankfully, macro call AST cannot contain anything like that, so these walks are just noops.
In majority of other places in def_collector / build_reduced_graph they are already not visited.
(Also, a minor match reformatting is included.)
Add diagnostic item for `std::iter::Enumerate`
This adds a diagnostic item for `std::iter::Enumerate`. The change will be used by the clippy `unused_enumerate_index` lint to move away from type paths to using diagnostic items.
see: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/5393
More DefineOpaqueTypes::Yes
This accepts more code on stable. It is now possible to have match arms return a function item `foo::<ConcreteType>` and a function item `foo::<OpaqueTypeInDefiningScope>` in another, and that will constrain `OpaqueTypeInDefiningScope` to have the hidden type `ConcreteType`. So the following function will now compile, but on master it errors with a type mismatch on the second match arm
```rust
// The function item whose generic params we want to merge.
fn foo<T>(t: T) -> T { t }
// Helper ensuring we can constrain `T` on `F` without explicitly specifying it
fn bind<T, F: FnOnce(T) -> T>(_: T, f: F) -> F { f }
fn k() -> impl Sized {
let x = match true {
true => {
// `f` is `FnDef(foo, [infer_var])`
let f = foo;
// Get a value of an opaque type on stable
let t = k();
// this returns `FnDef(foo, [k::return])`
bind(t, f)
}
false => foo::<()>,
};
todo!()
}
```
r? ``@compiler-errors``
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116652
delegation: Support renaming, and async, const, extern "ABI" and C-variadic functions
Also allow delegating to functions with opaque types (`impl Trait`).
The delegation item will refer to the original opaque type from the callee, fresh opaque type won't be created, which seems like a reasonable behavior.
(Such delegation items will cause query cycles when used in trait impls, but it can be fixed later.)
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118212.
It's a highly misleading name, because it's completely different to
`MetaItem::name_value_literal`. Specifically, it doesn't match
`MetaItemKind::NameValue` (e.g. `#[foo = 3]`), it matches
`MetaItemKind::List` (e.g. `#[foo(3)]`).
Couldn't find documentation supporting that single-variant
`#[repr(Rust)]` enums with RHS assigned work as expected with this
change.
```rust
enum Variants {
A = 17,
} // Would this be zero sized optimized guaranteed?
```
Stop using LLVM struct types for alloca
The alloca type has no semantic meaning, only the size (and alignment, but we specify it explicitly) matter. Using `[N x i8]` is a more direct way to specify that we want `N` bytes, and avoids relying on LLVM's struct layout. It is likely that a future LLVM version will change to an untyped alloca representation.
Split out from #121577.
r? `@ghost`
restrict promotion of `const fn` calls
We only promote them in `const`/`static` initializers, but even that is still unfortunate -- we still cannot add promoteds to required_consts. But we should add them there to make sure it's always okay to evaluate every const we encounter in a MIR body. That effort of not promoting things that can fail to evaluate is tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80619. These `const fn` calls are the last missing piece.
So I propose that we do not promote const-fn calls in const when that may fail without the entire const failing, thereby completing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80619. Unfortunately we can't just reject promoting these functions outright due to backwards compatibility. So let's see if we can find a hack that makes crater happy...
For the record, this is the [crater analysis](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80243#issuecomment-751885520) from when I tried to entirely forbid this kind of promotion. It's a tiny amount of breakage and if we had a nice alternative for code like that, we could conceivably push it through... but sadly, inline const expressions are still blocked on t-lang concerns about post-monomorphization errors and we haven't yet figured out an implementation that can resolve those concerns. So we're forced to make progress via other means, such as terrible hacks like this.
Attempt one: only promote calls on the "safe path" at the beginning of a MIR block. This is the path that starts at the start block and continues via gotos and calls, but stops at the first branch. If we had imposed this restriction before stabilizing `if` and `match` in `const`, this would have definitely been sufficient...
EDIT: Turns out that works. :)
**Here's the t-lang [nomination comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121557#issuecomment-1990902440).** And here's the [FCP comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121557#issuecomment-2010306165).
r? `@oli-obk`
Enable `CrateNum` query feeding via `TyCtxt`
Instead of having a magic function that violates some `TyCtxtFeed` invariants, add a `create_def` equivalent for `CrateNum`s.
Note that this still isn't tracked by the query system (unlike `create_def`), and that feeding most `CrateNum` queries for crates other than the local one will likely cause performance regressions.
These things should be attempted on their own separately, but this PR should stand on its own
Also allow `impl Trait` in delegated functions.
The delegation item will refer to the original opaque type from the callee, fresh opaque type won't be created.
Rollup of 3 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #124003 (Dellvmize some intrinsics (use `u32` instead of `Self` in some integer intrinsics))
- #124169 (Don't fatal when calling `expect_one_of` when recovering arg in `parse_seq`)
- #124286 (Subtree sync for rustc_codegen_cranelift)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Subtree sync for rustc_codegen_cranelift
This fixes a crash when compiling the standard library. In addition the Cranelift update fixes all the 128bit int abi incompatibility between cg_clif and cg_llvm.
r? ``@ghost``
``@rustbot`` label +A-codegen +A-cranelift +T-compiler
Don't fatal when calling `expect_one_of` when recovering arg in `parse_seq`
In `parse_seq`, when parsing a sequence of token-separated items, if we don't see a separator, we try to parse another item eagerly in order to give a good diagnostic and recover from a missing separator:
d1a0fa5ed3/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/mod.rs (L900-L901)
If parsing the item itself calls `expect_one_of`, then we will fatal because of #58903:
d1a0fa5ed3/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/mod.rs (L513-L516)
For `precise_capturing` feature I implemented, we do end up calling `expected_one_of`:
d1a0fa5ed3/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/ty.rs (L712-L714)
This leads the compiler to fatal *before* having emitted the first error, leading to absolutely no useful information for the user about what happened in the parser.
This PR makes it so that we stop doing that.
Fixes#124195
Dellvmize some intrinsics (use `u32` instead of `Self` in some integer intrinsics)
This implements https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/693 minus what was implemented in #123226.
Note: I decided to _not_ change `shl`/... builder methods, as it just doesn't seem worth it.
r? ``@scottmcm``
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #120929 (Wrap dyn type with parentheses in suggestion)
- #122591 (Suggest using type args directly instead of equality constraint)
- #122598 (deref patterns: lower deref patterns to MIR)
- #123048 (alloc::Layout: explicitly document size invariant on the type level)
- #123993 (Do `check_coroutine_obligations` once per typeck root)
- #124218 (Allow nesting subdiagnostics in #[derive(Subdiagnostic)])
- #124285 (Mark ``@RUSTC_BUILTIN`` search path usage as unstable)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do `check_coroutine_obligations` once per typeck root
We only need to do `check_coroutine_obligations` once per typeck root, especially since the new solver can't really (easily) associate which obligations correspond to which coroutines.
This requires us to move the checks for sized coroutine fields into `mir_coroutine_witnesses`, but that's fine imo.
r? lcnr
deref patterns: lower deref patterns to MIR
This lowers deref patterns to MIR. This is a bit tricky because this is the first kind of pattern that requires storing a value in a temporary. Thanks to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123324 false edges are no longer a problem.
The thing I'm not confident about is the handling of fake borrows. This PR ignores any fake borrows inside a deref pattern. We are guaranteed to at least fake borrow the place of the first pointer value, which could be enough, but I'm not certain.
Suggest using type args directly instead of equality constraint
When type arguments are written erroneously using an equality constraint we suggest specifying them directly without the equality constraint.
Fixes#122162
Changes the diagnostic in the issue from:
```rust
error[E0229]: associated type bindings are not allowed here
9 | impl std::cmp::PartialEq<Rhs = T> for S {
| ^^^^^^^ associated type not allowed here
|
```
to
```rust
error[E0229]: associated type bindings are not allowed here
9 | impl std::cmp::PartialEq<Rhs = T> for S {
| ^^^^^^^ associated type not allowed here
|
help: to use `T` as a generic argument specify it directly
|
| impl std::cmp::PartialEq<T> for S {
| ~
```
Use fulfillment in method probe, not evaluation
This PR reworks method probing to use fulfillment instead of a `for`-loop of `evaluate_predicate` calls, and moves normalization from method candidate assembly into the `consider_probe`, where it's applied to *all* candidates. This last part coincidentally fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121643#issuecomment-1975371248.
Regarding *why* this large rewrite is done: In general, it's an anti-pattern to do `for o in obligations { evaluate(o); }` because it's not compatible with the way that the new solver emits alias-relate obligations which constrain variables that may show up in other predicates.
r? lcnr
Disallow ambiguous attributes on expressions
This implements the suggestion in [#15701](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/15701#issuecomment-2033124217) to disallow ambiguous outer attributes on expressions. This should resolve one of the concerns blocking the stabilization of `stmt_expr_attributes`.
weak lang items are not allowed to be #[track_caller]
For instance the panic handler will be called via this import
```rust
extern "Rust" {
#[lang = "panic_impl"]
fn panic_impl(pi: &PanicInfo<'_>) -> !;
}
```
A `#[track_caller]` would add an extra argument and thus make this the wrong signature.
The 2nd commit is a consistency rename; based on the docs [here](https://doc.rust-lang.org/unstable-book/language-features/lang-items.html) and [here](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/lang-items.html) I figured "lang item" is more widely used. (In the compiler output, "lang item" and "language item" seem to be pretty even.)
panic_str only exists for the migration to 2021 panic macros
The only caller is `expect_failed`, which is already a cold inline(never) function, so inlining into that function should be fine. (And indeed `panic_str` was `#[inline]` anyway.)
The existence of panic_str risks someone calling it when they should call `panic` instead, and I can't see a reason why this footgun should exist.
I also extended the comment in `panic` to explain why it needs a `'static` string -- I know I've wondered about this in the past and it took me quite a while to understand.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123680 (Deny gen keyword in `edition_2024_compat` lints)
- #124057 (Fix ICE when ADT tail has type error)
- #124168 (Use `DefiningOpaqueTypes::Yes` in rustdoc, where the `InferCtxt` is guaranteed to have no opaque types it can define)
- #124197 (Move duplicated code in functions in `tests/rustdoc-gui/notable-trait.goml`)
- #124200 (Improve handling of expr->field errors)
- #124220 (Miri: detect wrong vtables in wide pointers)
- #124266 (remove an unused type from the reentrant lock tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Improve handling of expr->field errors
The current message for "`->` used for field access" is the following:
```rust
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `{`, `}`, or an operator, found `->`
--> src/main.rs:2:6
|
2 | a->b;
| ^^ expected one of 8 possible tokens
```
([playground link](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=7f8b6f4433aa7866124123575456f54e))
This PR tries to address this by adding a dedicated error message and recovery. The proposed error message is:
```
error: `->` used for field access or method call
--> ./tiny_test.rs:2:6
|
2 | a->b;
| ^^ help: try using `.` instead
|
= help: the `.` operator will dereference the value if needed
```
(feel free to bikeshed it as much as necessary)
Use `DefiningOpaqueTypes::Yes` in rustdoc, where the `InferCtxt` is guaranteed to have no opaque types it can define
r? `@lcnr`
I manually checked there it's always `tcx.infer_ctxt().build()`
Deny gen keyword in `edition_2024_compat` lints
Splits the `keyword_idents` lint into two -- `keyword_idents_2018` and `keyword_idents_2024` -- since each corresponds to a future-compat warning in a different edition. Group these together into a new `keyword_idents` lint group, and add the latter to the `rust_2024_compatibility` so that `gen` is ready for the 2024 edition.
cc `@traviscross` `@ehuss`
Add simple async drop glue generation
This is a prototype of the async drop glue generation for some simple types. Async drop glue is intended to behave very similar to the regular drop glue except for being asynchronous. Currently it does not execute synchronous drops but only calls user implementations of `AsyncDrop::async_drop` associative function and awaits the returned future. It is not complete as it only recurses into arrays, slices, tuples, and structs and does not have same sensible restrictions as the old `Drop` trait implementation like having the same bounds as the type definition, while code assumes their existence (requires a future work).
This current design uses a workaround as it does not create any custom async destructor state machine types for ADTs, but instead uses types defined in the std library called future combinators (deferred_async_drop, chain, ready_unit).
Also I recommend reading my [explainer](https://zetanumbers.github.io/book/async-drop-design.html).
This is a part of the [MCP: Low level components for async drop](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/727) work.
Feature completeness:
- [x] `AsyncDrop` trait
- [ ] `async_drop_in_place_raw`/async drop glue generation support for
- [x] Trivially destructible types (integers, bools, floats, string slices, pointers, references, etc.)
- [x] Arrays and slices (array pointer is unsized into slice pointer)
- [x] ADTs (enums, structs, unions)
- [x] tuple-like types (tuples, closures)
- [ ] Dynamic types (`dyn Trait`, see explainer's [proposed design](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#async-drop-glue-for-dyn-trait))
- [ ] coroutines (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123948)
- [x] Async drop glue includes sync drop glue code
- [x] Cleanup branch generation for `async_drop_in_place_raw`
- [ ] Union rejects non-trivially async destructible fields
- [ ] `AsyncDrop` implementation requires same bounds as type definition
- [ ] Skip trivially destructible fields (optimization)
- [ ] New [`TyKind::AdtAsyncDestructor`](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#adt-async-destructor-types) and get rid of combinators
- [ ] [Synchronously undroppable types](https://github.com/zetanumbers/posts/blob/main/async-drop-design.md#exclusively-async-drop)
- [ ] Automatic async drop at the end of the scope in async context
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.
coverage: Prepare for improved branch coverage
When trying to rebase my new branch coverage work (including #124154) on top of the introduction of MC/DC coverage (#123409), I found it a lot harder than anticipated. With the benefit of hindsight, the branch coverage code and MC/DC code have become more interdependent than I'm happy with.
This PR therefore disentangles them a bit, so that it will be easier for both areas of code to evolve independently without interference.
---
This PR also includes a few extra branch coverage tests that I had sitting around from my current branch coverage work. They mostly just demonstrate that certain language constructs listed in #124118 currently don't have branch coverage support.
``@rustbot`` label +A-code-coverage
[cleanup] [llvm backend] Prevent creating the same `Instance::mono` multiple times
Just a little thing I came across while going through the code.
r? ```@oli-obk```
The error mentions `///`, when it's actually `//!`:
error[E0658]: attributes on expressions are experimental
--> test.rs:4:9
|
4 | //! wah
| ^^^^^^^
|
= note: see issue #15701 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/15701> for more information
= help: add `#![feature(stmt_expr_attributes)]` to the crate attributes to enable
= help: `///` is for documentation comments. For a plain comment, use `//`.
The current message for "`->` used for field access" is the following:
```rust
error: expected one of `!`, `.`, `::`, `;`, `?`, `{`, `}`, or an operator, found `->`
--> src/main.rs:2:6
|
2 | a->b;
| ^^ expected one of 8 possible tokens
```
(playground link[1])
This PR tries to address this by adding a dedicated error message and recovery. The proposed error message is:
```
error: `->` used for field access or method call
--> ./tiny_test.rs:2:6
|
2 | a->b;
| ^^ help: try using `.` instead
|
= help: the `.` operator will dereference the value if needed
```
(feel free to bikeshed it as much as necessary)
[1]: https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=7f8b6f4433aa7866124123575456f54e
Signed-off-by: Sasha Pourcelot <sasha.pourcelot@protonmail.com>
Ignore `-C strip` on MSVC
tl;dr - Define `-Cstrip` to only ever affect the binary; no other build artifacts.
This is necessary to improve cross-platform behavior consistency: if someone wanted debug information to be contained only in separate files on all platforms, they would set `-Cstrip=symbols` and `-Csplit-debuginfo=packed`, but this would result in no PDB files on MSVC.
Resolves#114215
This clears the way for larger changes to how branches are handled by the
coverage instrumentor, in order to support branch coverage for more language
constructs.
Fix ICE when there is a non-Unicode entry in the incremental crate directory
Fix the ICE that occurs when there is a non-Unicode entry in the incremental crate directory by replacing uses of `to_string_lossy` + `assert_no_characters_lost` with `to_str`. The added test would cause the compiler to ICE before this PR.
Add an intrinsic for `ptr::from_raw_parts(_mut)`
Fixes#123174
cc `@CAD97` `@saethlin`
r? `@cjgillot`
As suggested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123190#issuecomment-2028717967, this adds a new `AggregateKind::RawPtr` for creating a pointer from its data pointer and its metadata.
That means that `slice::from_raw_parts` and friends no longer need to hard-code pointer layout into `libcore`, and because it no longer does union hacks the MIR is shorter and more amenable to optimizations.
fix normalizing in different `ParamEnv`s with the same `InferCtxt`
This PR changes the key of the projection cache from just `AliasTy` to `(AliasTy, ParamEnv)` to allow normalizing in different `ParamEnv`s without resetting caches. Previously, normalizing the same alias in different param envs would always reuse the cached result from the first normalization, which is incorrect if the projection clauses in the param env have changed.
Fixing this bug allows us to get rid of `InferCtxt::clear_caches`, which was only used by the `AutoTraitFinder`, because it requires normalizing in different param envs.
r? `@fmease`
Upcoming mingw-w64 releases will contain small math functions refactor which moved implementation around.
As a result functions like `lgamma`
now depend on libraries in this order:
`libmingwex.a` -> `libmsvcrt.a` -> `libmingwex.a`.
Fixes#124221
Fix trait solver overflow with `non_local_definitions` lint
This PR fixes the trait solver overflow with the `non_local_definitions` lint reported in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123573 using the suggestion from `@lcnr:` https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123573#issuecomment-2041348320 to use the next trait solver.
~~I have not (yet) tried to create a minimized repro~~ ``@compiler-errors`` did the minimization (thanks you) but I have manually tested on the `starlark-rust` project that it fixes the issue.
Fixes#123573
r? `@lcnr`
Flip spans for precise capturing syntax not capturing a ty/const param, and for implicit captures of lifetime params
Make the primary span point to the opaque, rather than the param which might be very far away (e.g. in an impl header hundreds of lines above).
Give a name to each distinct manipulation of pretty-printer FixupContext
There are only 7 distinct ways that the AST pretty-printer interacts with FixupContext: 3 constructors (including Default), 2 transformations, and 2 queries.
This PR turns these into associated functions which can be documented with examples.
This PR unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119427#discussion_r1439481201. In order to improve the pretty-printer's behavior regarding parenthesization of braced macro calls in match arms, which have different grammar than macro calls in statements, FixupContext needs to be extended with 2 new fields. In the previous approach, that would be onerous. In the new approach, all it entails is 1 new constructor (`FixupContext::new_match_arm()`).
This handles using deref patterns to choose the correct match arm. This
does not handle bindings or guards.
Co-authored-by: Deadbeef <ent3rm4n@gmail.com>
PatRangeBoundary::compare_with: als add a fast-path for signed integers
Not sure if we have a benchmark that hits this... but it seems odd to only do this for unsigned integers.
Fix capturing duplicated lifetimes via parent in `precise_captures` (`impl use<'...>`)
For technical reasons related to the way that `Self` and `T::Assoc` are lowered from HIR -> `rustc_middle::ty`, an opaque may mention in its bounds both the original early-bound lifetime from the parent `impl`/`fn`, *and* the *duplicated* early-bound lifetime on the opaque.
This is fine -- and has been fine since `@cjgillot` rewrote the way we handled opaque lifetime captures, and we went further to allow this behavior explicitly in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115659. It's worthwhile to read this PR's technical section to recall how this duplication works and when it acts surprisingly.
The problem here is that the check that make sure that `impl use<'a, 'b>` lists all of the opaque's captured lifetimes wasn't smart enough to consider both these captured lifetimes and the original lifetimes they're duplicated from to be equal. This PR fixes that.
r? oli-obk
Implement Modified Condition/Decision Coverage
This is an implementation based on llvm backend support (>= 18) by `@evodius96` and branch coverage support by `@Zalathar.`
### Major changes:
* Add -Zcoverage-options=mcdc as switch. Now coverage options accept either `no-branch`, `branch`, or `mcdc`. `mcdc` also enables `branch` because it is essential to work.
* Add coverage mapping for MCDCBranch and MCDCDecision. Note that MCDCParameter evolves from llvm 18 to llvm 19. The mapping in rust side mainly references to 19 and is casted to 18 types in llvm wrapper.
* Add wrapper for mcdc instrinc functions from llvm. And inject associated statements to mir.
* Add BcbMappingKind::Decision, I'm not sure is it proper but can't find a better way temporarily.
* Let coverage-dump support parsing MCDCBranch and MCDCDecision from llvm ir.
* Add simple tests to check whether mcdc works.
* Same as clang, currently rustc does not generate instrument for decision with more than 6 condtions or only 1 condition due to considerations of resource.
### Implementation Details
1. To get information about conditions and decisions, `MCDCState` in `BranchInfoBuilder` is used during hir lowering to mir. For expressions with logical op we call `Builder::visit_coverage_branch_operation` to record its sub conditions, generate condition ids for them and save their spans (to construct the span of whole decision). This process mainly references to the implementation in clang and is described in comments over `MCDCState::record_conditions`. Also true marks and false marks introduced by branch coverage are used to detect where the decision evaluation ends: the next id of the condition == 0.
2. Once the `MCDCState::decision_stack` popped all recorded conditions, we can ensure that the decision is checked over and push it into `decision_spans`. We do not manually insert decision span to avoid complexity from then_else_break in nested if scopes.
3. When constructing CoverageSpans, add condition info to BcbMappingKind::Branch and decision info to BcbMappingKind::Decision. If the branch mapping has non-zero condition id it will be transformed to MCDCBranch mapping and insert `CondBitmapUpdate` statements to its evaluated blocks. While decision bcb mapping will insert `TestVectorBitmapUpdate` in all its end blocks.
### Usage
```bash
echo "[build]\nprofiler=true" >> config.toml
./x build --stage 1
./x test tests/coverage/mcdc_if.rs
```
to build the compiler and run tests.
```shell
export PATH=path/to/llvm-build:$PATH
rustup toolchain link mcdc build/host/stage1
cargo +mcdc rustc --bin foo -- -Cinstrument-coverage -Zcoverage-options=mcdc
cd target/debug
LLVM_PROFILE_FILE="foo.profraw" ./foo
llvm-profdata merge -sparse foo.profraw -o foo.profdata
llvm-cov show ./foo -instr-profile=foo.profdata --show-mcdc
```
to check "foo" code.
### Problems to solve
For now decision mapping will insert statements to its all end blocks, which may be optimized by inserting a final block of the decision. To do this we must also trace the evaluated value at each end of the decision and join them separately.
This implementation is not heavily tested so there should be some unrevealed issues. We are going to check our rust products in the next. Please let me know if you had any suggestions or comments.
Disable SimplifyToExp in MatchBranchSimplification
Due to the miscompilation mentioned in #124150, We need to disable MatchBranchSimplification temporarily.
To fully resolve this issue, my plan is:
1. Disable SimplifyToExp in MatchBranchSimplification (this PR).
2. Remove all potentially unclear transforms in #124122.
3. Gradually add back the removed transforms (possibly multiple PRs).
r? `@Nilstrieb` or `@oli-obk`
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123571 (Correctly change type when adding adjustments on top of `NeverToAny`)
- #123729 (run-make: refactor out command wrappers for `clang` and `llvm-readobj`)
- #124106 (Don't repeatedly duplicate TAIT lifetimes for each subsequently nested TAIT)
- #124149 (rustdoc-search: fix description on aliases in results)
- #124155 (bootstrap: don't use rayon for sysinfo)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Don't repeatedly duplicate TAIT lifetimes for each subsequently nested TAIT
Make it so that nested TAITs inherit the lifetimes from their parent item, not their parent TAIT. This is because we don't need to re-duplicate lifetimes for nested TAITs over and over, since the only lifetimes they can capture are from the parent item anyways.
This mirrors how RPITs work. This is **not** a functional change that should be observable, since the whole point of duplicating lifetimes and marking the shadowed ones (and uncaptured ones) as bivariant is designed to *not* be observable.
r? oli-obk
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123406 (Force exhaustion in iter::ArrayChunks::into_remainder)
- #123752 (Properly handle emojis as literal prefix in macros)
- #123935 (Don't inline integer literals when they overflow - new attempt)
- #123980 ( Add an opt-in to store incoming edges in `VecGraph` + misc)
- #124019 (Use raw-dylib for Windows synchronization functions)
- #124110 (Fix negating `f16` and `f128` constants)
- #124116 (when suggesting RUST_BACKTRACE=1, add a special note for Miri's env var isolation)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Use raw-dylib for Windows synchronization functions
Fixes#123999 by using the raw-dylib feature to specify the DLL to load the Windows futex functions from (e.g. [`WaitOnAddress`](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/synchapi/nf-synchapi-waitonaddress)). This avoids reliance on the import library causing that issue.
With apologies to ``@bjorn3,`` as it's currently necessary to revert this for cranelift.
Don't inline integer literals when they overflow - new attempt
Basically #116633 but I implemented the suggested changes.
Fixes#115423. Fixes#116631.
This is my first contribution to this repo so please let me know if I'm supposed to change something :)
Properly handle emojis as literal prefix in macros
Do not accept the following
```rust
macro_rules! lexes {($($_:tt)*) => {}}
lexes!(🐛"foo");
```
Before, invalid emoji identifiers were gated during parsing instead of lexing in all cases, but this didn't account for macro pre-expansion of literal prefixes.
Fix#123696.
Introduce perma-unstable `wasm-c-abi` flag
Now that `wasm-bindgen` v0.2.88 supports the spec-compliant C ABI, the idea is to switch to that in a future version of Rust. In the meantime it would be good to let people test and play around with it.
This PR introduces a new perma-unstable `-Zwasm-c-abi` compiler flag, which switches to the new spec-compliant C ABI when targeting `wasm32-unknown-unknown`.
Alternatively, we could also stabilize this and then deprecate it when we switch. I will leave this to the Rust maintainers to decide.
This is a companion PR to #117918, but they could be merged independently.
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/703
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122532
Add support for Arm64EC to the Standard Library
Adds the final pieces so that the standard library can be built for arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc (initially added in #119199)
* Bumps `windows-sys` to 0.56.0, which adds support for Arm64EC.
* Correctly set the `isEC` parameter for LLVM's `writeArchive` function.
* Add `#![feature(asm_experimental_arch)]` to library crates where Arm64EC inline assembly is used, as it is currently unstable.
Move confusing comment about otherwise blocks in `lower_match_tree`
This comment was historically inside a block guarded by `if let Some(otherwise_block) = otherwise`.
When #120978 made the “otherwise block” non-optional, it also flattened that region of code. Doing so left this comment awkwardly stranded above an unrelated line of code, without its original context.
We can restore that context by moving it above the declaration of `otherwise`.
r? ``@Nadrieril``
Match ergonomics 2024: miscellaneous code cleanups
- Store `ByRef` instead of `BindingAnnotation` in `PatInfo`
- Rename `BindingAnnotation` to `BindingMode`
r? ``@Nadrieril``
cc #123076
``@rustbot`` label A-patterns
Delay interning errors to after validation
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122398fixes#122548
This improves diagnostics since validation errors are usually more helpful compared with interning errors that just make broad statements about the entire constant
r? `@RalfJung`
Codegen ZSTs without an allocation
This makes sure that &[] is equivalent to unsafe code (from_raw_parts(dangling, 0)). No new stable guarantee is intended about whether or not we do this, this is just an optimization.
This regressed in #67000 (no comments I can see about that regression in the PR, though it did change the test modified here). We had previously performed this optimization since #63635.
interpret: pass MemoryKind to adjust_alloc_base_pointer
Another puzzle piece for https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/3475.
The 2nd commit renames base_pointer -> root_pointer; that's how Tree Borrows already calls them and I think the term is more clear than "base pointer". In particular, this distinguishes it from "base address", since a root pointer can point anywhere into an allocation, not just its base address.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124018 has been rolled up already so I couldn't add it there any more.
r? ```@oli-obk```
This comment was historically inside a block guarded by
`if let Some(otherwise_block) = otherwise`.
When #120978 made the otherwise block non-optional, it also flattened that
region of code. Doing so left this comment awkwardly stranded above an
unrelated line of code, without its original context.
We can restore that context by moving it above the declaration of `otherwise`.
Delay span bug when `Self` kw resolves to `DefKind::{Mod,Trait}`
Catch the case where `kw::Self` is recovered in the parser and causes us to subsequently resolve `&self`'s implicit type to something that's not a type.
This check could be made more accurate, though I'm not sure how hard we have to try here.
Fixes#123988
This makes sure that &[] is just as efficient as indirecting through
unsafe code (from_raw_parts). No new stable guarantee is intended about
whether or not we do this, this is just an optimization.
Co-authored-by: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123673 (Don't ICE for kind mismatches during error rendering)
- #123675 (Taint const qualifs if a static is referenced that didn't pass wfcheck)
- #123975 (Port the 2 `rust-lld` run-make tests to `rmake`)
- #124000 (Use `/* value */` as a placeholder)
- #124013 (Box::into_raw: make Miri understand that this is a box-to-raw cast)
- #124027 (Prefer identity equality over equating types during coercion.)
- #124036 (Remove `default_hidden_visibility: false` from wasm targets)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
This PR removes the static check that disallowed extern functions
with ellipsis (varargs) as the only parameter since this is now
valid in C23.
Also, adds a doc comment for `check_decl_cvariadic_pos()` and
fixes the name of the function (`varadic` -> `variadic`).
Remove `default_hidden_visibility: false` from wasm targets
To the best of my ability I believe that this is no longer necessary. I don't fully recall why this was first added but I believe it had to do with symbols all being exported by default and this was required to undo that. Regardless nowadays the default output of rustc seems suitable so it seems best to keep wasm in line with other targets.
Prefer identity equality over equating types during coercion.
These types are always generic only over their own generic parameters with no inference variables involved.
r? `@compiler-errors`
I love touching code that [hasn't changed meaningfully since 2016](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/41937)
Use `/* value */` as a placeholder
The expression `value` isn't a valid suggestion; let's use `/* value */` as a placeholder (which is also invalid) since it more clearly signals to the user that they need to fill it in with something meaningful. This parallels the suggestions we have in a couple other places, like arguments.
We could also print the type name instead of `/* value */`, especially if it's suggestable, but I don't care strongly about that.
Taint const qualifs if a static is referenced that didn't pass wfcheck
It is correct to only check the signature here, as the ICE is caused by `USE_WITH_ERROR` trying to allocate memory to store the result of `WITH_ERROR` before evaluating it.
fixes#123153
To the best of my ability I believe that this is no longer necessary. I
don't fully recall why this was first added but I believe it had to do
with symbols all being exported by default and this was required to undo
that. Regardless nowadays the default output of rustc seems suitable so
it seems best to keep wasm in line with other targets.
Allow workproducts without object files.
This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44
Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:
For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234
Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
Outline default query and hook provider function implementations
The default query and hook provider functions call `bug!` with a decently long message.
Due to argument inlining in `format_args!` ([`flatten_format_args`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78356)), this ends up duplicating the message for each query, adding ~90KB to `librustc_driver.so` of unreachable panic messages.
To avoid this, we can outline the common `bug!` logic.
Subtype predicates only exist on inference types, so we can allow them to register opaque types within them.
We were unable to come up with an example where this could be reached (subtype predicates with either side not being an infer var gets consumed during any `select_where_possible` invocation, of which we have a lot in typeck). To ensure we don't silently accept new behaviour in case we missed a situation where this could occur, I have added an assert that prevents opaque types from having their hidden type constrained.
r? `@compiler-errors`
interpret: remove outdated comment
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107756, allocation became generally fallible, so the "only panic if there is provenance" no longer applies.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Change a diagnostics-path-only `DefineOpaqueTypes` to `Yes`.
This can't possibly affect compilation, so it's safe to flip, even if I couldn't come up with an affected test
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Stabilize checking of cfgs at compile-time: `--check-cfg` option
This PR stabilize the `--check-cfg` CLI option of `rustc` (and `rustdoc`) 🎉.
In particular this PR does two things:
1. it makes the `--check-cfg` option stable
2. and it moves the documentation to the stable books
FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82450#issuecomment-1965328542Resolves#82450
``@rustbot`` labels +S-blocked +F-check-cfg
r? ``@petrochenkov``
This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44
Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:
For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234
Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
Move size assertions for `mir::syntax` types into the same file
A redundant size assertion for `StatementKind` was added in #122937, because the existing assertion was in a different file.
This PR cleans that up, and also moves the `TerminatorKind` assertion into the same file where it belongs, to avoid the same thing happening again.
r? `@nnethercote`
Opaque types have no namespace
Opaques are never referenced by name -- even when we have `type X = impl Sized;`, `X` is the name of the type alias, not the opaque.
Make `suggest_deref_closure_return` more idiomatic/easier to understand
The only functional change here really is just making it not use a fresh type variable for upvars. I'll point that out in the code.
The rest of the changes are just stylistic, because reading this code was really confusing me (variable names were vague, ways of accessing types were unidiomatic, order of operations was kind of strange, etc).
This is stacked on #123989.
r? oli-obk since you approved #122213
Better graphviz output for SCCs and NLL constraints
This PR modifies the output for `-Z dump-mir-graphviz=yes`. Specifically, it changes the output of the files `.-------.nll.0.regioncx.all.dot` and `nll.0.regioncx.scc.dot` to be easier to read and contain some information that helped me during debugging. In particular:
- SCC indices are contracted to `SCC(n)` instead of `ConstraintSccIndex(n)` to compress the nodes
- SCC regions are in `{}` rather than `[]` (controversial since they are technically ordered by index, but I figured they're more sets than arrays conceptually since they're equivalence classes).
- For regions in other universes than the root, also show the region universe (as ?8/U1)
- For regions with external names, show the external name in parenthesis
- For the region graph where edges are locations, render the All variant of the enum without the file since it's extremely long and often destroys the rendering
- For region graph edge annotations for single locations, remove the wrapping around the Location variant and just add its contents since this can be unambiguously done
Example output (from the function `foo()` of `tests/ui/error-codes/E0582.rs`) for an SCC graph:

...and for the constraints:

This PR also gives `UniverseIndex`es the `is_root()` method since this is now an operation that happens three times in the borrowck crate.
Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0
This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.
Implement syntax for `impl Trait` to specify its captures explicitly (`feature(precise_capturing)`)
Implements `impl use<'a, 'b, T, U> Sized` syntax that allows users to explicitly list the captured parameters for an opaque, rather than inferring it from the opaque's bounds (or capturing *all* lifetimes under 2024-edition capture rules). This allows us to exclude some implicit captures, so this syntax may be used as a migration strategy for changes due to #117587.
We represent this list of captured params as `PreciseCapturingArg` in AST and HIR, resolving them between `rustc_resolve` and `resolve_bound_vars`. Later on, we validate that the opaques only capture the parameters in this list.
We artificially limit the feature to *require* mentioning all type and const parameters, since we don't currently have support for non-lifetime bivariant generics. This can be relaxed in the future.
We also may need to limit this to require naming *all* lifetime parameters for RPITIT, since GATs have no variance. I have to investigate this. This can also be relaxed in the future.
r? `@oli-obk`
Tracking issue:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123432
Trait predicates for types which have errors may still
evaluate to OK leading to downstream ICEs. Now we return
a selection error for such types in candidate assembly and
thereby prevent such issues
A redundant size assertion for `StatementKind` was added in #122937, because
the existing assertion was in a different file.
This patch cleans that up, and also moves the `TerminatorKind` assertion into
the same file where it belongs, to avoid the same thing happening again.
Currently it's a method on `EarlyDiagCtxt`, which is not the right place
for it at all -- `EarlyDiagCtxt` is used to issue diagnostics, but
shouldn't be doing any of the actual checking.
This commit moves it into a standalone function that takes an
`EarlyDiagCtxt` as an argument, which is more sensible. This does
require adding `EarlyDiagCtxt::early_struct_warn`, so a warning can be
returned and then modified with a note. (And that likely explains why
somebody put `initialize_checked_jobserver` into `EarlyDiagCtxt` in the
first place.)
Currently `SourceMap` is constructed slightly later than
`SessionGlobals`, and inserted. This commit changes things so they are
done at the same time.
Benefits:
- `SessionGlobals::source_map` changes from
`Lock<Option<Lrc<SourceMap>>>` to `Option<Lrc<SourceMap>>`. It's still
optional, but mutability isn't required because it's initialized at
construction.
- `set_source_map` is removed, simplifying `run_compiler`, which is
good because that's a critical function and it's nice to make it
simpler.
This requires moving things around a bit, so the necessary inputs are
available when `SessionGlobals` is created, in particular the `loader`
and `hash_kind`, which are no longer computed by `build_session`. These
inputs are captured by the new `SourceMapInputs` type, which is threaded
through various places.
Fix pretty HIR for anon consts in diagnostics
This removes the `NoAnn` printer which skips over nested bodies altogether, which is confusing, and requires users of `{ty|qpath|pat}_to_string` to pass in `&tcx` which now impleemnts `hir_pretty::PpAnn`.
There's one case where this "regresses" by actually printing out the body of the anon const -- we could suppress that, but I don't expect people to actually get anon consts like that unless they're fuzzing, tbh.
r? estebank
Don't even parse an intrinsic unless the feature gate is enabled
Don't return true in `tcx.is_intrinsic` if the function is defined locally and `#![feature(intrinsics)]` is not enabled. This is a slightly more general fix than #123526, since #123587 shows that we have simplifying assumptions about intrinsics elsewhere in the compiler.
This will make the code ICE again if the user **enables** `#[feature(intrinsics)]`, but I kind of feel like if we want to fix that, we should make the `INTERNAL_FEATURES` lint `Deny` again. Perhaps we could do that on non-nightly compilers. Or we should just stop compilation altogether if they have `#![feature]` enabled on a non-nightly compiler.
As for the UX of *real* cases of hitting these ICEs, I believe pretty strongly that if a compiler/stdlib dev is modifying internal intrinsics (intentionally, like when making a change to rustc) we have no guarantee to make the ICE better looking for them. Honestly, *not* spitting out a stack trace is probably a disservice to the people who hit those ICEs in that case.
r? `@Nilstrieb` `@estebank`
Cleanup: Rename `ModSep` to `PathSep`
`::` is usually referred to as the *path separator* (citation needed).
The existing name `ModSep` for *module separator* is a bit misleading since it in fact separates the segments of arbitrary path segments, not only ones resolving to modules. Let me just give a shout-out to associated items (`T::Assoc`, `<Ty as Trait>::function`) and enum variants (`Option::None`).
Motivation: Reduce friction for new contributors, prevent potential confusion.
cc `@petrochenkov`
r? nnethercote or compiler
Remove `TypeVariableOriginKind` and `ConstVariableOriginKind`
It's annoying to have to import `TypeVariableOriginKind` just to fill it with `MiscVariable` for almost every use. Every other usage other than `TypeParameterDefinition` wasn't even used -- I can see how it may have been useful once for debugging, but I do quite a lot of typeck debugging and I've never really needed it.
So let's just remove it, and keep around the only useful thing which is the `DefId` of the param for `var_for_def`.
This is based on #123006, which removed the special use of `TypeVariableOriginKind::OpaqueInference`, which I'm pretty sure I was the one that added.
r? lcnr or re-roll to types
Fix various bugs in `ty_kind_suggestion`
Consolidates two implementations of `ty_kind_suggestion`
Fixes some misuse of the empty param-env
Fixes a problem where we suggested `(42)` instead of `(42,)` for tuple suggestions
Suggest a value when `return;`, making it consistent with `break;`
Fixes#123906
Fix UB in LLVM FFI when passing zero or >1 bundle
Rust passes a `*const &OperandBundleDef` to these APIs, usually from a `Vec<&OperandBundleDef>` or so. Previously we were dereferencing that pointer and passing it to the ArrayRef constructor with some length (N).
This meant that if the length was 0, we were dereferencing a pointer to nowhere (if the vector on the Rust side didn't actually get allocated or so), and if the length was >1 then loading the *second* element somewhere in LLVM would've been reading past the end.
Since Rust can't hold OperandBundleDef by-value we're forced to indirect through a vector that copies out the OperandBundleDefs from the by-reference list on the Rust side in order to match the LLVM expected API.
move the LargeAssignments lint logic into its own file
The collector is a file full of very subtle logic, so let's try to keep that separate from the logic that only serves to implement this lint.
Remove magic constants when using `base_n`.
Some use cases of `base_n` use number literals instead of the predefined constants. The latter are more descriptive so it might be better to use those instead.
builtin-derive: tag → discriminant
As far as I can tell, all of this operates on the discriminant, not the tag. After all, with something like `Option<&T>`, the "tag" of the `Some` variant is basically just the reference value, which is never what you want to compare when figuring out which variant the enum is in.
See [here](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/appendix/glossary.html) for an explanation of the difference between tag and discriminant.
Migrate some diagnostics in `rustc_resolve` to session diagnostic
Hello, I migrated some diagnostics in `rustc_resolve` to session diagnostic.
r? ``@davidtwco``
Remove a HACK by instead inferring opaque types during expected/formal type checking
I was wondering why I couldn't come up with a test that hits the code path of the argument check checking the types we inferred from the return type... Turns out we reject those attempts early during fudging.
I have absolutely no information for you as to what kind of type inference changes this may incur, but I think we should just land this out of two reasons:
* had I found the other place to use opaque type inference on before I added the hack, we'd be using that today and this PR would never have happened
* if it is possible to hit this path, it requires some god awful recursive RPIT logic that I doubt anyone would have written without actively trying to write obscure code
r? ``@ghost``
Add the missing inttoptr when we ptrtoint in ptr atomics
Ralf noticed this here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122220#discussion_r1535172094
Our previous codegen forgot to add the cast back to integer type. The code compiles anyway, because of course all locals are in-memory to start with, so previous codegen would do the integer atomic, store the integer to a local, then load a pointer from that local. Which is definitely _not_ what we wanted: That's an integer-to-pointer transmute, so all pointers returned by these `AtomicPtr` methods didn't have provenance. Yikes.
Here's the IR for `AtomicPtr::fetch_byte_add` on 1.76: https://godbolt.org/z/8qTEjeraY
```llvm
define noundef ptr `@atomicptr_fetch_byte_add(ptr` noundef nonnull align 8 %a, i64 noundef %v) unnamed_addr #0 !dbg !7 {
start:
%0 = alloca ptr, align 8, !dbg !12
%val = inttoptr i64 %v to ptr, !dbg !12
call void `@llvm.lifetime.start.p0(i64` 8, ptr %0), !dbg !28
%1 = ptrtoint ptr %val to i64, !dbg !28
%2 = atomicrmw add ptr %a, i64 %1 monotonic, align 8, !dbg !28
store i64 %2, ptr %0, align 8, !dbg !28
%self = load ptr, ptr %0, align 8, !dbg !28
call void `@llvm.lifetime.end.p0(i64` 8, ptr %0), !dbg !28
ret ptr %self, !dbg !33
}
```
r? `@RalfJung`
cc `@nikic`
Rust passes a *const &OperandBundleDef to these APIs, usually from a
Vec<&OperandBundleDef> or so. Previously we were dereferencing that
pointer and passing it to the ArrayRef constructor with some length (N).
This meant that if the length was 0, we were dereferencing a pointer to
nowhere, and if the length was >1 then loading the *second* element
somewhere in LLVM would've been reading past the end.
Since Rust can't hold OperandBundleDef by-value we're forced to indirect
through a vector that copies out the OperandBundleDefs from the
by-reference list on the Rust side in order to match the LLVM expected
API.
Discard overflow obligations in `impl_may_apply`
Hacky fix for #123493. Throws away obligations that are overflowing in `impl_may_apply` when we recompute if an impl applies, since those will lead to fatal overflow if processed during fulfillment.
Something about #114811 (I think it's the predicate reordering) caused us to evaluate predicates differently in error reporting leading to fatal overflow, though I believe the underlying overflow is possible to hit since this code was rewritten to use fulfillment.
Fixes#123493
Does not necessarily change much, but we never overwrite it, so I see no reason
for it to be in the `Successors` trait. (+we already have a similar `is_cyclic`)
Add add/sub methods that only panic with debug assertions to rustc
This mitigates the perf impact of enabling overflow checks on rustc. The change to use overflow checks will be done in a later PR.
For rust-lang/compiler-team#724, based on data gathered in #119440.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123530 (Enable building tier2 target riscv32im-unknown-none-elf)
- #123642 (do not allow using local llvm while using rustc from ci)
- #123716 (Update documentation of Path::to_path_buf and Path::ancestors)
- #123876 (Update backtrace submodule)
- #123888 (Replace a `DefiningOpaqueTypes::No` with `Yes` by asserting that one side of the comparison is a type variable.)
- #123890 (removed (mostly) unused code)
- #123891 (Miri subtree update)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Replace a `DefiningOpaqueTypes::No` with `Yes` by asserting that one side of the comparison is a type variable.
Thus there will never be an opaque type involved in a way that constrains its hidden type, as the other side of the comparison is always a generator witness type
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Linker flavors next steps: linker features
This is my understanding of the first step towards `@petrochenkov's` vision for the future of linker flavors, described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119906#issuecomment-1895693162 and the discussion that followed.
To summarize: having `Cc` and `Lld` embedded in linker flavors creates tension about naming, and a combinatorial explosion of flavors for each new linker feature we'd want to use. Linker features are an extension mechanism that is complementary to principal flavors, with benefits described in #119906.
The most immediate use of this flag would be to turn self-contained linking on and off via features instead of flavors. For example, `-Clinker-features=+/-lld` would toggle using lld instead of selecting a precise flavor, and would be "generic" and work cross-platform (whereas linker flavors are currently more tied to targets). Under this scheme, MCP510 is expected to be `-Clink-self-contained=+linker -Zlinker-features=+lld -Zunstable-options` (though for the time being, the original flags using lld-cc flavors still work).
I purposefully didn't add or document CLI support for `+/-cc`, as it would be a noop right now. I only expect that we'd initially want to stabilize `+/-lld` to begin with.
r? `@petrochenkov`
You had requested that minimal churn would be done to the 230 target specs and this does none yet: the linker features are inferred from the flavor since they're currently isomorphic. We of course expect this to change sooner rather than later.
In the future, we can allow targets to define linker features independently from their flavor, and remove the cc and lld components from the flavors to use the features instead, this actually doesn't need to block stabilization, as we discussed.
(Best reviewed per commit)
Detect borrow checker errors where `.clone()` would be an appropriate user action
When a value is moved twice, suggest cloning the earlier move:
```
error[E0509]: cannot move out of type `U2`, which implements the `Drop` trait
--> $DIR/union-move.rs:49:18
|
LL | move_out(x.f1_nocopy);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| cannot move out of here
| move occurs because `x.f1_nocopy` has type `ManuallyDrop<RefCell<i32>>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | move_out(x.f1_nocopy.clone());
| ++++++++
```
When a value is borrowed by an `fn` call, consider if cloning the result of the call would be reasonable, and suggest cloning that, instead of the argument:
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `a` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/variance-issue-20533.rs:53:14
|
LL | let a = AffineU32(1);
| - binding `a` declared here
LL | let x = bat(&a);
| -- borrow of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(a);
| ^ move out of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(x);
| - borrow later used here
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | let x = bat(&a).clone();
| ++++++++
```
otherwise, suggest cloning the argument:
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `a` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/variance-issue-20533.rs:59:14
|
LL | let a = ClonableAffineU32(1);
| - binding `a` declared here
LL | let x = foo(&a);
| -- borrow of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(a);
| ^ move out of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(x);
| - borrow later used here
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL - let x = foo(&a);
LL + let x = foo(a.clone());
|
```
This suggestion doesn't attempt to square out the types between what's cloned and what the `fn` expects, to allow the user to make a determination on whether to change the `fn` call or `fn` definition themselves.
Special case move errors caused by `FnOnce`:
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `blk`
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:8:5
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| --- move occurs because `blk` has type `F`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
LL | blk();
| ----- `blk` moved due to this call
LL | blk();
| ^^^ value used here after move
|
note: `FnOnce` closures can only be called once
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:6:10
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| ^^^^^^^^ `F` is made to be an `FnOnce` closure here
LL | blk();
| ----- this value implements `FnOnce`, which causes it to be moved when called
```
Account for redundant `.clone()` calls in resulting suggestions:
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of dereference of `S`
--> $DIR/needs-clone-through-deref.rs:15:18
|
LL | for _ in self.clone().into_iter() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ----------- value moved due to this method call
| |
| move occurs because value has type `Vec<usize>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
note: `into_iter` takes ownership of the receiver `self`, which moves value
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/iter/traits/collect.rs:LL:COL
help: you can `clone` the value and consume it, but this might not be your desired behavior
|
LL | for _ in <Vec<usize> as Clone>::clone(&self).into_iter() {}
| ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ~
```
We use the presence of `&mut` values in a move error as a proxy for the user caring about side effects, so we don't emit a clone suggestion in that case:
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `s` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/borrowck-overloaded-index-move-index.rs:53:7
|
LL | let mut s = "hello".to_string();
| ----- binding `s` declared here
LL | let rs = &mut s;
| ------ borrow of `s` occurs here
...
LL | f[s] = 10;
| ^ move out of `s` occurs here
...
LL | use_mut(rs);
| -- borrow later used here
```
We properly account for `foo += foo;` errors where we *don't* suggest `foo.clone() += foo;`, instead suggesting `foo += foo.clone();`.
---
Each commit can be reviewed in isolation. There are some "cleanup" commits, but kept them separate in order to show *why* specific changes were being made, and their effect on tests' output.
Fix#49693, CC #64167.
Thus there will never be an opaque type involved in a way that constrains its hidden type, as the other side of the comparison is always a generator witness type
Re-enable `has_thread_local` for i686-msvc
A few years back, `has_thread_local` was disabled as a workaround for a compiler issue. While the exact cause was never tracked down, it was suspected to be caused by the compiler inlining a thread local access across a dylib boundary. This should be fixed now so let's try again.
Add `/System/iOSSupport` to the library search path on Mac Catalyst
On macOS, `/System/iOSSupport` contains iOS frameworks like UIKit, which is the whole idea of Mac Catalyst.
To link to these, we need to explicitly tell the linker about the support library stubs provided in the macOS SDK under the same path.
Concretely, when building a binary for Mac Catalyst, Xcode passes the following flags to the linker:
```
-iframework /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/System/Library/Frameworks
-L/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/usr/lib
```
This is not something that can be disabled (it's enabled as soon as you enable `SUPPORTS_MACCATALYST`), so I think it's pretty safe to say that we don't need an option to turn these off.
I've chosen to slightly deviate from what Xcode does and use `-F` instead of `-iframework`, since we don't need to change the header search path, and this way the flags nicely match on all the linkers. From what I could tell by reading Clang sources, there shouldn't be a difference when just running the linker.
CC `@BlackHoleFox,` `@shepmaster` (I accidentally let rustbot choose the reviewer).
typeck: fix `?` suggestion span
Noticed in <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112043#issuecomment-2043565292>, if the
```
use the `?` operator to extract the `Result<(), std::fmt::Error>` value, propagating a `Result::Err` value to the caller
```
suggestion is applied to a macro that comes from a non-local crate (e.g. the stdlib), the suggestion span can become non-local, which will cause newer rustfix versions to fail.
This PR tries to remedy the problem by recursively probing ancestors of the expression span, trying to identify the most ancestor span that is (1) still local, and (2) still shares the same syntax context as the expression.
This is the same strategy used in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112043.
The test unfortunately cannot `//@ run-rustfix` because there are two conflicting MaybeIncorrect suggestions that when collectively applied, cause the fixed source file to become non-compilable.
Also avoid running `//@ run-rustfix` for `tests/ui/typeck/issue-112007-leaked-writeln-macro-internals.rs` because that also contains conflicting suggestions.
cc `@ehuss` who noticed this. This question mark span fix + not running rustfix on the tests containing conflicting MaybeIncorrect suggestions should hopefully unblock rustfix from updating.
The suggestion to use `let else` with an uninitialized refutable `let`
statement was erroneous: `let else` cannot be used with deferred
initialization.
Improve diagnostic by suggesting to remove visibility qualifier
Resolves#123529
This PR improve diagnostic by suggesting to remove visibility qualifier.
Fix invalid silencing of parsing error
Given
```rust
macro_rules! a {
( ) => {
impl<'b> c for d {
e::<f'g>
}
};
}
```
ensure an error is emitted.
Fix#123079.
While they're isomorphic, we can flip the lld component where
applicable, so that downstream doesn't have to check both the flavor and
the linker features.
They are a flexible complementary mechanism to linker flavors,
that also avoid the combinatorial explosion of mapping linking features
to actual linker flavors.
Don't delay a bug if we suggest adding a semicolon to the RHS of an assign operator
It only makes sense to delay a bug based on the assumption that "[we] defer to the later error produced by `check_lhs_assignable`" *if* the expression we're erroring actually is an LHS; otherwise, we should still report the error since it's both useful and required.
Fixes#123722
Make `PlaceRef` and `OperandValue::Ref` share a common `PlaceValue` type
Both `PlaceRef` and `OperandValue::Ref` need the triple of the backend pointer immediate, the optional backend metadata for DSTs, and the actual alignment of the place (since it can differ from the ABI alignment).
This PR introduces a new `PlaceValue` type for those three values, leaving [`PlaceRef`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_codegen_ssa/mir/place/struct.PlaceRef.html) with the `TyAndLayout` and a `PlaceValue`, just like how [`OperandRef`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_codegen_ssa/mir/operand/struct.OperandRef.html) is a `TyAndLayout` and an `OperandValue`.
This means that various places that use `Ref`s as places can just pass the `PlaceValue` along, like in the below excerpt from the diff:
```diff
match operand.val {
- OperandValue::Ref(ptr, meta, align) => {
- debug_assert_eq!(meta, None);
+ OperandValue::Ref(source_place_val) => {
+ debug_assert_eq!(source_place_val.llextra, None);
debug_assert!(matches!(operand_kind, OperandValueKind::Ref));
- let fake_place = PlaceRef::new_sized_aligned(ptr, cast, align);
+ let fake_place = PlaceRef { val: source_place_val, layout: cast };
Some(bx.load_operand(fake_place).val)
}
```
There's more refactoring that I'd like to do after this, but I wanted to stop the PR here where it's hopefully easy (albeit probably not quick) to review since I tried to keep every change line-by-line clear. (Most are just adding `.val` to get to a field.)
You can also go commit-at-a-time if you'd like. Each passed tidy and the codegen tests on my machine (though I didn't run the cg_gcc ones).
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #122882 (Avoid a panic in `set_output_capture` in the default panic handler)
- #123523 (Account for trait/impl difference when suggesting changing argument from ref to mut ref)
- #123744 (Silence `unused_imports` for redundant imports)
- #123784 (Replace `document.write` with `document.head.insertAdjacent`)
- #123798 (Avoid invalid socket address in length calculation)
- #123804 (Stop using `HirId` for fn-like parents since closures are not `OwnerNode`s)
- #123806 (Panic on overflow in `BorrowedCursor::advance`)
- #123820 (Add my former address to .mailmap)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Stop using `HirId` for fn-like parents since closures are not `OwnerNode`s
This is a minimal fix for #123273.
I'm overall pretty disappointed w/ the state of this code; although it's "just diagnostics", it still should be maintainable and understandable and neither of those are true. I believe this code really needs some major overhauling before anything more should be added to it, because there are subtle invariants that are being exercised and subsequently broken all over the place, and I don't think we should just paper over them (e.g.) by delaying bugs or things like that. I wouldn't be surprised if fixing up this code would also yield better diagnostics.
Silence `unused_imports` for redundant imports
Quick fix for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121708#issuecomment-2048105393
r? `@petrochenkov` cc `@joshtriplett`
I think this is right, would like confirmation. I also think it's weird that we're using `=` to assign to `is_redundant` but using `per_ns` for the actual spans. Seems like this could be weirdly order dependent, but that's unrelated to this change.
Account for trait/impl difference when suggesting changing argument from ref to mut ref
Do not ICE when encountering a lifetime error involving an argument with an immutable reference of a method that differs from the trait definition.
Fix#123414.
Deduplicate some function implementations between the parser and AST/HIR
These functions already existed on parser binops, so just convert back to them back and invoke the equivalent method.
Reduce Size of `ModifierInfo`
I added `ModifierInfo` in #121940 and had used a `u64` for the `size` field even though the largest value it holds is `512`.
This PR changes the type of the `size` field to `u16`.
We attempt to suggest an appropriate clone for move errors on expressions
like `S { ..s }` where a field isn't `Copy`. If we can't suggest, we still don't
emit the incorrect suggestion of `S { ..s }.clone()`.
```
error[E0509]: cannot move out of type `S<K>`, which implements the `Drop` trait
--> $DIR/borrowck-struct-update-with-dtor.rs:28:19
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, ..s0 };
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| cannot move out of here
| move occurs because `s0.c` has type `K`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
help: clone the value from the field instead of using the spread operator syntax
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, c: s0.c.clone(), ..s0 };
| +++++++++++++++++
```
```
error[E0509]: cannot move out of type `S<()>`, which implements the `Drop` trait
--> $DIR/borrowck-struct-update-with-dtor.rs:20:19
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, ..s0 };
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| cannot move out of here
| move occurs because `s0.b` has type `B`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
note: `B` doesn't implement `Copy` or `Clone`
--> $DIR/borrowck-struct-update-with-dtor.rs:4:1
|
LL | struct B;
| ^^^^^^^^
help: if `B` implemented `Clone`, you could clone the value from the field instead of using the spread operator syntax
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, b: s0.b.clone(), ..s0 };
| +++++++++++++++++
```
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `blk`
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:8:5
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| --- move occurs because `blk` has type `F`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
LL | blk();
| ----- `blk` moved due to this call
LL | blk();
| ^^^ value used here after move
|
note: `FnOnce` closures can only be called once
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:6:10
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| ^^^^^^^^ `F` is made to be an `FnOnce` closure here
LL | blk();
| ----- this value implements `FnOnce`, which causes it to be moved when called
```
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `a` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/variance-issue-20533.rs:28:14
|
LL | let a = AffineU32(1);
| - binding `a` declared here
LL | let x = foo(&a);
| -- borrow of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(a);
| ^ move out of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(x);
| - borrow later used here
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | let x = foo(&a).clone();
| ++++++++
```