Combine `ty::Projection` and `ty::Opaque` into `ty::Alias`
Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/types-team/issues/79.
This PR consolidates `ty::Projection` and `ty::Opaque` into a single `ty::Alias`, with an `AliasKind` and `AliasTy` type (renamed from `ty::ProjectionTy`, which is the inner data of `ty::Projection`) defined as so:
```
enum AliasKind {
Projection,
Opaque,
}
struct AliasTy<'tcx> {
def_id: DefId,
substs: SubstsRef<'tcx>,
}
```
Since we don't have access to `TyCtxt` in type flags computation, and because repeatedly calling `DefKind` on the def-id is expensive, these two types are distinguished with `ty::AliasKind`, conveniently glob-imported into `ty::{Projection, Opaque}`. For example:
```diff
match ty.kind() {
- ty::Opaque(..) =>
+ ty::Alias(ty::Opaque, ..) => {}
_ => {}
}
```
This PR also consolidates match arms that treated `ty::Opaque` and `ty::Projection` identically.
r? `@ghost`
Remove `mir::CastKind::Misc`
As discussed in #97649 `mir::CastKind::Misc` is not clear, this PR addresses that by creating a new enum variant for every valid cast.
r? ````@oli-obk````
Normalize before erasing late-bound regions in `equal_up_to_regions`
Normalize erasing regions **first**, before passing the type through a `BottomUpFolder` which erases late-bound regions too.
The root cause of this issue is due to 96d4137dee, which removes a `normalize_erasing_regions` that happens before this call to `equal_up_to_regions`. While reverting that commit might be a fix, I think it was suspicious to be erasing late-bound regions first _then_ normalizing types in the first place in `equal_up_to_regions`.
-----
I am tempted to ask the reviewer to review and `r+` this without a UI test, since the existing issues that I think this fixes are all incredibly difficult to minimize (anything hyper/warp related, given the nature of those libraries 😓) or impossible to reproduce locally (the miri test), namely:
* This recently reported issue with tokio + warp: #101430
* This issue from `@RalfJung` about Miri being broken: #101344
* This additional issue reported in a comment by `@tmandry` (issue with fuchsia + hyper): https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101344#issuecomment-1235974564
I have locally verified that the repro in #101430 is fixed with this PR, but after a couple of hours of attempting to minimize this error and either failing to actually repro the ICE, or being overwhelmed with the number of traits and functions I need to inline into a UI test, I have basically given up. Thoughts are appreciated on how best to handle this.
r? `@oli-obk` who is at the intersection of MIR and types-related stuff who may be able to give advice 😅
Try normalizing types without RevealAll in ParamEnv in MIR validation
Before, the MIR validator used RevealAll in its ParamEnv for type
checking. This could cause false negatives in some cases due to
RevealAll ParamEnvs not always use all predicates as expected here.
Since some MIR passes like inlining use RevealAll as well, keep using
it in the MIR validator too, but when it fails usign RevealAll, also
try the check without it, to stop false negatives.
Fixes#99866
cc ````````@compiler-errors```````` who nicely helped me on zulip
Before, the MIR validator used RevealAll in its ParamEnv for type
checking. This could cause false negatives in some cases due to
RevealAll ParamEnvs not always use all predicates as expected here.
Since some MIR passes like inlining use RevealAll as well, keep using
it in the MIR validator too, but when it fails usign RevealAll, also
try the check without it, to stop false negatives.
Clarify MIR semantics of storage statements
Seems worthwhile to start closing out some of the less controversial open questions about MIR semantics. Hopefully this is fairly non-controversial - it's what we implement already, and I see no reason to do anything more restrictive. cc ``@tmiasko`` who commented on this when it was discussed in the original PR that added these docs.
Change enum->int casts to not go through MIR casts.
follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96814
this simplifies all backends and even gives LLVM more information about the return value of `Rvalue::Discriminant`, enabling optimizations in more cases.