Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #97488 (Suggest blanket impl to the local traits)
- #98585 (Make `ThinBox<T>` covariant in `T`)
- #98644 (fix ICE with -Wrust-2021-incompatible-closure-captures)
- #98739 (fix grammar in useless doc comment lint)
- #98741 (Many small deriving cleanups)
- #98756 (Use const instead of function and make it private)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Suggest blanket impl to the local traits
This PR will add additional suggestion regarding the blanket implementation when it is possible, by generation a new help message + suggestion.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/96076
Signed-off-by: Vincenzo Palazzo <vincenzopalazzodev@gmail.com>
Rewrite dead-code pass to avoid fetching HIR.
This allows to get a more uniform handling of spans, and to simplify the grouping of diagnostics for variants and fields.
The existing derive code allows for various possibilities that aren't
needed in practice, which complicates the code. There are only a few
auto-derived traits and new ones are unlikely, so this commit simplifies
things.
- `PtrTy` has been eliminated. The `Raw` variant was never used, and the
lifetime for the `Borrowed` variant was always `None`. That left just
the mutability field, which has been inlined as necessary.
- `MethodDef::explicit_self` was a confusing `Option<Option<PtrTy>>`.
Indicating either `&self` or nothing. It's now a `bool`.
- `borrowed_self` is renamed as `self_ref`.
- `Ty::Ptr` is renamed to `Ty::Ref`.
The `&[ast::Variant]` field isn't used.
The `Vec<Ident>` field is only used for its length, but that's always
the same as the length of the `&[Ident]` and so isn't necessary.
This created unexpected diagnostics while compiling alga:
cannot satisfy `<Self as Module>::Ring == _`
Turns out that we don't need this diagnostic as we disable inlining when
it would trigger an ICE.
Const eval no longer runs MIR optimizations so unless this is getting
run as part of a MIR optimization like const-prop, there can be unused
type parameters even if polymorphization is enabled.
interpret: add From<&MplaceTy> for PlaceTy
We have a similar instance for `&MPlaceTy` to `OpTy`. Also add the same for `&mut`.
This avoids having to write `&(*place).into()`, which we have a few times here and at least twice in Miri (and it comes up again in my current patch).
r? ```@oli-obk```
For diagnostic information of Boolean, remind it as use the type: 'bool'
Fixes#98492.
It helps programmers coming from other languages
modified: compiler/rustc_resolve/src/late/diagnostics.rs
In NLL, when we are promoting a bound out from a closure,
if we have a requirement that `T: 'a` where `'a` is in a
higher universe, we were previously ignoring that, which is
totally wrong. We should be promoting those constraints to `'static`,
since universes are not expressible across closure boundaries.
Added llvm lifetime annotations to function call argument temporaries.
The goal of this change is to ensure that llvm will do stack slot
optimization on these temporaries. This ensures that in code like:
```rust
const A: [u8; 1024] = [0; 1024];
fn copy_const() {
f(A);
f(A);
}
```
we only use 1024 bytes of stack space, instead of 2048 bytes.
I am new to developing for the rust compiler, and as such not entirely sure, but I believe this should be sufficient to close#98156.
Also, this does not contain a test case to ensure this keeps working, primarily because I am not sure how to go about testing this. I would love some suggestions as to how that could be approached.
Accept `DiagnosticMessage` in `LintDiagnosticBuilder::build` so that
lints can be built with translatable diagnostic messages.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
move MIR syntax into a dedicated file and ping some people whenever it changes
Adding or changing MIR operations/statements/whatever should be under significant scrutiny wrt their wider impact, specified semantics, and so on. So let's start by putting all that into a dedicated file and pinging some people whenever that file changes.
This PR only moves definitions around, and then fiddles with imports until it all works again.
Make TAIT behave exactly like RPIT
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/96552
This makes type-alias-impl-trait behave like return-position-impl-trait. Unfortunately it also causes some cases to stop compiling due to "needing type annotations" and makes panicking cause fallback for the hidden type to `()`.
All of these are addressable, but we should probably address them for RPIT and TAIT together
r? ``@lcnr``
Avoid some `&str` to `String` conversions with `MultiSpan::push_span_label`
This patch removes some`&str` to `String` conversions with `MultiSpan::push_span_label`.
emit Retag for compound types with reference fields
I want to add an option to Miri to do retagging inside reference fields. But that means we first have to even emit `Retag` for types that *contain* references (rather than being of reference types). :)
Stacked Borrows originally did that, but we stopped doing it when hitting bunch of issues in the standard library. However I have since realized that we actually do emit `noalias` for newtypes references, which means for soundness we should recurse into fields. Also it'd probably be bad news if newtypes lose out on optimizations (and they don't, for anything else). I want to add an option for that to Miri so that we can start experimenting with those semantics.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Clean up arg mismatch diagnostic, generalize tuple wrap suggestion
This is based on top of #97542, so just look at the last commit which contains the relevant changes.
1. Remove `final_arg_types` which was one of the last places we were using raw (`usize`) indices instead of typed indices in the arg mismatch suggestion code.
2. Improve the tuple wrap suggestion, now we suggest things like `call(a, b, c, d)` -> `call(a, (b, c), d)` 😺
3. Folded in fix#98645
Erase regions in New Abstract Consts
When an abstract const is constructed, we previously included lifetimes in the set of substitutes, so it was not able to unify two abstract consts if their lifetimes did not match but the values did, despite the values not depending on the lifetimes. This caused code that should have compiled to not compile.
Fixes#98452
r? ```@lcnr```
Some borrowck diagnostic fixes
1. Remove some redundant `.as_ref` suggestion logic from borrowck, this has the consequence of also not suggesting `.as_ref` after `Option` methods, but (correctly) before.
2. Fix a bug where we were replacing a binding's name with a type. Instead, make it a note.
This is somewhat incomplete. See `src/test/ui/borrowck/suggest-as-ref-on-mut-closure.rs` for more improvements.
interpret: do not prune requires_caller_location stack frames quite so early
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87000 made the interpreter skip `caller_location` frames for its stacktraces and `cur_span`. However, those functions are used for much more than just panic reporting, and e.g. when Miri reports UB somewhere, it probably wants to point inside `caller_location` frames. (And if it did not, it would want to have its own logic to decide that, not be forced into it by the core interpreter engine.) This fixes some rare ICEs in Miri that say "we should never pop more than one frame at once".
So let's remove all `caller_location` logic from the core interpreter, and instead move it to CTFE error reporting. This does not change user-visible behavior. That's the first commit.
We might additionally want to change CTFE error reporting to treat panics differently from other errors: only prune `caller_location` frames for panics. The second commit does that. But honestly I am not sure if this is an improvement.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Fix trait object reborrow suggestion
Fixes#93596
Slightly generalizes the logic we use to suggest fix first implemented in #95609, specifically when we have a `Sized` obligation that comes from a struct's unsized tail.
Account for `-Z simulate-remapped-rust-src-base` when resolving remapped paths
Discovered in #97682, `-Z simulate-remapped-rust-src-base` only partially simulated the behavior of `remap-debuginfo = true`. While the flag successfully simulates the remapping when stdlib's `rmeta` file is loaded, the simulated prefix was not accounted for when the remapped path's local path was being discovered. This caused the flag to not fully simulate the behavior of `remap-debuginfo = true`, leading to inconsistent behaviors.
This PR fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97682 by also accounting for the simulated path.
Use typed indices in argument mismatch algorithm
I kinda went overboard with the renames, but in general, "arg" is renamed to "expected", and "input" is renamed to "provided", and we use new typed indices to make sure we're indexing into the right sized array.
Other drive-by changes:
1. Factor this logic into a new function, so we don't need to `break 'label` to escape it.
1. Factored out dependence on `final_arg_types`, which is never populated for arguments greater than the number of expected args. Instead, we just grab the final coerced expression type from `in_progress_typeck_results`.
1. Adjust the criteria we use to print (provided) type names, before we didn't suggest anything that had infer vars, but now we suggest thing that have infer vars but aren't `_`.
~Also, sorry in advance, I kinda want to backport this but I know I have folded in a lot of unnecessary drive-by changes that might discourage that. I would be open to brainstorming how to get some of these changes on beta at least.~ edit: Minimized the ICE-fixing changes to #97557
cc `@jackh726` as author of #92364, and `@estebank` as reviewer of the PR.
fixes#97484
Simplify memory ordering intrinsics
This changes the names of the atomic intrinsics to always fully include their memory ordering arguments.
```diff
- atomic_cxchg
+ atomic_cxchg_seqcst_seqcst
- atomic_cxchg_acqrel
+ atomic_cxchg_acqrel_release
- atomic_cxchg_acqrel_failrelaxed
+ atomic_cxchg_acqrel_relaxed
// And so on.
```
- `seqcst` is no longer implied
- The failure ordering on chxchg is no longer implied in some cases, but now always explicitly part of the name.
- `release` is no longer shortened to just `rel`. That was especially confusing, since `relaxed` also starts with `rel`.
- `acquire` is no longer shortened to just `acq`, such that the names now all match the `std::sync::atomic::Ordering` variants exactly.
- This now allows for more combinations on the compare exchange operations, such as `atomic_cxchg_acquire_release`, which is necessary for #68464.
- This PR only exposes the new possibilities through unstable intrinsics, but not yet through the stable API. That's for [a separate PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98383) that requires an FCP.
Suffixes for operations with a single memory order:
| Order | Before | After |
|---------|--------------|------------|
| Relaxed | `_relaxed` | `_relaxed` |
| Acquire | `_acq` | `_acquire` |
| Release | `_rel` | `_release` |
| AcqRel | `_acqrel` | `_acqrel` |
| SeqCst | (none) | `_seqcst` |
Suffixes for compare-and-exchange operations with two memory orderings:
| Success | Failure | Before | After |
|---------|---------|--------------------------|--------------------|
| Relaxed | Relaxed | `_relaxed` | `_relaxed_relaxed` |
| Relaxed | Acquire | ❌ | `_relaxed_acquire` |
| Relaxed | SeqCst | ❌ | `_relaxed_seqcst` |
| Acquire | Relaxed | `_acq_failrelaxed` | `_acquire_relaxed` |
| Acquire | Acquire | `_acq` | `_acquire_acquire` |
| Acquire | SeqCst | ❌ | `_acquire_seqcst` |
| Release | Relaxed | `_rel` | `_release_relaxed` |
| Release | Acquire | ❌ | `_release_acquire` |
| Release | SeqCst | ❌ | `_release_seqcst` |
| AcqRel | Relaxed | `_acqrel_failrelaxed` | `_acqrel_relaxed` |
| AcqRel | Acquire | `_acqrel` | `_acqrel_acquire` |
| AcqRel | SeqCst | ❌ | `_acqrel_seqcst` |
| SeqCst | Relaxed | `_failrelaxed` | `_seqcst_relaxed` |
| SeqCst | Acquire | `_failacq` | `_seqcst_acquire` |
| SeqCst | SeqCst | (none) | `_seqcst_seqcst` |
Currently, `search_for_structural_match_violation` constructs an `infcx`
from a `tcx` and then only uses the `tcx` within the `infcx`. This is
wasteful because `infcx` is a big type.
This commit changes it to use the `tcx` directly. When compiling
`pest-2.1.3`, this changes the memcpy stats reported by DHAT for a `check full`
build from this:
```
433,008,916 bytes (100%, 99,787.93/Minstr) in 2,148,668 blocks (100%, 495.17/Minstr), avg size 201.52 bytes
```
to this:
```
101,422,347 bytes (99.98%, 25,243.59/Minstr) in 1,318,407 blocks (99.96%, 328.15/Minstr), avg size 76.93 bytes
```
This translates to a 4.3% reduction in instruction counts.
Checking the size/alignment of an mplace may be costly, so we only do it
on the types where the walk we want to avoid could be expensive: the larger types
like arrays and slices, rather than on all aggregates being interned.
Reorganizes the previous commits to have a single exit-point to avoid doing the
potentially costly walk. Also moves the relocations tests before the interior
mutability test: only references are important when checking for `UnsafeCell`s
and we're checking if there are any to decide to avoid the walk anyways.
The interning of const allocations visits the mplace looking for references
to intern. Walking big aggregates like big static arrays can be costly,
so we only do it if the allocation we're interning contains references
or interior mutability.
Walking ZSTs was avoided before, and this optimization is now applied
to cases where there are no references/relocations either.
translation: lint fix + more migration
- Unfortunately, the diagnostic lints are very broken and trigger much more often than they should. This PR corrects the conditional which checks if the function call being made is to a diagnostic function so that it returns in every intended case.
- The `rustc_lint_diagnostics` attribute is used by the diagnostic translation/struct migration lints to identify calls where non-translatable diagnostics or diagnostics outwith impls are being created. Any function used in creating a diagnostic should be annotated with this attribute so this PR adds the attribute to many more functions.
- Port the diagnostics from the `rustc_privacy` crate and enable the lints for that crate.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Fix RSS reporting on macOS
> NOTE: This is a duplicate of #98164, which I closed because I borked my rustc fork
Currently, `rustc_data_structures::profiling::get_resident_set_size()` always returns `None` on macOS. This is because
macOS does not implement procfs used in the unix version of the function:
```rust
...
else if #[cfg(unix)] {
pub fn get_resident_set_size() -> Option<usize> {
let field = 1;
let contents = fs::read("/proc/self/statm").ok()?;
let contents = String::from_utf8(contents).ok()?;
let s = contents.split_whitespace().nth(field)?;
let npages = s.parse::<usize>().ok()?;
Some(npages * 4096)
}
...
```
The proposed solution uses libproc, and more specifically `proc_pidinfo`, which has been available on macOS since 10.5 if the function signature inside libproc.h is to be believed:
```c
int proc_pidinfo(int pid, int flavor, uint64_t arg, void *buffer, int buffersize) __OSX_AVAILABLE_STARTING(__MAC_10_5, __IPHONE_2_0);
```
[RFC 2011] Optimize non-consuming operators
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44838
Fifth step of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/96496
The most non-invasive approach that will probably have very little to no performance impact.
## Current behaviour
Captures are handled "on-the-fly", i.e., they are performed in the same place expressions are located.
```rust
// `let a = 1; let b = 2; assert!(a > 1 && b < 100);`
if !(
{ ***try capture `a` and then return `a`*** } > 1 && { ***try capture `b` and then return `b`*** } < 100
) {
panic!( ... );
}
```
As such, some overhead is likely to occur (Specially with very large chains of conditions).
## New behaviour for non-consuming operators
When an operator is known to not take `self`, then it is possible to capture variables **AFTER** the condition.
```rust
// `let a = 1; let b = 2; assert!(a > 1 && b < 100);`
if !( a > 1 && b < 100 ) {
{ ***try capture `a`*** }
{ ***try capture `b`*** }
panic!( ... );
}
```
So the possible impact on the runtime execution time will be diminished.
r? ````@oli-obk````
Remove `MAX_SUGGESTION_HIGHLIGHT_LINES`
After #97798 the `MAX_SUGGESTION_HIGHLIGHT_LINES` constant doesn't really make sense since we always show full suggestions. This PR removes last usages of the constant and the constant itself.
r? ``@flip1995`` (this mostly does changes in clippy)
Only keep a single query for well-formed checking
There are currently 3 queries to perform wf checks on different item-likes. This complexity is not required.
This PR replaces the query by:
- one query per item;
- one query to invoke it for a whole module.
This allows to remove HIR `ParItemLikeVisitor`.
interpret: refactor allocation info query
We now have an infallible function that also tells us which kind of allocation we are talking about.
Also we do longer have to distinguish between data and function allocations for liveness.
This will help us to avoid "catching" `InterpError`s in Miri.
r? `@oli-obk`
Fix rustdoc argument error
Fixes#88756.
It's a take over of #88831. I cherry-picked the commits, fixed the merge conflict and the failing test.
cc `@inashivb` `@jyn514`
r? `@notriddle`
catch unwind in parallel mode during wfcheck
Update #75760
When performing wfcheck, from the test results, the parallel mode will stop all checks when an `item`'s check failed, (e.g. the first ui test failure raised from [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/error_reporting/mod.rs#L249))while the serial mode will output each `item`'s check result via `catch_unwind`. This leads to inconsistencies in the final output of the two mode.
In my local environment, this modification prevents the following ui tests from failing when set `parallel-compiler = true` in `config.toml`:
```
[ui] src/test\ui\associated-types\defaults-cyclic-fail-1.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\associated-types\defaults-cyclic-fail-2.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\associated-types\hr-associated-type-bound-2.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\associated-types\impl-wf-cycle-1.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\associated-types\impl-wf-cycle-2.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\issues\issue-20413.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\parallel_test\defaults-cyclic-fail-para.rs
```
The `rustc_lint_diagnostics` attribute is used by the diagnostic
translation/struct migration lints to identify calls where
non-translatable diagnostics or diagnostics outwith impls are being
created. Any function used in creating a diagnostic should be annotated
with this attribute so this commit adds the attribute to many more
functions.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Unfortunately, the diagnostic lints are very broken and trigger much
more often than they should. Correct the conditional which checks if the
function call being made is to a diagnostic function so that it returns
in every intended case.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Check ADT field is well-formed before checking it is sized
Fixes#96810.
There is one diagnostics regression, in [`src/test/ui/generic-associated-types/bugs/issue-80626.stderr`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97780/files#diff-53795946378e78a0af23a10277c628ff79091c18090fdc385801ee70c1ba6963). I am not super concerned about it, since it's GAT related.
We _could_ fix it, possibly by using the `FieldSized` obligation cause code instead of `BuiltinDerivedObligation`. But that would require changing `Sized` trait confirmation and the `adt_sized_constraint` query.
We now have an infallible function that also tells us which kind of allocation we are talking about.
Also we do longer have to distinguish between data and function allocations for liveness.
This greatly reduces round-trips to fetch relevant extra information about the
token in proc macro code, and avoids RPC messages to create Group tokens.
This greatly reduces round-trips to fetch relevant extra information about the
token in proc macro code, and avoids RPC messages to create Punct tokens.
rustc_target: Add convenience functions for adding linker arguments
They ensure that lld and non-lld linker flavors get the same set of arguments.
The second commit also adds some tests checking for linker argument inconsistencies, and tweaks some arguments to fix those inconsistencies.
Currently the generated code for methods like `eq`, `ne`, and `partial_cmp`
includes stuff like this:
```
let __self_vi = ::core::intrinsics::discriminant_value(&*self);
let __arg_1_vi = ::core::intrinsics::discriminant_value(&*other);
if true && __self_vi == __arg_1_vi {
...
}
```
This commit removes the unnecessary `true &&`, and makes the generating
code a little easier to read in the process. It also fixes some errors
in comments.
proc_macro/bridge: cache static spans in proc_macro's client thread-local state
This is the second part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86822, split off as requested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86822#pullrequestreview-1008655452. This patch removes the RPC calls required for the very common operations of `Span::call_site()`, `Span::def_site()` and `Span::mixed_site()`.
Some notes:
This part is one of the ones I don't love as a final solution from a design standpoint, because I don't like how the spans are serialized immediately at macro invocation. I think a more elegant solution might've been to reserve special IDs for `call_site`, `def_site`, and `mixed_site` at compile time (either starting at 1 or from `u32::MAX`) and making reading a Span handle automatically map these IDs to the relevant values, rather than doing extra serialization.
This would also have an advantage for potential future work to allow `proc_macro` to operate more independently from the compiler (e.g. to reduce the necessity of `proc-macro2`), as methods like `Span::call_site()` could be made to function without access to the compiler backend.
That was unfortunately tricky to do at the time, as this was the first part I wrote of the patches. After the later part (#98188, #98189), the other uses of `InternedStore` are removed meaning that a custom serialization strategy for `Span` is easier to implement.
If we want to go that path, we'll still need the majority of the work to split the bridge object and introduce the `Context` trait for free methods, and it will be easier to do after `Span` is the only user of `InternedStore` (after #98189).
macros: use typed identifiers in diag and subdiag derive
Using typed identifiers instead of strings with the Fluent identifiers in the diagnostic and subdiagnostic derives - this enables the diagnostic derive to benefit from the compile-time validation that comes with typed identifiers, namely that use of a non-existent Fluent identifier will not compile.
r? `````@oli-obk`````
make const_err show up in future breakage reports
As tracked in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71800, const_err should become a hard error Any Day Now (TM). I'd love to move forward with that sooner rather than later; it has been deny-by-default for many years and a future incompat lint since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/80394 (landed more than a year ago). Some CTFE errors are already hard errors since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86194. But before we truly make it a hard error in all cases, we now have one more intermediate step we can take -- to make it show up in future breakage reports.
Cc `````@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`````
This is useful for debugging drop-tracking; previously, you had to recompile
rustc from source and manually add a call to `write_graph_to_file`. This
makes the option more discoverable and configurable at runtime.
I also took the liberty of making the labels for the CFG nodes much easier to read:
previously, they looked like `id(2), local_id: 48`, now they look like
```
expr from_config (hir_id=HirId { owner: DefId(0:10 ~ default_struct_update[79f9]::foo), local_id: 2})
```
Work around llvm 12's memory ordering restrictions.
Older llvm has the pre-C++17 restriction on success and failure memory ordering, requiring the former to be at least as strong as the latter. So, for llvm 12, this upgrades the success ordering to a stronger one if necessary.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/68464
Suggest defining variable as mutable on `&mut _` type mismatch in pats
Suggest writing `mut a` where `&mut a` was written but a non-ref type provided.
Since we still don't have "apply either one of the suggestions but not both" kind of thing, the interaction with the suggestion of removing `&[mut]` or moving it to the type is weird, and idk how to make it better..
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Reverse folder hierarchy
#91318 introduced a trait for infallible folders distinct from the fallible version. For some reason (completely unfathomable to me now that I look at it with fresh eyes), the infallible trait was a supertrait of the fallible one: that is, all fallible folders were required to also be infallible. Moreover the `Error` associated type was defined on the infallible trait! It's so absurd that it has me questioning whether I was entirely sane.
This trait reverses the hierarchy, so that the fallible trait is a supertrait of the infallible one: all infallible folders are required to also be fallible (which is a trivial blanket implementation). This of course makes much more sense! It also enables the `Error` associated type to sit on the fallible trait, where it sensibly belongs.
There is one downside however: folders expose a `tcx` accessor method. Since the blanket fallible implementation for infallible folders only has access to a generic `F: TypeFolder`, we need that trait to expose such an accessor to which we can delegate. Alternatively it's possible to extract that accessor into a separate `HasTcx` trait (or similar) that would then be a supertrait of both the fallible and infallible folder traits: this would ensure that there's only one unambiguous `tcx` method, at the cost of a little additional boilerplate. If desired, I can submit that as a separate PR.
r? ````@jackh726````
Previously, the expand_expr method would expand bool literals as a
`Literal` token containing a `LitKind::Bool`, rather than as an `Ident`.
This is not a valid token, and the `LitKind::Bool` case needs to be
handled seperately.
Tests were added to more deeply compare the streams in the expand-expr
test suite to catch mistakes like this in the future.
Now that typed identifiers are used in both derives, constructors for
the `DiagnosticMessage` and `SubdiagnosticMessage` types are not
required.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
As in the diagnostic derive, using typed identifiers in the
subdiagnostic derive improves the diagnostics of using the subdiagnostic
derive as Fluent messages will be confirmed to exist at compile-time.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Using typed identifiers instead of strings with the Fluent identifier
enables the diagnostic derive to benefit from the compile-time
validation that comes with typed identifiers - use of a non-existent
Fluent identifier will not compile.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Fixup missing renames from `#[main]` to `#[rustc_main]`
In #84217 `#[main]` was removed and replaced with `#[rustc_main]`. In some places the rename was forgotten, which makes the current code confusing, because at first glance it seems that `#[main]` is still around. Perform the renames also in these places.
I noticed this (after first being confused by it) when working on #97802.
r? `@petrochenkov`
(since you reviewed the other PR)
Improve suggestion for calling fn-like expr on type mismatch
1.) Suggest calling values of with RPIT types (and probably TAIT) when we expect `Ty` and have `impl Fn() -> Ty`
2.) Suggest calling closures even when they're not assigned to a local variable first
3.) Drive-by fix of a pretty-printing bug (`impl Fn()-> Ty` => `impl Fn() -> Ty`)
r? ```@estebank```
rustc_target: Remove some redundant target properties
`is_like_emscripten` is equivalent to `os == "emscripten"`, so it's removed.
`is_like_fuchsia` is equivalent to `os == "fuchsia"`, so it's removed.
`is_like_osx` also falls into the same category and is equivalent to `vendor == "apple"`, but it's commonly used so I kept it as is for now.
`is_like_(solaris,windows,wasm)` are combinations of different operating systems or architectures (see compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/tests/tests_impl.rs) so they are also kept as is.
I think `is_like_wasm` (and maybe `is_like_osx`) are sufficiently closed sets, so we can remove these fields as well and replace them with methods like `fn is_like_wasm() { arch == "wasm32" || arch == "wasm64" }`.
On other hand, `is_like_solaris` and `is_like_windows` are sufficiently open and I can imagine custom targets introducing other values for `os`.
This is kind of a gray area.
Remove (transitive) reliance on sorting by DefId in pretty-printer
This moves us a step closer to removing the `PartialOrd/`Ord` impls
for `DefId`. See #90317
Add macro support in jump to definition feature
Fixes#91174.
To do so, I check if the span comes from an expansion, and if so, I infer the original macro `DefId` or `Span` depending if it's a defined in the current crate or not.
There is one limitation due to macro expansion though:
```rust
macro_rules! yolo { () => {}}
fn foo() {
yolo!();
}
```
In `foo`, `yolo!` won't be linked because after expansion, it is replaced by nothing (which seems logical). So I can't get an item from the `Visitor` from which I could tell if its `Span` comes from an expansion.
I added a test for this specific limitation alongside others.
Demo: https://rustdoc.crud.net/imperio/macro-jump-to-def/src/foo/check-source-code-urls-to-def-std.rs.html
As for the empty macro issue that cannot create a jump to definition, you can see it [here](https://rustdoc.crud.net/imperio/macro-jump-to-def/src/foo/check-source-code-urls-to-def-std.rs.html#35).
r? ```@jyn514```
fix universes in the NLL type tests
In the NLL code, we were not accommodating universes in the
`type_test` logic.
Fixes#98095.
r? `@compiler-errors`
This breaks some tests, however, so the purpose of this branch is more explanatory and perhaps to do a crater run.
This commit adds new methods that combine sequences of existing
formatting methods.
- `Formatter::debug_{tuple,struct}_field[12345]_finish`, equivalent to a
`Formatter::debug_{tuple,struct}` + N x `Debug{Tuple,Struct}::field` +
`Debug{Tuple,Struct}::finish` call sequence.
- `Formatter::debug_{tuple,struct}_fields_finish` is similar, but can
handle any number of fields by using arrays.
These new methods are all marked as `doc(hidden)` and unstable. They are
intended for the compiler's own use.
Special-casing up to 5 fields gives significantly better performance
results than always using arrays (as was tried in #95637).
The commit also changes the `Debug` deriving code to use these new methods. For
example, where the old `Debug` code for a struct with two fields would be like
this:
```
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut ::core::fmt::Formatter) -> ::core::fmt::Result {
match *self {
Self {
f1: ref __self_0_0,
f2: ref __self_0_1,
} => {
let debug_trait_builder = &mut ::core::fmt::Formatter::debug_struct(f, "S2");
let _ = ::core::fmt::DebugStruct::field(debug_trait_builder, "f1", &&(*__self_0_0));
let _ = ::core::fmt::DebugStruct::field(debug_trait_builder, "f2", &&(*__self_0_1));
::core::fmt::DebugStruct::finish(debug_trait_builder)
}
}
}
```
the new code is like this:
```
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut ::core::fmt::Formatter) -> ::core::fmt::Result {
match *self {
Self {
f1: ref __self_0_0,
f2: ref __self_0_1,
} => ::core::fmt::Formatter::debug_struct_field2_finish(
f,
"S2",
"f1",
&&(*__self_0_0),
"f2",
&&(*__self_0_1),
),
}
}
```
This shrinks the code produced for `Debug` instances
considerably, reducing compile times and binary sizes.
Co-authored-by: Scott McMurray <scottmcm@users.noreply.github.com>
implement `iter_projections` function on `PlaceRef`
this makes the api more flexible. the original function now calls the PlaceRef
version to avoid duplicating the code.
Update no_default_libraries handling for emscripten target
```@sbc100``` says:
> `-sDEFAULT_LIBRARY_FUNCS_TO_INCLUDE=[]` is almost certainly wrong/out-of-date. This setting defaults to the empty list anyway these days so its redundant. Also we now support `-nodefaultlibs` so you can use that, as with other toolchains.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/98303#issuecomment-1162163684
Migrate two diagnostics from the `rustc_builtin_macros` crate
Migrate two diagnostics to use the struct derive and be translatable.
r? ```@davidtwco```
Provide a `PathSegment.res` in more cases
I find that in many cases, the `res` associated with a `PathSegment` is `Res::Err` even though the path was fully resolved. A few diagnostics use this `res` and their error messages suffer because of the lack of resolved segment.
This fixes it a bit, but it's obviously not complete and I'm not exactly sure if it's correct.
Greatly improve error reporting for futures and generators in `note_obligation_cause_code`
Most futures don't go through this code path, because they're caught by
`maybe_note_obligation_cause_for_async_await`. But all generators do,
and `maybe_note` is imperfect and doesn't catch all futures. Improve the error message for those it misses.
At some point, we may want to consider unifying this with the code for `maybe_note_async_await`,
so that `async_await` notes all parent constraints, and `note_obligation` can point to yield points.
But both functions are quite complicated, and it's not clear to me how to combine them;
this seems like a good incremental improvement.
Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/97332.
r? ``@estebank`` cc ``@eholk`` ``@compiler-errors``
In fc357039f9 `#[main]` was removed and replaced with `#[rustc_main]`.
In some place the rename was forgotten, which makes the current code
confusing, because at first glance it seems that `#[main]` is still
around. Perform the renames also in these places.
Older llvm has the pre-C++17 restriction on success and failure memory
ordering, requiring the former to be at least as strong as the latter.
So, for llvm 12, this upgrades the success ordering to a stronger one if
necessary.
Create elided lifetime parameters for function-like types
Split from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97720
This PR refactor lifetime generic parameters in bare function types and parenthesized traits to introduce the additional required lifetimes as fresh parameters in a `for<>` bound.
This PR does the same to lifetimes appearing in closure signatures, and as-if introducing `for<>` bounds on closures (without the associated change in semantics).
r? `@petrochenkov`
The goal of this change is to ensure that llvm will do stack slot
optimization on these temporaries. This ensures that in code like:
```rust
const A: [u8; 1024] = [0; 1024];
fn copy_const() {
f(A);
f(A);
}
```
we only use 1024 bytes of stack space, instead of 2048 bytes.
Point at return expression for RPIT-related error
Certainly this needs some diagnostic refining, but I wanted to show that it was possible first and foremost. Not sure if this is the right approach. Open to feedback.
Fixes#80583
use `def_ident_span` , `body_owner_def_id` instead of `in_progress_typeck_results`, `guess_head_span`
use `body_id.owner` directly
add description to label
This comment is out dated and misleading, the arm is about TAITs
r? ```@oli-obk```
```@oli-obk``` unsure if you want to add a different comment of some sort.
```@bors``` rollup=always
Remove the unused-`#[doc(hidden)]` logic from the `unused_attributes` lint
Fixes#96890.
It was found out that `#[doc(hidden)]` on trait impl items does indeed have an effect on the generated documentation (see the linked issue). In my opinion and the one of [others](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/266220-rustdoc/topic/Validy.20checks.20for.20.60.23.5Bdoc.28hidden.29.5D.60/near/281846219), rustdoc's output is actually a bit flawed in that regard but that should be tracked in a new issue I suppose (I will open an issue for that in the near future).
The check was introduced in #96008 which is marked to be part of version `1.62` (current `beta`). As far as I understand, this means that **this PR needs to be backported** to `beta` to fix#96890 on time. Correct me if I am wrong.
CC `@dtolnay` (in case you would like to agree or disagree with my decision to fully remove this check)
`@rustbot` label A-lint T-compiler T-rustdoc
r? `@rust-lang/compiler`
lub: don't bail out due to empty binders
allows for the following to compile. The equivalent code using `struct Wrapper<'upper>(fn(&'upper ());` already compiles on stable.
```rust
let _: fn(&'upper ()) = match v {
true => lt_in_fn::<'a>(),
false => lt_in_fn::<'b>(),
};
```
see https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=7034a677190110941223cafac6632f70 for a complete example
r? ```@rust-lang/types```
#91318 introduced a trait for infallible folders distinct from the fallible version. For some reason (completely unfathomable to me now that I look at it with fresh eyes), the infallible trait was a supertrait of the fallible one: that is, all fallible folders were required to also be infallible. Moreover the `Error` associated type was defined on the infallible trait! It's so absurd that it has me questioning whether I was entirely sane.
This trait reverses the hierarchy, so that the fallible trait is a supertrait of the infallible one: all infallible folders are required to also be fallible (which is a trivial blanket implementation). This of course makes much more sense! It also enables the `Error` associated type to sit on the fallible trait, where it sensibly belongs.
There is one downside however: folders expose a `tcx` accessor method. Since the blanket fallible implementation for infallible folders only has access to a generic `F: TypeFolder`, we need that trait to expose such an accessor to which we can delegate. Alternatively it's possible to extract that accessor into a separate `HasTcx` trait (or similar) that would then be a supertrait of both the fallible and infallible folder traits: this would ensure that there's only one unambiguous `tcx` method, at the cost of a little additional boilerplate. If desired, I can submit that as a separate PR.
r? @jackh726
Remove the source archive functionality of ArchiveWriter
We now build archives through strictly additive means rather than taking an existing archive and potentially substracting parts. This is simpler and makes it easier to swap out the archive writer in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97485.
`try_fold_unevaluated` for infallible folders
#97447 added folding of unevaluated constants, but did not include an override of the default (fallible) operation in the blanket impl of `FallibleTypeFolder` for infallible folders. Here we provide that missing override.
r? ```@nnethercote```
Fix erroneous span for borrowck error
I am not confident that this is the correct fix, but it does the job. Open to suggestions for a real fix instead.
Fixes#97997
The issue is that we pass a [dummy location](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/src/rustc_middle/mir/visit.rs.html#302) when type-checking the ["required consts"](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_middle/mir/struct.Body.html#structfield.required_consts) that are needed by the MIR body during borrowck. This means that when we fail to evaluate the constant, we use the span of `bb0[0]`, instead of the actual span of the constant.
There are quite a few other places that use `START_BLOCK.start_location()`, `Location::START`, etc. when calling for a random/unspecified `Location` value. This is because, unlike (for example) `Span`, we don't have a dummy/miscellaneous value to use instead. I would appreciate guidance (either in this PR, or a follow-up) on what needs to be done to clean this up in general.
Add proper tracing spans to rustc_trait_selection::traits::error_reporting
While I was trying to figure out #97704 I did some of this to make the logs more legible, so I figured I'd do the whole module and open a PR with it. afaict this is an ongoing process in the compiler from the log->tracing transition? but lmk if there was a reason for the more verbose forms of logging as they are.
Also, for some of the functions with only one log in them, I put the function name as a message for that log instead of `#[instrument]`-ing the whole function with a span? but maybe the latter would actually be preferable, I'm not actually sure.
Remove dereferencing of Box from codegen
Through #94043, #94414, #94873, and #95328, I've been fixing issues caused by Box being treated like a pointer when it is not a pointer. However, these PRs just introduced special cases for Box. This PR removes those special cases and instead transforms a deref of Box into a deref of the pointer it contains.
Hopefully, this is the end of the Box<T, A> ICEs.
Mention formatting macros when encountering `ArgumentV1` method in const
Also open to just closing this if it's overkill. There are a lot of other distracting error messages around, so maybe it's not worth fixing just this one.
Fixes#93665
Don't omit comma when suggesting wildcard arm after macro expr
* Also adds `Span::eq_ctxt` to consolidate the various usages of `span.ctxt() == other.ctxt()`
* Also fixes an unhygenic usage of spans which caused the suggestion to render weirdly when we had one arm match in a macro
* Also always suggests a comma (i.e. even after a block) if we're rendering a wildcard arm in a single-line match (looks prettier 🌹)
Fixes#94866
Drop magic value 3 from code
Magic value 3 is used to create state for a yield point. It is in fact
the number of reserved variants.
Lift RESERVED_VARIANTS out to module scope and use it instead.
#97447 added folding of unevaluated constants, but did not include an override of the default (fallible) operation in the blanket impl of `FallibleTypeFolder` for infallible folders. Here we provide that missing override.
r? @nnethercote
Include ForeignItem when visiting types for WF check
Addresses Issue 95665 by including `hir::Node::ForeignItem` as a valid
type to visit in `diagnostic_hir_wf_check`.
Fixes#95665
Magic value 3 is used to create state for a yield point. It is in fact
the number of reserved variants.
Lift RESERVED_VARIANTS out to module scope and use it instead.
Fix pretty printing of empty bound lists in where-clause
Repro:
```rust
macro_rules! assert_item_stringify {
($item:item $expected:literal) => {
assert_eq!(stringify!($item), $expected);
};
}
fn main() {
assert_item_stringify! {
fn f<'a, T>() where 'a:, T: {}
"fn f<'a, T>() where 'a:, T: {}"
}
}
```
Previously this assertion would fail because rustc renders the where-clause as `where 'a, T` which is invalid syntax.
This PR makes the above assertion pass.
This bug also affects `-Zunpretty=expanded`. The intention is for that to emit syntactically valid code, but the buggy output is not valid Rust syntax.
```console
$ rustc <(echo "fn f<'a, T>() where 'a:, T: {}") -Zunpretty=expanded
#![feature(prelude_import)]
#![no_std]
#[prelude_import]
use ::std::prelude::rust_2015::*;
#[macro_use]
extern crate std;
fn f<'a, T>() where 'a, T {}
```
```console
$ rustc <(echo "fn f<'a, T>() where 'a:, T: {}") -Zunpretty=expanded | rustc -
error: expected `:`, found `,`
--> <anon>:7:23
|
7 | fn f<'a, T>() where 'a, T {}
| ^ expected `:`
```
Make missing argument placeholder more obvious that it's a placeholder
Use `/* ty */` instead of `{ty}`, since people might be misled into thinking that this is valid syntax, and not just a diagnostic placeholder.
Fixes#96880
Both functions do some modifying of streams using `make_mut`:
- `push` sometimes glues the first token of the next stream to the last
token of the first stream.
- `build` appends tokens to the first stream.
By doing all of this in the one place, things are simpler. The first
stream can be modified in both ways (if necessary) in the one place, and
any next stream with the first token removed doesn't need to be stored.
Fix `SourceScope` for `if let` bindings.
Fixes#97799.
I'm not sure how to test this properly, is there any way to observe the difference in behavior apart from `ui` tests? I'm worried that they would be overlooked in the case of a regression.
It's a weird function: it lets you modify the token stream in the middle
of iteration. There is only one call site, and it is only used for the
rare `ProceduralMasquerade` legacy case.
Make debug_triple depend on target json file content rather than file path
This ensures that changes to target json files will force a recompilation. And more importantly that moving the files doesn't force a recompilation.
This should fix https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/792 (cc ``@ojeda)``
Stabilize `Path::try_exists()` and improve doc
This stabilizes the `Path::try_exists()` method which returns
`Result<bool, io::Error>` instead of `bool` allowing handling of errors
unrelated to the file not existing. (e.g permission errors)
Along with the stabilization it also:
* Warns that the `exists()` method is error-prone and suggests to use
the newly stabilized one.
* Suggests it instead of `metadata()` to handle errors.
* Mentions TOCTOU bugs to avoid false assumption that `try_exists()` is
completely safe fixed version of `exists()`.
* Renames the feature of still-unstable `std::fs::try_exists()` to
`fs_try_exists` to avoid name conflict.
The tracking issue #83186 remains open to track `fs_try_exists`.
Most futures don't go through this code path, because they're caught by
`maybe_note_obligation_cause_for_async_await`. But all generators do,
and `maybe_note` is imperfect and doesn't catch all futures. Improve the error message for those it misses.
At some point, we may want to consider unifying this with the code for `maybe_note_async_await`,
so that `async_await` notes all parent constraints, and `note_obligation` can point to yield points.
But both functions are quite complicated, and it's not clear to me how to combine them;
this seems like a good incremental improvement.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #98105 (rustdoc: remove tuple link on round braces)
- #98136 (Rename `impl_constness` to `constness`)
- #98146 (Remove --memory-init-file flag when linking with Emscripten)
- #98219 (Skip late bound regions in GATSubstCollector)
- #98233 (Remove accidental uses of `&A: Allocator`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Skip late bound regions in GATSubstCollector
#93227 liberated late bound regions when collecting GAT substs in wfcheck. It should simply skip late bound regions instead.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Rename `impl_constness` to `constness`
The current code is a basis for `is_const_fn_raw`, and `impl_constness`
is no longer a valid name, which is previously used for determining the
constness of impls, and not items in general.
r? `@oli-obk`
add comments in `store_dead_field_or_variant`
support multiple log level
add a item ident label
fix ui tests
fix a ui test
fix a rustdoc ui test
use let chain
refactor: remove `store_dead_field_or_variant`
fix a tiny bug
once cell renamings
This PR does the renamings proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74465#issuecomment-1153703128
- Move/rename `lazy::{OnceCell, Lazy}` to `cell::{OnceCell, LazyCell}`
- Move/rename `lazy::{SyncOnceCell, SyncLazy}` to `sync::{OnceLock, LazyLock}`
(I used `Lazy...` instead of `...Lazy` as it seems to be more consistent, easier to pronounce, etc)
```@rustbot``` label +T-libs-api -T-libs
Batch proc_macro RPC for TokenStream iteration and combination operations
This is the first part of #86822, split off as requested in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/86822#pullrequestreview-1008655452. It reduces the number of RPC calls required for common operations such as iterating over and concatenating TokenStreams.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #97803 (Impl Termination for Infallible and then make the Result impls of Termination more generic)
- #97828 (Allow configuring where artifacts are downloaded from)
- #98150 (Emscripten target: replace -g4 with -g, and -g3 with --profiling-funcs)
- #98195 (Fix rustdoc json primitive handling)
- #98205 (Remove a possible unnecessary assignment)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove a possible unnecessary assignment
The reference issue has been closed (the feature has been stabilized)
and things work fine without it, it seems.
Signed-off-by: Yuki Okushi <jtitor@2k36.org>
Emscripten target: replace -g4 with -g, and -g3 with --profiling-funcs
Emscripten prints the following warning:
```
emcc: warning: please replace -g4 with -gsource-map [-Wdeprecated]
```
`@sbc100`
The reference issue has been closed (the feature has been stabilized)
and things work fine without fine, it seems.
Signed-off-by: Yuki Okushi <jtitor@2k36.org>
ctfe: limit hashing of big const allocations when interning
Const allocations are only hashed for interning. However, they can be large, making the hashing expensive especially since it uses `FxHash`: it's better suited to short keys, not potentially big buffers like the actual bytes of allocation and the associated 1/8th sized `InitMask`.
We can partially hash these fields when they're large, hashing the length, and head and tail of these buffers, to
limit possible collisions while avoiding most of the hashing work.
r? `@ghost`
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #95392 (std: Stabilize feature try_reserve_2 )
- #97798 (Hide irrelevant lines in suggestions to allow for suggestions that are far from each other to be shown)
- #97844 (Windows: No panic if function not (yet) available)
- #98013 (Subtype FRU fields first in `type_changing_struct_update`)
- #98191 (Remove the rest of unnecessary `to_string`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Subtype FRU fields first in `type_changing_struct_update`
So this fixes a subtle bug that `type_changing_struct_update` introduced, where it'll no longer coerce the base expr correctly. I actually think this code is easier to understand now, too.
r? `@lcnr` since you reviewed the last one
Hide irrelevant lines in suggestions to allow for suggestions that are far from each other to be shown
This is an attempt to fix suggestions one part of which is 6 lines or more far from the first. I've noticed "the problem" (of not showing some parts of the suggestion) here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97759#discussion_r889689230.
I'm not sure about the implementation (this big closure is just bad and makes already complicated code even more so), but I want to at least discuss the result.
Here is an example of how this changes the output:
Before:
```text
help: consider enclosing expression in a block
|
3 ~ 'l: { match () { () => break 'l,
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
...
```
After:
```text
help: consider enclosing expression in a block
|
3 ~ 'l: { match () { () => break 'l,
4 |
...
31|
32~ } };
|
```
r? `@estebank`
`@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics +A-suggestion-diagnostics
`BitSet` related perf improvements
This commit makes two changes:
1. Changes `MaybeLiveLocals` to use `ChunkedBitSet`
2. Overrides the `fold` method for the iterator for `ChunkedBitSet`
I have local benchmarks verifying that each of these changes individually yield significant perf improvements to #96451 . I'm hoping this will be true outside of that context too. If that is not the case, I'll try to gate things on where they help as needed
r? `@nnethercote` who I believe was working on closely related things, cc `@tmiasko` because of the destprop pr
Move `finish` out of the `Encoder` trait.
This simplifies things, but requires making `CacheEncoder` non-generic.
(This was previously merged as commit 4 in #94732 and then was reverted
in #97905 because it caused a perf regression.)
r? `@ghost`
This is an experimental patch to try to reduce the codegen complexity of
TokenStream's FromIterator and Extend implementations for downstream
crates, by moving the core logic into a helper type. This might help
improve build performance of crates which depend on proc_macro as
iterators are used less, and the compiler may take less time to do
things like attempt specializations or other iterator optimizations.
The change intentionally sacrifices some optimization opportunities,
such as using the specializations for collecting iterators derived from
Vec::into_iter() into Vec.
This is one of the simpler potential approaches to reducing the amount
of code generated in crates depending on proc_macro, so it seems worth
trying before other more-involved changes.
This significantly reduces the cost of common interactions with TokenStream
when running with the CrossThread execution strategy, by reducing the number of
RPC calls required.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #97377 (Do not suggest adding semicolon/changing delimiters for macros in item position that originates in macros)
- #97675 (Make `std::mem::needs_drop` accept `?Sized`)
- #98118 (Test NLL fix of bad lifetime inference for reference captured in closure.)
- #98166 (Add rustdoc-json regression test for #98009)
- #98169 (Keyword docs: Link to wikipedia article for dynamic dispatch)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make `std::mem::needs_drop` accept `?Sized`
This change attempts to make `needs_drop` work with types like `[u8]` and `str`.
This enables code in types like `Arc<T>` that was not possible before, such as https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97676.
Compile `unicode-normalization` faster
Various optimizations and cleanups aimed at improving compilation of `unicode-normalization`, which is notable for having several very large `match`es with many char ranges.
Best reviewed one commit at a time.
r? `@oli-obk`
Big const allocations hash a large amount of data for interning:
the whole bytes buffer, and the 1/8th sized initmask, with FxHash.
This hash function is made for shorter keys.
This only hashes the length, and head and tail of these buffers, to
limit possible collisions while avoiding most of the hashing work.
Previously we only show at most 6 lines of suggestions and, if the
suggestions are more than 6 lines apart, we've just showed ... at the
end. This is probably fine, but quite confusing in my opinion.
This commit is an attempt to show ... in places where there is nothing
to suggest instead, for example:
Before:
```text
help: consider enclosing expression in a block
|
3 ~ 'l: { match () { () => break 'l,
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
...
```
After:
```text
help: consider enclosing expression in a block
|
3 ~ 'l: { match () { () => break 'l,
4 |
...
31|
32~ } };
|
```
Support lint expectations for `--force-warn` lints (RFC 2383)
Rustc has a `--force-warn` flag, which overrides lint level attributes and forces the diagnostics to always be warn. This means, that for lint expectations, the diagnostic can't be suppressed as usual. This also means that the expectation would not be fulfilled, even if a lint had been triggered in the expected scope.
This PR now also tracks the expectation ID in the `ForceWarn` level. I've also made some minor adjustments, to possibly catch more bugs and make the whole implementation more robust.
This will probably conflict with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97718. That PR should ideally be reviewed and merged first. The conflict itself will be trivial to fix.
---
r? `@wesleywiser`
cc: `@flip1995` since you've helped with the initial review and also discussed this topic with me. 🙃
Follow-up of: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87835
Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85549
Yeah, and that's it.
This simplifies things, but requires making `CacheEncoder` non-generic.
(This was previously merged as commit 4 in #94732 and then was reverted
in #97905 because it caused a perf regression.)
This commit removes the `a == b` early return, which isn't useful in
practice, and replaces it with one that helps matches with many ranges,
including char ranges.
The code is clearer and simpler without it. Note that the `a == b` early
return at the top of the function means the `a == b` test at the end of
the function could never succeed.
It's never executed when running the entire test suite. I think it's
because of the early return at the top of the function if `a.ty() != ty`
succeeds.
This is a performance win for `unicode-normalization`.
The commit also removes the closure, which isn't necessary. And
reformulates the comparison into a form I find easier to read.
The `MissingDoc` lint has quadratic behaviour when processing doc comments.
This is a problem for large doc comments (e.g. 1000+ lines) when
`deny(missing_code)` is enabled.
A 1000-line doc comment using `//!` comments is represented as 1000 attributes
on an item. The lint machinery iterates over each attribute with
`visit_attribute`. `MissingDoc`'s impl of that function calls
`with_lint_attrs`, which calls `enter_attrs`, which iterates over all 1000
attributes looking for a `doc(hidden)` attribute. I.e. for every attribute we
iterate over all the other attributes.
The fix is simple: don't call `with_lint_attrs` on attributes. This makes
sense: `with_lint_attrs` is intended to iterate over the attributes on a
language fragment like a statement or expression, but it doesn't need to
be called on attributes themselves.
Refactor path segment parameter error
This PR attempts to rewrite the error handling for an unexpected parenthesised type parameters to:
- Use provided data instead of re-parsing the whole span
- Add a multipart suggestion to reflect on the changes with an underline
- Remove the unnecessary "if" nesting
Fix suggestions for `&a: T` parameters
I've accidentally discovered that we have broken suggestions for `&a: T` parameters:
```rust
fn f(&mut bar: u32) {}
fn main() {
let _ = |&mut a| ();
}
```
```text
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> ./t.rs:1:6
|
1 | fn f(&mut bar: u32) {}
| ^^^^^^^^-----
| | |
| | expected due to this
| expected `u32`, found `&mut _`
| help: did you mean `bar`: `&u32`
|
= note: expected type `u32`
found mutable reference `&mut _`
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> ./t.rs:4:23
|
4 | let _: fn(u32) = |&mut a| ();
| ^^^^^--
| | |
| | expected due to this
| expected `u32`, found `&mut _`
| help: did you mean `a`: `&u32`
|
= note: expected type `u32`
found mutable reference `&mut _`
```
It's hard to see, but
1. The help span is overlapping with "expected" spans
2. It suggests `fn f( &u32) {}` (no `mut` and lost parameter name) and `|&u32 ()` (no closing `|` and lost parameter name)
I've tried to fix this.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
[RFC 2011] Minimal initial implementation
Tracking issue: #44838
Third step of #96496
Implementation has ~290 LOC with the bare minimum to be in a functional state. Currently only searches for binary operations to mimic what `assert_eq!` and `assert_ne!` already do.
r? `@oli-obk`
The code now accepts `Binder<OutlivesPredicate>`
instead of just `OutlivesPredicate` and thus exercises
the new, generalized `IfEqBound` codepaths. Note though
that we never *produce* Binder<OutlivesPredicate>, so we
are only testing a subset of those codepaths that excludes
actual higher-ranked outlives bounds.
STD support for the Nintendo 3DS
Rustc already supports compiling for the Nintendo 3DS using the `armv6k-nintendo-3ds` target (Tier 3). Until now though, only `core` and `alloc` were supported. This PR adds standard library support for the Nintendo 3DS. A notable exclusion is `std::thread` support, which will come in a follow-up PR as it requires more complicated changes.
This has been a joint effort by `@Meziu,` `@ian-h-chamberlain,` myself, and prior work by `@rust3ds` members.
### Background
The Nintendo 3DS (Horizon OS) is a mostly-UNIX looking system, with the caveat that it does not come with a full libc implementation out of the box. On the homebrew side (I'm not under NDA), the libc interface is partially implemented by the [devkitPro](https://devkitpro.org/wiki/devkitPro_pacman) toolchain and a user library like [`libctru`](https://github.com/devkitPro/libctru). This is important because there are [some possible legal barriers](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88529#issuecomment-919938396) to linking directly to a library that uses the underlying platform APIs, since they might be considered a trade secret or under NDA.
To get around this, the standard library impl for the 3DS does not directly depend on any platform-level APIs. Instead, it expects standard libc functions to be linked in. The implementation of these libc functions is left to the user. Some functions are provided by the devkitPro toolchain, but in our testing, we used the following to fill in the other functions:
- [`libctru`] - provides more basic APIs, such as `nanosleep`. Linked in by way of [`ctru-sys`](https://github.com/Meziu/ctru-rs/tree/master/ctru-sys).
- [`pthread-3ds`](https://github.com/Meziu/pthread-3ds) - provides pthread APIs for `std::thread`. Implemented using [`libctru`].
- [`linker-fix-3ds`](https://github.com/Meziu/rust-linker-fix-3ds) - fulfills some other missing libc APIs. Implemented using [`libctru`].
For more details, see the `src/doc/rustc/src/platform-support/armv6k-nintendo-3ds.md` file added in this PR.
### Notes
We've already upstreamed changes to the [`libc`] crate to support this PR, as well as the upcoming threading PR. These changes have all been released as of 0.2.121, so we bump the crate version in this PR.
Edit: After some rebases, the version bump has already been merged so it doesn't appear in this PR.
A lot of the changes in this PR are straightforward, and follow in the footsteps of the ESP-IDF target: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87666.
The 3DS does not support user space process spawning, so these APIs are unimplemented (similar to ESP-IDF).
[`libctru`]: https://github.com/devkitPro/libctru
[`libc`]: https://github.com/rust-lang/libc
The current code is a basis for `is_const_fn_raw`, and `impl_constness`
is no longer a valid name, which is previously used for determining the
constness of impls, and not items in general.
Remove `rustc_deprecated` diagnostics
Follow-up on #95960. The diagnostics will remain until the next bootstrap, at which point people will have had six weeks to adjust.
``@rustbot`` label +A-diagnostics
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Make `ExprKind::Closure` a struct variant.
Simple refactor since we both need it to introduce additional fields in `ExprKind::Closure`.
r? ``@Aaron1011``
Remove thread-local `IGNORED_ATTRIBUTES`.
It's just a copy of the read-only global `ich::IGNORED_ATTRIBUTES`, and
can be removed without any effect.
r? `@michaelwoerister`
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #97822 (Filter out intrinsics if we have other import candidates to suggest)
- #98026 (Move some tests to more reasonable directories)
- #98067 (compiler: remove unused deps)
- #98078 (Use unchecked mul to compute slice sizes)
- #98083 (Rename rustc_serialize::opaque::Encoder as MemEncoder.)
- #98087 (Suggest adding a `#[macro_export]` to a private macro)
- #98113 (Fix misspelling of "constraint" as "contraint")
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Rename rustc_serialize::opaque::Encoder as MemEncoder.
This avoids the name clash with `rustc_serialize::Encoder` (a trait),
and allows lots qualifiers to be removed and imports to be simplified
(e.g. fewer `as` imports).
(This was previously merged as commit 5 in #94732 and then was reverted
in #97905 because of a perf regression caused by commit 4 in #94732.)
r? ```@bjorn3```
Use unchecked mul to compute slice sizes
This allows LLVM to realize that `slice.len() > 0` iff `slice.len() * size_of::<T>() > 0`, allowing a branch on the latter to be folded into the former when dropping vecs and boxed slices, in some cases.
Fixes (partially) #96497
Filter out intrinsics if we have other import candidates to suggest
Fixes#97618
Also open to just sorting these candidates to be last. Pretty easy to modify the code to do that, too.
Improve parsing errors and suggestions for bad `if` statements
1. Parses `if {}` as `if <err> {}` (block-like conditions that are missing a "then" block), and `if true && {}` as `if true && <err> {}` (unfinished binary operation), which is a more faithful recovery and leads to better typeck errors later on.
1. Points out the span of the condition if we don't see a "then" block after it, to help the user understand what is being parsed as a condition (and by elimination, what isn't).
1. Allow `if cond token else { }` to be fixed properly to `if cond { token } else { }`.
1. Fudge with the error messages a bit. This is somewhat arbitrary and I can revert my rewordings if they're useless.
----
Also this PR addresses a strange parsing regression (1.20 -> 1.21) where we chose to reject this piece of code somewhat arbitrarily, even though we should parse it fine:
```rust
fn main() {
if { if true { return } else { return }; } {}
}
```
For context, all of these other expressions parse correctly:
```rust
fn main() {
if { if true { return } else { return } } {}
if { return; } {}
if { return } {}
if { return if true { } else { }; } {}
}
```
The parser used a heuristic to determine if the "the parsed `if` condition makes sense as a condition" that did like a one-expr-deep reachability analysis. This should not be handled by the parser though.
Use valtrees as the type-system representation for constant values
This is not quite ready yet, there are still some problems with pretty printing and symbol mangling and `deref_const` seems to not work correctly in all cases.
Mainly opening now for a perf-run (which should be good to go, despite the still existing problems).
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@lcnr` `@RalfJung`
This stabilizes the `Path::try_exists()` method which returns
`Result<bool, io::Error>` instead of `bool` allowing handling of errors
unrelated to the file not existing. (e.g permission errors)
Along with the stabilization it also:
* Warns that the `exists()` method is error-prone and suggests to use
the newly stabilized one.
* Suggests it instead of `metadata()` to handle errors.
* Mentions TOCTOU bugs to avoid false assumption that `try_exists()` is
completely safe fixed version of `exists()`.
* Renames the feature of still-unstable `std::fs::try_exists()` to
`fs_try_exists` to avoid name conflict.
The tracking issue #83186 remains open to track `fs_try_exists`.
Integrate measureme's hardware performance counter support.
*Note: this is a companion to https://github.com/rust-lang/measureme/pull/143, and duplicates some information with it for convenience*
**(much later) EDIT**: take any numbers with a grain of salt, they may have changed since initial PR open.
## Credits
I'd like to start by thanking `@alyssais,` `@cuviper,` `@edef1c,` `@glandium,` `@jix,` `@Mark-Simulacrum,` `@m-ou-se,` `@mystor,` `@nagisa,` `@puckipedia,` and `@yorickvP,` for all of their help with testing, and valuable insight and suggestions.
Getting here wouldn't have been possible without you!
(If I've forgotten anyone please let me know, I'm going off memory here, plus some discussion logs)
## Summary
This PR adds support to `-Z self-profile` for counting hardware events such as "instructions retired" (as opposed to being limited to time measurements), using the `rdpmc` instruction on `x86_64` Linux.
While other OSes may eventually be supported, preliminary research suggests some kind of kernel extension/driver is required to enable this, whereas on Linux any user can profile (at least) their own threads.
Supporting Linux on architectures other than x86_64 should be much easier (provided the hardware supports such performance counters), and was mostly not done due to a lack of readily available test hardware.
That said, 32-bit `x86` (aka `i686`) would be almost trivial to add and test once we land the initial `x86_64` version (as all the CPU detection code can be reused).
A new flag `-Z self-profile-counter` was added, to control which of the named `measureme` counters is used, and which defaults to `wall-time`, in order to keep `-Z self-profile`'s current functionality unchanged (at least for now).
The named counters so far are:
* `wall-time`: the existing time measurement
* name chosen for consistency with `perf.rust-lang.org`
* continues to use `std::time::Instant` for a nanosecond-precision "monotonic clock"
* `instructions:u`: the hardware performance counter usually referred to as "Instructions retired"
* here "retired" (roughly) means "fully executed"
* the `:u` suffix is from the Linux `perf` tool and indicates the counter only runs while userspace code is executing, and therefore counts no kernel instructions
* *see [Caveats/Subtracting IRQs](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Subtracting-IRQs) for why this isn't entirely true and why `instructions-minus-irqs:u` should be preferred instead*
* `instructions-minus-irqs:u`: same as `instructions:u`, except the count of hardware interrupts ("IRQs" here for brevity) is subtracted
* *see [Caveats/Subtracting IRQs](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Subtracting-IRQs) for why this should be preferred over `instructions:u`*
* `instructions-minus-r0420:u`: experimental counter, same as `instructions-minus-irqs:u` but subtracting an undocumented counter (`r0420:u`) instead of IRQs
* the `rXXXX` notation is again from Linux `perf`, and indicates a "raw" counter, with a hex representation of the low-level counter configuration - this was picked because we still don't *really* know what it is
* this only exists for (future) testing and isn't included/used in any comparisons/data we've put together so far
* *see [Challenges/Zen's undocumented 420 counter](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Epilogue-Zen’s-undocumented-420-counter) for details on how this counter was found and what it does*
---
There are also some additional commits:
* ~~see [Challenges/Rebasing *shouldn't* affect the results, right?](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Rebasing-*shouldn’t*-affect-the-results,-right) for details on the changes to `rustc_parse` and `rustc_trait_section` (the latter far more dubious, and probably shouldn't be merged, or not as-is)~~
* **EDIT**: the effects of these are no long quantifiable, the PR includes reverts for them
* ~~see [Challenges/`jemalloc`: purging will commence in ten seconds](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#jemalloc-purging-will-commence-in-ten-seconds) for details on the `jemalloc` change~~
* this is also separately found in #77162, and we probably want to avoid doing it by default, ideally we'd use the runtime control API `jemalloc` offers (assuming that can stop the timer that's already running, which I'm not sure about)
* **EDIT**: until we can do this based on `-Z` flags, this commit has also been reverted
* the `proc_macro` change was to avoid randomized hashing and therefore ASLR-like effects
---
**(much later) EDIT**: take any numbers with a grain of salt, they may have changed since initial PR open.
#### Write-up / report
Because of how extensive the full report ended up being, I've kept most of it [on `hackmd.io`](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view), but for convenient access, here are all the sections (with individual links):
<sup>(someone suggested I'd make a backup, so [here it is on the wayback machine](http://web.archive.org/web/20201127164748/https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view) - I'll need to remember to update that if I have to edit the write-up)</sup>
* [**Motivation**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Motivation)
* [**Results**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Results)
* [**Overhead**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Overhead)
*Preview (see the report itself for more details):*
|Counter|Total<br>`instructions-minus-irqs:u`|Overhead from "Baseline"<br>(for all 1903881<br>counter reads)|Overhead from "Baseline"<br>(per each counter read)|
|-|-|-|-|
|Baseline|63637621286 ±6||
|`instructions:u`|63658815885 ±2| +21194599 ±8| +11|
|`instructions-minus-irqs:u`|63680307361 ±13| +42686075 ±19| +22|
|`wall-time`|63951958376 ±10275|+314337090 ±10281|+165|
* [**"Macro" noise (self time)**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#“Macro”-noise-(self-time))
*Preview (see the report itself for more details):*
|| `wall-time` (ns) | `instructions:u` | `instructions-minus-irqs:u`
-: | -: | -: | -:
`typeck` | 5478261360 ±283933373 (±~5.2%) | 17350144522 ±6392 (±~0.00004%) | 17351035832.5 ±4.5 (±~0.00000003%)
`expand_crate` | 2342096719 ±110465856 (±~4.7%) | 8263777916 ±2937 (±~0.00004%) | 8263708389 ±0 (±~0%)
`mir_borrowck` | 2216149671 ±119458444 (±~5.4%) | 8340920100 ±2794 (±~0.00003%) | 8341613983.5 ±2.5 (±~0.00000003%)
`mir_built` | 1269059734 ±91514604 (±~7.2%) | 4454959122 ±1618 (±~0.00004%) | 4455303811 ±1 (±~0.00000002%)
`resolve_crate` | 942154987.5 ±53068423.5 (±~5.6%) | 3951197709 ±39 (±~0.000001%) | 3951196865 ±0 (±~0%)
* [**"Micro" noise (individual sampling intervals)**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#“Micro”-noise-(individual-sampling-intervals))
* [**Caveats**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Caveats)
* [**Disabling ASLR**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Disabling-ASLR)
* [**Non-deterministic proc macros**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Non-deterministic-proc-macros)
* [**Subtracting IRQs**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Subtracting-IRQs)
* [**Lack of support for multiple threads**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Lack-of-support-for-multiple-threads)
* [**Challenges**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Challenges)
* [**How do we even read hardware performance counters?**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#How-do-we-even-read-hardware-performance-counters)
* [**ASLR: it's free entropy**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#ASLR-it’s-free-entropy)
* [**The serializing instruction**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#The-serializing-instruction)
* [**Getting constantly interrupted**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Getting-constantly-interrupted)
* [**AMD patented time-travel and dubbed it `SpecLockMap`<br><sup> or: "how we accidentally unlocked `rr` on AMD Zen"</sup>**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#AMD-patented-time-travel-and-dubbed-it-SpecLockMapnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspnbspor-“how-we-accidentally-unlocked-rr-on-AMD-Zen”)
* [**`jemalloc`: purging will commence in ten seconds**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#jemalloc-purging-will-commence-in-ten-seconds)
* [**Rebasing *shouldn't* affect the results, right?**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Rebasing-*shouldn’t*-affect-the-results,-right)
* [**Epilogue: Zen's undocumented 420 counter**](https://hackmd.io/sH315lO2RuicY-SEt7ynGA?view#Epilogue-Zen’s-undocumented-420-counter)
This adds the typeid and `vcall_visibility` metadata to vtables when the
-Cvirtual-function-elimination flag is set.
The typeid is generated in the same way as for the
`llvm.type.checked.load` intrinsic from the trait_ref.
The offset that is added to the typeid is always 0. This is because LLVM
assumes that vtables are constructed according to the definition in the
Itanium ABI. This includes an "address point" of the vtable. In C++ this
is the offset in the vtable where information for RTTI is placed. Since
there is no RTTI information in Rust's vtables, this "address point" is
always 0. This "address point" in combination with the offset passed to
the `llvm.type.checked.load` intrinsic determines the final function
that should be loaded from the vtable in the
`WholeProgramDevirtualization` pass in LLVM. That's why the
`llvm.type.checked.load` intrinsics are generated with the typeid of the
trait, rather than with that of the function that is called. This
matches what `clang` does for C++.
The vcall_visibility metadata depends on three factors:
1. LTO level: Currently this is always fat LTO, because LLVM only
supports this optimization with fat LTO.
2. Visibility of the trait: If the trait is publicly visible, VFE
can only act on its vtables after linking.
3. Number of CGUs: if there is more than one CGU, also vtables with
restricted visibility could be seen outside of the CGU, so VFE can
only act on them after linking.
To reflect this, there are three visibility levels: Public, LinkageUnit,
and TranslationUnit.
Add the intrinsic
declare {i8*, i1} @llvm.type.checked.load(i8* %ptr, i32 %offset, metadata %type)
This is used in the VFE optimization when lowering loading functions
from vtables to LLVM IR. The `metadata` is used to map the function to
all vtables this function could belong to. This ensures that functions
from vtables that might be used somewhere won't get removed.
This function computes a Itanium-like typeid for a trait_ref. This is
required for the VFE optimization in LLVM. It is used to map
`llvm.type.checked.load` invocations, that is loading the function from
a vtable, to the vtables this function could be from.
It is important to note that `typeid`s are not unique. So multiple
vtables of the same trait can share `typeid`s.
To apply the optimization the `Virtual Function Elim` module flag has to
be set. To apply this optimization post-link the `LTOPostLink` module
flag has to be set.
Adds the virtual-function-elimination unstable compiler flag and a check
that this flag is only used in combination with -Clto. LLVM can only
apply this optimization with fat LTO.
lint: add diagnostic translation migration lints
Introduce allow-by-default lints for checking whether diagnostics are written in
`SessionDiagnostic` or `AddSubdiagnostic` impls and whether diagnostics are translatable. These lints can be denied for modules once they are fully migrated to impls and translation.
These lints are intended to be temporary - once all diagnostics have been changed then we can just change the APIs we have and that will enforce these constraints thereafter.
r? `````@oli-obk`````
Rename the `ConstS::val` field as `kind`.
And likewise for the `Const::val` method.
Because its type is called `ConstKind`. Also `val` is a confusing name
because `ConstKind` is an enum with seven variants, one of which is
called `Value`. Also, this gives consistency with `TyS` and `PredicateS`
which have `kind` fields.
The commit also renames a few `Const` variables from `val` to `c`, to
avoid confusion with the `ConstKind::Value` variant.
r? `@BoxyUwU`
Remove RegionckMode in favor of calling new skip_region_resolution
Simple cleanup. We can skip a bunch of stuff for places where NLL does the region checking, so skip earlier.
r? rust-lang/types
This avoids the name clash with `rustc_serialize::Encoder` (a trait),
and allows lots qualifiers to be removed and imports to be simplified
(e.g. fewer `as` imports).
(This was previously merged as commit 5 in #94732 and then was reverted
in #97905 because of a perf regression caused by commit 4 in #94732.)
And likewise for the `Const::val` method.
Because its type is called `ConstKind`. Also `val` is a confusing name
because `ConstKind` is an enum with seven variants, one of which is
called `Value`. Also, this gives consistency with `TyS` and `PredicateS`
which have `kind` fields.
The commit also renames a few `Const` variables from `val` to `c`, to
avoid confusion with the `ConstKind::Value` variant.
Add Apple WatchOS compile targets
Hello,
I would like to add the following target triples for Apple WatchOS as Tier 3 platforms:
armv7k-apple-watchos
arm64_32-apple-watchos
x86_64-apple-watchos-sim
There are some pre-requisites Pull Requests:
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-builtins/pull/456 (merged)
https://github.com/alexcrichton/cc-rs/pull/662 (pending)
https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/2717 (merged)
There will be a subsequent PR with standard library changes for WatchOS. Previous compiler and library changes were in a single PR (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/94736) which is now closed in favour of separate PRs.
Many thanks!
Vlad.
### Tier 3 Target Requirements
Adds support for Apple WatchOS compile targets.
Below are details on how this target meets the requirements for tier 3:
> tier 3 target must have a designated developer or developers (the "target maintainers") on record to be CCed when issues arise regarding the target. (The mechanism to track and CC such developers may evolve over time.)
`@deg4uss3r` has volunteered to be the target maintainer. I am also happy to help if a second maintainer is required.
> Targets must use naming consistent with any existing targets; for instance, a target for the same CPU or OS as an existing Rust target should use the same name for that CPU or OS. Targets should normally use the same names and naming conventions as used elsewhere in the broader ecosystem beyond Rust (such as in other toolchains), unless they have a very good reason to diverge. Changing the name of a target can be highly disruptive, especially once the target reaches a higher tier, so getting the name right is important even for a tier 3 target.
Uses the same naming as the LLVM target, and the same convention as other Apple targets.
> Target names should not introduce undue confusion or ambiguity unless absolutely necessary to maintain ecosystem compatibility. For example, if the name of the target makes people extremely likely to form incorrect beliefs about what it targets, the name should be changed or augmented to disambiguate it.
I don't believe there is any ambiguity here.
> Tier 3 targets may have unusual requirements to build or use, but must not create legal issues or impose onerous legal terms for the Rust project or for Rust developers or users.
I don't see any legal issues here.
> The target must not introduce license incompatibilities.
> Anything added to the Rust repository must be under the standard Rust license (MIT OR Apache-2.0).
> The target must not cause the Rust tools or libraries built for any other host (even when supporting cross-compilation to the target) to depend on any new dependency less permissive than the Rust licensing policy. This applies whether the dependency is a Rust crate that would require adding new license exceptions (as specified by the tidy tool in the rust-lang/rust repository), or whether the dependency is a native library or binary. In other words, the introduction of the target must not cause a user installing or running a version of Rust or the Rust tools to be subject to any new license requirements.
> If the target supports building host tools (such as rustc or cargo), those host tools must not depend on proprietary (non-FOSS) libraries, other than ordinary runtime libraries supplied by the platform and commonly used by other binaries built for the target. For instance, rustc built for the target may depend on a common proprietary C runtime library or console output library, but must not depend on a proprietary code generation library or code optimization library. Rust's license permits such combinations, but the Rust project has no interest in maintaining such combinations within the scope of Rust itself, even at tier 3.
> Targets should not require proprietary (non-FOSS) components to link a functional binary or library.
> "onerous" here is an intentionally subjective term. At a minimum, "onerous" legal/licensing terms include but are not limited to: non-disclosure requirements, non-compete requirements, contributor license agreements (CLAs) or equivalent, "non-commercial"/"research-only"/etc terms, requirements conditional on the employer or employment of any particular Rust developers, revocable terms, any requirements that create liability for the Rust project or its developers or users, or any requirements that adversely affect the livelihood or prospects of the Rust project or its developers or users.
I see no issues with any of the above.
> Neither this policy nor any decisions made regarding targets shall create any binding agreement or estoppel by any party. If any member of an approving Rust team serves as one of the maintainers of a target, or has any legal or employment requirement (explicit or implicit) that might affect their decisions regarding a target, they must recuse themselves from any approval decisions regarding the target's tier status, though they may otherwise participate in discussions.
> This requirement does not prevent part or all of this policy from being cited in an explicit contract or work agreement (e.g. to implement or maintain support for a target). This requirement exists to ensure that a developer or team responsible for reviewing and approving a target does not face any legal threats or obligations that would prevent them from freely exercising their judgment in such approval, even if such judgment involves subjective matters or goes beyond the letter of these requirements.
Only relevant to those making approval decisions.
> Tier 3 targets should attempt to implement as much of the standard libraries as possible and appropriate (core for most targets, alloc for targets that can support dynamic memory allocation, std for targets with an operating system or equivalent layer of system-provided functionality), but may leave some code unimplemented (either unavailable or stubbed out as appropriate), whether because the target makes it impossible to implement or challenging to implement. The authors of pull requests are not obligated to avoid calling any portions of the standard library on the basis of a tier 3 target not implementing those portions.
core and alloc can be used. std support will be added in a subsequent PR.
> The target must provide documentation for the Rust community explaining how to build for the target, using cross-compilation if possible. If the target supports running tests (even if they do not pass), the documentation must explain how to run tests for the target, using emulation if possible or dedicated hardware if necessary.
Use --target=<target> option to cross compile, just like any target. Tests can be run using the WatchOS simulator (see https://developer.apple.com/documentation/xcode/running-your-app-in-the-simulator-or-on-a-device).
> Tier 3 targets must not impose burden on the authors of pull requests, or other developers in the community, to maintain the target. In particular, do not post comments (automated or manual) on a PR that derail or suggest a block on the PR based on a tier 3 target. Do not send automated messages or notifications (via any medium, including via `@)` to a PR author or others involved with a PR regarding a tier 3 target, unless they have opted into such messages.
> Backlinks such as those generated by the issue/PR tracker when linking to an issue or PR are not considered a violation of this policy, within reason. However, such messages (even on a separate repository) must not generate notifications to anyone involved with a PR who has not requested such notifications.
I don't foresee this being a problem.
> Patches adding or updating tier 3 targets must not break any existing tier 2 or tier 1 target, and must not knowingly break another tier 3 target without approval of either the compiler team or the maintainers of the other tier 3 target.
> In particular, this may come up when working on closely related targets, such as variations of the same architecture with different features. Avoid introducing unconditional uses of features that another variation of the target may not have; use conditional compilation or runtime detection, as appropriate, to let each target run code supported by that target.
No other targets should be affected by the pull request.
Improve parser diagnostics
This pr fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93867 and contains a couple of diagnostics related changes to the parser.
Here is a short list with some of the changes:
- don't suggest the same thing that is the current token
- suggest removing the current token if the following token is one of the suggestions (maybe incorrect)
- tell the user to put a type or lifetime after where if there is none (as a warning)
- reduce the amount of tokens suggested (via the new eat_noexpect and check_noexpect methods)
If any of these changes are undesirable, i can remove them, thanks!
Remove unnecessary `to_string` and `String::new`
73fa217bc1 changed the type of the `suggestion` argument to `impl ToString`. This patch removes unnecessary `to_string` and `String::new`.
cc: `````@davidtwco`````
Make `type_changing_struct_update` no longer an incomplete feature
After #97705, I don't see what would make it incomplete anymore. `check_expr_struct_fields` seems to now implement the RFC to the letter.
r? ``````@nikomatsakis``````
cc ``````@rust-lang/types``````
interpret: unify offset_from check with offset check
`offset` does the check with a single `check_ptr_access` call while `offset_from` used two calls. Make them both just one one call.
I originally intended to actually factor this into a common function, but I am no longer sure if that makes a lot of sense... the two functions start with pretty different precondition (e.g. `offset` *knows* that the 2nd pointer has the same provenance).
I also reworded the UB messages a little. Saying it "cannot" do something is not how we usually phrase UB (as far as I know). Instead it's not *allowed* to do that.
r? ``````@oli-obk``````