By changing some attributes to only_local, reducing encoding attributes in the crate metadate.
Thank you.
This is part of changing attributes to only_local. I hope get your opinion whether I should split into multiple PRs, or submit in one.
According to [try to not rely on attributes from extern crates](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/505) and lcnr's guidance.
avoid generalization inside of aliases
The basic idea of this PR is that we don't generalize aliases when the instantiation could fail later on, either due to the *occurs check* or because of a universe error. We instead replace the whole alias with an inference variable and emit a nested `AliasRelate` goal. This `AliasRelate` then fully normalizes the alias before equating it with the inference variable, at which point the alias can be treated like any other rigid type.
We now treat aliases differently depending on whether they are *rigid* or not. To detect whether an alias is rigid we check whether `NormalizesTo` fails. While we already do so inside of `AliasRelate` anyways, also doing so when instantiating a query response would be both ugly/difficult and likely inefficient. To avoid that I change `instantiate_and_apply_query_response` to relate types completely structurally. This change generally removes a lot of annoying complexity, which is nice. It's implemented by adding a flag to `Equate` to change it to structurally handle aliases.
We currently always apply constraints from canonical queries right away. By providing all the necessary information to the canonical query, we can guarantee that instantiating the query response never fails, which further simplifies the implementation. This does add the invariant that *any information which could cause instantiating type variables to fail must also be available inside of the query*.
While it's acceptable for canonicalization to result in more ambiguity, we must not cause the solver to incompletely structurally relate aliases by erasing information. This means we have to be careful when merging universes during canonicalization. As we only generalize for type and const variables we have to make sure that anything nameable by such a type or const variable inside of the canonical query is also nameable outside of it. Because of this we both stop merging universes of existential variables when canonicalizing inputs, we put all uniquified regions into a higher universe which is not nameable by any type or const variable.
I will look into always replacing aliases with inference variables when generalizing in a later PR unless the alias references bound variables. This should both pretty much fix https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/4. This may allow us to merge the universes of existential variables again by changing generalize to not consider their universe when deciding whether to generalize aliases. This requires some additional non-trivial changes to alias-relate, so I am leaving that as future work.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/79. While it would be nice to decrement universe indices when existing a `forall`, that was surprisingly difficult and not necessary to fix this issue. I am really happy with the approach in this PR think it is the correct way forward to also fix the remaining cases of https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/8.
only checking whether nested goals hold means that we don't consider
their inference constraints. Given that we now emit `AliasRelate` when relating
aliases and infer vars, this previously resulted in an "unconstrained" inference var
in `coerce_unsized`.
Fix more #121208 fallout (round 3)
#121208 converted lots of delayed bugs to bugs. Unsurprisingly, there were a few invalid conversion found via fuzzing.
r? `@lcnr`
Split Diagnostics for Uncommon Codepoints: Add Individual Identifier Types
This pull request further modifies the `uncommon_codepoints` lint, adding the individual identifier types of `Technical`, `Not_NFKC`, `Exclusion` and `Limited_Use` to the diagnostic message.
Example rendered diagnostic:
```
error: identifier contains a Unicode codepoint that is not used in normalized strings: 'ij'
--> $DIR/lint-uncommon-codepoints.rs:6:4
|
LL | fn dijkstra() {}
| ^^^^^^^
= note: this character is included in the Not_NFKC Unicode general security profile
```
Second step of #120228.
Add `StructurallyRelateAliases` to allow instantiating infer vars with rigid aliases.
Change `instantiate_query_response` to be infallible in the new solver. This requires canonicalization to not hide any information used by the query, so weaken
universe compression. It also modifies `term_is_fully_unconstrained` to allow
region inference variables in a higher universe.
Prevent cycle in implied predicates computation
Makes #65913 from hang -> fail. I believe fail is the correct state for this test to remain for the long term.
Add newtypes for bool fields/params/return types
Fixed all the cases of this found with some simple searches for `*/ bool` and `bool /*`; probably many more
Stabilize `cfg_target_abi`
This stabilizes the `cfg` option called `target_abi`:
```rust
#[cfg(target_abi = "eabihf")]
```
Tracking issue: #80970fixes#78791resolves#80970
Add `#[rustc_no_mir_inline]` for standard library UB checks
should help with #121110 and also with #120848
Because the MIR inliner cannot know whether the checks are enabled or not, so inlining is an unnecessary compile time pessimization when debug assertions are disabled. LLVM knows whether they are enabled or not, so it can optimize accordingly without wasting time.
r? `@saethlin`
promotion: don't promote int::MIN / -1
Looks like I entirely forgot about this case when adding the div-by-zero check, which was supposed to ensure that we never promote operations that can fail...
Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/80619
This is a breaking change, so needs a crater run.
r? ``@oli-obk``
match lowering: Split off `test_candidates` into several functions and improve comments
The logic of `test_candidates` has three steps: pick a test, sort the candidates, and generate code for everything. So I split it off into three methods.
I also ended up reworking the comments that explain the algorithm. In particular I added detailed examples. I removed the digression about https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29740 because it's no longer relevant to how the code is structured today.
r? ``@matthewjasper``
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #121435 (Account for RPITIT in E0310 explicit lifetime constraint suggestion)
- #121490 (Rustdoc: include crate name in links for local primitives)
- #121520 (delay cloning of iterator items)
- #121522 (check that simd_insert/extract indices are in-bounds)
- #121531 (Ignore less tests in debug builds)
- #121539 (compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/base/apple/tests.rs: Avoid unnecessary large move)
- #121542 (update stdarch)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/base/apple/tests.rs: Avoid unnecessary large move
Fixes:
$ MAGIC_EXTRA_RUSTFLAGS=-Zmove-size-limit=4096 ./x test compiler/rustc_target
error: moving 6216 bytes
--> compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/base/apple/tests.rs:17:19
|
17 | for target in all_sim_targets {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ value moved from here
|
= note: The current maximum size is 4096, but it can be customized with the move_size_limit attribute: `#![move_size_limit = "..."]`
= note: `-D large-assignments` implied by `-D warnings`
= help: to override `-D warnings` add `#[allow(large_assignments)]`
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83518
The goal is to enable the lint by default at one point. There are many cases where it needs to be allowed. But here we don't need to allow it. We can simply fix it.
I don't want to enable the lint in the file, because I don't want the "default size threshold for when a value is OK to move" to be duplicated in many places. We'll want the threshold in one central place once we enable it by default.
Account for RPITIT in E0310 explicit lifetime constraint suggestion
When given
```rust
trait Original {
fn f() -> impl Fn();
}
trait Erased {
fn f(&self) -> Box<dyn Fn()>;
}
impl<T: Original> Erased for T {
fn f(&self) -> Box<dyn Fn()> {
Box::new(<T as Original>::f())
}
}
```
emit do not emit an invalid suggestion restricting the `Trait::{opaque}` type in a `where` clause:
```
error[E0310]: the associated type `<T as Original>::{opaque#0}` may not live long enough
--> $DIR/missing-static-bound-from-impl.rs:11:9
|
LL | Box::new(<T as Original>::f())
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| the associated type `<T as Original>::{opaque#0}` must be valid for the static lifetime...
| ...so that the type `impl Fn()` will meet its required lifetime bounds
```
Partially address #119773. Ideally we'd suggest modifying `Erased::f` instead.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Fixes:
$ MAGIC_EXTRA_RUSTFLAGS=-Zmove-size-limit=4096 ./x test compiler/rustc_target
error: moving 6216 bytes
--> compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/base/apple/tests.rs:17:19
|
17 | for target in all_sim_targets {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ value moved from here
|
= note: The current maximum size is 4096, but it can be customized with the move_size_limit attribute: `#![move_size_limit = "..."]`
= note: `-D large-assignments` implied by `-D warnings`
= help: to override `-D warnings` add `#[allow(large_assignments)]`
coverage: Rename `is_closure` to `is_hole`
Extracted from #121433, since I was having second thoughts about some of the other changes bundled in that PR, but these changes are still fine.
---
When refining covspans, we don't specifically care which ones represent closures; we just want to know which ones represent "holes" that should be carved out of other spans and then discarded.
(Closures are currently the only source of hole spans, but in the future we might want to also create hole spans for nested items and inactive `#[cfg(..)]` regions.)
``@rustbot`` label +A-code-coverage
Don't ICE on anonymous struct in enum variant
Fixes#121446
Computing `adt_def` for the anon struct calls `adt_def` on the parent to find its repr. If the parent is a non-item (e.g. an enum variant) we should have already emitted at least one error, so we just use the repr of the anonymous struct to avoid an ICE.
cc ``@frank-king``
mark `min_exhaustive_patterns` as complete
This is step 1 and 2 of my [proposal](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119612#issuecomment-1918097361) to move `min_exhaustive_patterns` forward. The vast majority of in-tree use cases of `exhaustive_patterns` are covered by `min_exhaustive_patterns`. There are a few cases that still require `exhaustive_patterns` in tests and they're all behind references.
r? ``@ghost``
Thank you.
This is part of changing attributes to only_local. I hope get your opinion whether I should split into multiple PRs, or submit in one.
According to [try to not rely on attributes from extern crates](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/505) and lcnr's guidance.
region unification: update universe of region vars
necessary for #119106. see inline comment for why this is necessary
r? `@compiler-errors` `@BoxyUwU`
When refining covspans, we don't specifically care which ones represent
closures; we just want to know which ones represent "holes" that should be
carved out of other spans and then discarded.
(Closures are currently the only source of hole spans, but in the future we
might want to also create hole spans for nested items and inactive `#[cfg(..)]`
regions.)
coverage: Use variable name `this` in `CoverageGraph::from_mir`
A tiny little improvement, extracted from #120013.
This makes it easier to see that we're manipulating the instance that is being constructed, and is a lot less verbose than `basic_coverage_blocks`.
Allow for a missing `adt_def` in `NamePrivacyVisitor`.
This was caused by 72b172bdf6 in #121206. That commit removed an early return from `analysis` when there are stashed errors. As a result, it's possible to reach privacy analysis when there are stashed errors, which means more code paths can be reached. One such code path was handled in that commit, where a `span_bug` was changed to a `span_delayed_bug`.
This commit handles another such code path uncovered by fuzzing, in much the same way.
Fixes#121455.
r? `@oli-obk`
Fix more #121208 fallout
#121208 converted lots of delayed bugs to bugs. Unsurprisingly, there were a few invalid conversion found via fuzzing.
r? `@lcnr`
fix generalizer unsoundness
I ended up getting confused while trying to flip the variances when flipping the order. Should be all right now.
This is only exploitable when generalizing if the `ambient_variance` of the relation is `Contravariant`. This can currently only be the case in the NLL generalizer which only rarely generalizes, causing us to miss this regression. Very much an issue with #121462 however.
When encountering `<&T as Clone>::clone(x)` because `T: Clone`, suggest `#[derive(Clone)]`
CC #40699.
```
warning: call to `.clone()` on a reference in this situation does nothing
--> $DIR/noop-method-call.rs:23:71
|
LL | let non_clone_type_ref_clone: &PlainType<u32> = non_clone_type_ref.clone();
| ^^^^^^^^
|
= note: the type `PlainType<u32>` does not implement `Clone`, so calling `clone` on `&PlainType<u32>` copies the reference, which does not do anything and can be removed
help: remove this redundant call
|
LL - let non_clone_type_ref_clone: &PlainType<u32> = non_clone_type_ref.clone();
LL + let non_clone_type_ref_clone: &PlainType<u32> = non_clone_type_ref;
|
help: if you meant to clone `PlainType<u32>`, implement `Clone` for it
|
LL + #[derive(Clone)]
LL | struct PlainType<T>(T);
|
```
Provide suggestions through `rustc_confusables` annotations
Help with common API confusion, like asking for `push` when the data structure really has `append`.
```
error[E0599]: no method named `size` found for struct `Vec<{integer}>` in the current scope
--> $DIR/rustc_confusables_std_cases.rs:17:7
|
LL | x.size();
| ^^^^
|
help: you might have meant to use `len`
|
LL | x.len();
| ~~~
help: there is a method with a similar name
|
LL | x.resize();
| ~~~~~~
```
Fix#59450 (we can open subsequent tickets for specific cases).
Fix#108437:
```
error[E0599]: `Option<{integer}>` is not an iterator
--> f101.rs:3:9
|
3 | opt.flat_map(|val| Some(val));
| ^^^^^^^^ `Option<{integer}>` is not an iterator
|
::: /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/option.rs:571:1
|
571 | pub enum Option<T> {
| ------------------ doesn't satisfy `Option<{integer}>: Iterator`
|
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`Option<{integer}>: Iterator`
which is required by `&mut Option<{integer}>: Iterator`
help: you might have meant to use `and_then`
|
3 | opt.and_then(|val| Some(val));
| ~~~~~~~~
```
On type error of method call arguments, look at confusables for suggestion. Fix#87212:
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> f101.rs:8:18
|
8 | stuff.append(Thing);
| ------ ^^^^^ expected `&mut Vec<Thing>`, found `Thing`
| |
| arguments to this method are incorrect
|
= note: expected mutable reference `&mut Vec<Thing>`
found struct `Thing`
note: method defined here
--> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/alloc/src/vec/mod.rs:2025:12
|
2025 | pub fn append(&mut self, other: &mut Self) {
| ^^^^^^
help: you might have meant to use `push`
|
8 | stuff.push(Thing);
| ~~~~
```
This was caused by 72b172bdf6 in #121206. That commit removed an early
return from `analysis` when there are stashed errors. As a result, it's
possible to reach privacy analysis when there are stashed errors, which
means more code paths can be reached. One such code path was handled in
that commit, where a `span_bug` was changed to a `span_delayed_bug`.
This commit handles another such code path uncovered by fuzzing, in much
the same way.
Fixes#121455.
remove `sub_relations` from the `InferCtxt`
While doing so, I tried to remove the `delay_span_bug` in `rematch_impl` again, which lead me to discover another `freshen` bug, fixing that one in the second commit. See commit descriptions for the reasoning behind each change.
r? `@compiler-errors`
When given
```rust
trait Original {
fn f() -> impl Fn();
}
trait Erased {
fn f(&self) -> Box<dyn Fn()>;
}
impl<T: Original> Erased for T {
fn f(&self) -> Box<dyn Fn()> {
Box::new(<T as Original>::f())
}
}
```
avoid suggestion to restrict the `Trait::{opaque}` type in a `where` clause:
```
error[E0310]: the associated type `<T as Original>::{opaque#0}` may not live long enough
--> $DIR/missing-static-bound-from-impl.rs:11:9
|
LL | Box::new(<T as Original>::f())
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| the associated type `<T as Original>::{opaque#0}` must be valid for the static lifetime...
| ...so that the type `impl Fn()` will meet its required lifetime bounds
```
CC #119773.
Do not provide a structured suggestion when the arguments don't match.
```
error[E0599]: no method named `test_mut` found for struct `Vec<{integer}>` in the current scope
--> $DIR/auto-ref-slice-plus-ref.rs:7:7
|
LL | a.test_mut();
| ^^^^^^^^
|
= help: items from traits can only be used if the trait is implemented and in scope
note: `MyIter` defines an item `test_mut`, perhaps you need to implement it
--> $DIR/auto-ref-slice-plus-ref.rs:14:1
|
LL | trait MyIter {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^
help: there is a method `get_mut` with a similar name, but with different arguments
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/slice/mod.rs:LL:COL
```
Consider methods beyond inherent ones when suggesting typos.
```
error[E0599]: no method named `owned` found for reference `&dyn Foo` in the current scope
--> $DIR/object-pointer-types.rs:11:7
|
LL | fn owned(self: Box<Self>);
| --------- the method might not be found because of this arbitrary self type
...
LL | x.owned();
| ^^^^^ help: there is a method with a similar name: `to_owned`
```
Fix#101013.
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/rustc_confusables_std_cases.rs:20:14
|
LL | x.append(42);
| ------ ^^ expected `&mut Vec<{integer}>`, found integer
| |
| arguments to this method are incorrect
|
= note: expected mutable reference `&mut Vec<{integer}>`
found type `{integer}`
note: method defined here
--> $SRC_DIR/alloc/src/vec/mod.rs:LL:COL
help: you might have meant to use `push`
|
LL | x.push(42);
| ~~~~
```
Help with common API confusion, like asking for `push` when the data structure really has `append`.
```
error[E0599]: no method named `size` found for struct `Vec<{integer}>` in the current scope
--> $DIR/rustc_confusables_std_cases.rs:17:7
|
LL | x.size();
| ^^^^
|
help: you might have meant to use `len`
|
LL | x.len();
| ~~~
help: there is a method with a similar name
|
LL | x.resize();
| ~~~~~~
```
#59450