builtin-derive: tag → discriminant
As far as I can tell, all of this operates on the discriminant, not the tag. After all, with something like `Option<&T>`, the "tag" of the `Some` variant is basically just the reference value, which is never what you want to compare when figuring out which variant the enum is in.
See [here](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/appendix/glossary.html) for an explanation of the difference between tag and discriminant.
Add the missing inttoptr when we ptrtoint in ptr atomics
Ralf noticed this here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122220#discussion_r1535172094
Our previous codegen forgot to add the cast back to integer type. The code compiles anyway, because of course all locals are in-memory to start with, so previous codegen would do the integer atomic, store the integer to a local, then load a pointer from that local. Which is definitely _not_ what we wanted: That's an integer-to-pointer transmute, so all pointers returned by these `AtomicPtr` methods didn't have provenance. Yikes.
Here's the IR for `AtomicPtr::fetch_byte_add` on 1.76: https://godbolt.org/z/8qTEjeraY
```llvm
define noundef ptr `@atomicptr_fetch_byte_add(ptr` noundef nonnull align 8 %a, i64 noundef %v) unnamed_addr #0 !dbg !7 {
start:
%0 = alloca ptr, align 8, !dbg !12
%val = inttoptr i64 %v to ptr, !dbg !12
call void `@llvm.lifetime.start.p0(i64` 8, ptr %0), !dbg !28
%1 = ptrtoint ptr %val to i64, !dbg !28
%2 = atomicrmw add ptr %a, i64 %1 monotonic, align 8, !dbg !28
store i64 %2, ptr %0, align 8, !dbg !28
%self = load ptr, ptr %0, align 8, !dbg !28
call void `@llvm.lifetime.end.p0(i64` 8, ptr %0), !dbg !28
ret ptr %self, !dbg !33
}
```
r? `@RalfJung`
cc `@nikic`
compiletest ice tracking
see https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/where.20to.20mass-add.20known.20ices.20.2F.20merging.20glacier.20into.20rust/near/429082963
This will allow us to sunset most of https://github.com/rust-lang/glacier
The rustc ices will be tracked directly inside the rust testsuite
There are a couple of .sh tests remaining that I have not ported over yet.
This adds `tests/crashes`, a file inside this directory MUST ice, otherwise it is considered test-fail.
This will be used to track ICEs from glacier and the bugtracker.
When someones pr accidentally fixes one of these ICEs, they can move the test from `crashes` into `ui` for example.
I also added a new tidy lint that warns when a test inside `tests/crashes` does not have a `//@ known-bug: ` line
the env var `COMPILETEST_VERBOSE_CRASHES` can be set to get exit code, stderr and stdout of a crash-test to aid debugging/adding tests.
Discard overflow obligations in `impl_may_apply`
Hacky fix for #123493. Throws away obligations that are overflowing in `impl_may_apply` when we recompute if an impl applies, since those will lead to fatal overflow if processed during fulfillment.
Something about #114811 (I think it's the predicate reordering) caused us to evaluate predicates differently in error reporting leading to fatal overflow, though I believe the underlying overflow is possible to hit since this code was rewritten to use fulfillment.
Fixes#123493
Get rid of `USIZE_MARKER` in formatting infrastructure
An alternative to #123780.
The `USIZE_MARKER` function used to differentiate between placeholder and count arguments is never called anyway, so we can just replace the function-pointer-comparison hack with an `enum` and an `unreachable_unchecked`, hopefully without causing a regression.
CC `@RalfJung`
Linker flavors next steps: linker features
This is my understanding of the first step towards `@petrochenkov's` vision for the future of linker flavors, described in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119906#issuecomment-1895693162 and the discussion that followed.
To summarize: having `Cc` and `Lld` embedded in linker flavors creates tension about naming, and a combinatorial explosion of flavors for each new linker feature we'd want to use. Linker features are an extension mechanism that is complementary to principal flavors, with benefits described in #119906.
The most immediate use of this flag would be to turn self-contained linking on and off via features instead of flavors. For example, `-Clinker-features=+/-lld` would toggle using lld instead of selecting a precise flavor, and would be "generic" and work cross-platform (whereas linker flavors are currently more tied to targets). Under this scheme, MCP510 is expected to be `-Clink-self-contained=+linker -Zlinker-features=+lld -Zunstable-options` (though for the time being, the original flags using lld-cc flavors still work).
I purposefully didn't add or document CLI support for `+/-cc`, as it would be a noop right now. I only expect that we'd initially want to stabilize `+/-lld` to begin with.
r? `@petrochenkov`
You had requested that minimal churn would be done to the 230 target specs and this does none yet: the linker features are inferred from the flavor since they're currently isomorphic. We of course expect this to change sooner rather than later.
In the future, we can allow targets to define linker features independently from their flavor, and remove the cc and lld components from the flavors to use the features instead, this actually doesn't need to block stabilization, as we discussed.
(Best reviewed per commit)
Detect borrow checker errors where `.clone()` would be an appropriate user action
When a value is moved twice, suggest cloning the earlier move:
```
error[E0509]: cannot move out of type `U2`, which implements the `Drop` trait
--> $DIR/union-move.rs:49:18
|
LL | move_out(x.f1_nocopy);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| cannot move out of here
| move occurs because `x.f1_nocopy` has type `ManuallyDrop<RefCell<i32>>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | move_out(x.f1_nocopy.clone());
| ++++++++
```
When a value is borrowed by an `fn` call, consider if cloning the result of the call would be reasonable, and suggest cloning that, instead of the argument:
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `a` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/variance-issue-20533.rs:53:14
|
LL | let a = AffineU32(1);
| - binding `a` declared here
LL | let x = bat(&a);
| -- borrow of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(a);
| ^ move out of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(x);
| - borrow later used here
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | let x = bat(&a).clone();
| ++++++++
```
otherwise, suggest cloning the argument:
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `a` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/variance-issue-20533.rs:59:14
|
LL | let a = ClonableAffineU32(1);
| - binding `a` declared here
LL | let x = foo(&a);
| -- borrow of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(a);
| ^ move out of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(x);
| - borrow later used here
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL - let x = foo(&a);
LL + let x = foo(a.clone());
|
```
This suggestion doesn't attempt to square out the types between what's cloned and what the `fn` expects, to allow the user to make a determination on whether to change the `fn` call or `fn` definition themselves.
Special case move errors caused by `FnOnce`:
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `blk`
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:8:5
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| --- move occurs because `blk` has type `F`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
LL | blk();
| ----- `blk` moved due to this call
LL | blk();
| ^^^ value used here after move
|
note: `FnOnce` closures can only be called once
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:6:10
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| ^^^^^^^^ `F` is made to be an `FnOnce` closure here
LL | blk();
| ----- this value implements `FnOnce`, which causes it to be moved when called
```
Account for redundant `.clone()` calls in resulting suggestions:
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of dereference of `S`
--> $DIR/needs-clone-through-deref.rs:15:18
|
LL | for _ in self.clone().into_iter() {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ----------- value moved due to this method call
| |
| move occurs because value has type `Vec<usize>`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
note: `into_iter` takes ownership of the receiver `self`, which moves value
--> $SRC_DIR/core/src/iter/traits/collect.rs:LL:COL
help: you can `clone` the value and consume it, but this might not be your desired behavior
|
LL | for _ in <Vec<usize> as Clone>::clone(&self).into_iter() {}
| ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ~
```
We use the presence of `&mut` values in a move error as a proxy for the user caring about side effects, so we don't emit a clone suggestion in that case:
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `s` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/borrowck-overloaded-index-move-index.rs:53:7
|
LL | let mut s = "hello".to_string();
| ----- binding `s` declared here
LL | let rs = &mut s;
| ------ borrow of `s` occurs here
...
LL | f[s] = 10;
| ^ move out of `s` occurs here
...
LL | use_mut(rs);
| -- borrow later used here
```
We properly account for `foo += foo;` errors where we *don't* suggest `foo.clone() += foo;`, instead suggesting `foo += foo.clone();`.
---
Each commit can be reviewed in isolation. There are some "cleanup" commits, but kept them separate in order to show *why* specific changes were being made, and their effect on tests' output.
Fix#49693, CC #64167.
Avoid more NonNull-raw-NonNull roundtrips in Vec
r? the8472
The standard library in general has a lot of these round-trips from niched types to their raw innards and back. Such round-trips have overhead in debug builds since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120594. I removed some such round-trips in that initial PR and I've been meaning to come back and hunt down more such examples (this is the last item on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120848).
Add `/System/iOSSupport` to the library search path on Mac Catalyst
On macOS, `/System/iOSSupport` contains iOS frameworks like UIKit, which is the whole idea of Mac Catalyst.
To link to these, we need to explicitly tell the linker about the support library stubs provided in the macOS SDK under the same path.
Concretely, when building a binary for Mac Catalyst, Xcode passes the following flags to the linker:
```
-iframework /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/System/Library/Frameworks
-L/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX14.2.sdk/System/iOSSupport/usr/lib
```
This is not something that can be disabled (it's enabled as soon as you enable `SUPPORTS_MACCATALYST`), so I think it's pretty safe to say that we don't need an option to turn these off.
I've chosen to slightly deviate from what Xcode does and use `-F` instead of `-iframework`, since we don't need to change the header search path, and this way the flags nicely match on all the linkers. From what I could tell by reading Clang sources, there shouldn't be a difference when just running the linker.
CC `@BlackHoleFox,` `@shepmaster` (I accidentally let rustbot choose the reviewer).
typeck: fix `?` suggestion span
Noticed in <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112043#issuecomment-2043565292>, if the
```
use the `?` operator to extract the `Result<(), std::fmt::Error>` value, propagating a `Result::Err` value to the caller
```
suggestion is applied to a macro that comes from a non-local crate (e.g. the stdlib), the suggestion span can become non-local, which will cause newer rustfix versions to fail.
This PR tries to remedy the problem by recursively probing ancestors of the expression span, trying to identify the most ancestor span that is (1) still local, and (2) still shares the same syntax context as the expression.
This is the same strategy used in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112043.
The test unfortunately cannot `//@ run-rustfix` because there are two conflicting MaybeIncorrect suggestions that when collectively applied, cause the fixed source file to become non-compilable.
Also avoid running `//@ run-rustfix` for `tests/ui/typeck/issue-112007-leaked-writeln-macro-internals.rs` because that also contains conflicting suggestions.
cc `@ehuss` who noticed this. This question mark span fix + not running rustfix on the tests containing conflicting MaybeIncorrect suggestions should hopefully unblock rustfix from updating.
The suggestion to use `let else` with an uninitialized refutable `let`
statement was erroneous: `let else` cannot be used with deferred
initialization.
Improve diagnostic by suggesting to remove visibility qualifier
Resolves#123529
This PR improve diagnostic by suggesting to remove visibility qualifier.
Fix invalid silencing of parsing error
Given
```rust
macro_rules! a {
( ) => {
impl<'b> c for d {
e::<f'g>
}
};
}
```
ensure an error is emitted.
Fix#123079.
Don't delay a bug if we suggest adding a semicolon to the RHS of an assign operator
It only makes sense to delay a bug based on the assumption that "[we] defer to the later error produced by `check_lhs_assignable`" *if* the expression we're erroring actually is an LHS; otherwise, we should still report the error since it's both useful and required.
Fixes#123722
Fix revisions syntax in cfg(ub_checks) test
`//@ revisions YES NO` doesn't do anything without the `:`. Thanks for pointing this out to me.
r? jieyouxu
Set the host library path in run-make v2
When the build is configured with `[rust] rpath = false`, we need to set
`LD_LIBRARY_PATH` (or equivalent) to what would have been the `RPATH`,
so the compiler can find its own libraries. The old `tools.mk` code has
this environment prefixed in the `$(BARE_RUSTC)` variable, so we just
need to wire up something similar for run-make v2.
This is now set while building each `rmake.rs` itself, as well as in the
`rust-make-support` helpers for `rustc` and `rustdoc` commands. This is
also available in a `set_host_rpath` function for manual commands, like
in the `compiler-builtins` test.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #122882 (Avoid a panic in `set_output_capture` in the default panic handler)
- #123523 (Account for trait/impl difference when suggesting changing argument from ref to mut ref)
- #123744 (Silence `unused_imports` for redundant imports)
- #123784 (Replace `document.write` with `document.head.insertAdjacent`)
- #123798 (Avoid invalid socket address in length calculation)
- #123804 (Stop using `HirId` for fn-like parents since closures are not `OwnerNode`s)
- #123806 (Panic on overflow in `BorrowedCursor::advance`)
- #123820 (Add my former address to .mailmap)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Stop using `HirId` for fn-like parents since closures are not `OwnerNode`s
This is a minimal fix for #123273.
I'm overall pretty disappointed w/ the state of this code; although it's "just diagnostics", it still should be maintainable and understandable and neither of those are true. I believe this code really needs some major overhauling before anything more should be added to it, because there are subtle invariants that are being exercised and subsequently broken all over the place, and I don't think we should just paper over them (e.g.) by delaying bugs or things like that. I wouldn't be surprised if fixing up this code would also yield better diagnostics.
Silence `unused_imports` for redundant imports
Quick fix for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121708#issuecomment-2048105393
r? `@petrochenkov` cc `@joshtriplett`
I think this is right, would like confirmation. I also think it's weird that we're using `=` to assign to `is_redundant` but using `per_ns` for the actual spans. Seems like this could be weirdly order dependent, but that's unrelated to this change.
Account for trait/impl difference when suggesting changing argument from ref to mut ref
Do not ICE when encountering a lifetime error involving an argument with an immutable reference of a method that differs from the trait definition.
Fix#123414.
codegen tests: Tolerate `nuw` `nsw` on `trunc`
llvm/llvm-project#87910 infers `nuw` and `nsw` on some `trunc` instructions we're doing `FileCheck` on. Tolerate but don't require them to support both release and head LLVM.
`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main
cc `@durin42`
Correctly handle inlining of doc hidden foreign items
Fixes#123435.
In case a foreign item has doc(hidden) attribute, we simply merged its attributes with the re-export's, making it being removed once in the `strip_hidden` pass.
The solution was to use the same as for local reexported items: merge attributes, but not some of them (like `doc(hidden)`).
I originally checked if we could simply update `Item::is_doc_hidden` method to use `self.inline_stmt_id.is_some_and(|def_id| tcx.is_doc_hidden(def_id))` but unfortunately, it added (local) items that shouldn't be inlined. At least it unifies local and foreign items inlining, which I think is the best course of action here.
r? `@notriddle`
llvm/llvm-project#87910 infers `nuw` and `nsw` on some `trunc`
instructions we're doing `FileCheck` on. Tolerate but don't require them
to support both release and head LLVM.
We attempt to suggest an appropriate clone for move errors on expressions
like `S { ..s }` where a field isn't `Copy`. If we can't suggest, we still don't
emit the incorrect suggestion of `S { ..s }.clone()`.
```
error[E0509]: cannot move out of type `S<K>`, which implements the `Drop` trait
--> $DIR/borrowck-struct-update-with-dtor.rs:28:19
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, ..s0 };
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| cannot move out of here
| move occurs because `s0.c` has type `K`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
help: clone the value from the field instead of using the spread operator syntax
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, c: s0.c.clone(), ..s0 };
| +++++++++++++++++
```
```
error[E0509]: cannot move out of type `S<()>`, which implements the `Drop` trait
--> $DIR/borrowck-struct-update-with-dtor.rs:20:19
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, ..s0 };
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| cannot move out of here
| move occurs because `s0.b` has type `B`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
note: `B` doesn't implement `Copy` or `Clone`
--> $DIR/borrowck-struct-update-with-dtor.rs:4:1
|
LL | struct B;
| ^^^^^^^^
help: if `B` implemented `Clone`, you could clone the value from the field instead of using the spread operator syntax
|
LL | let _s2 = S { a: 2, b: s0.b.clone(), ..s0 };
| +++++++++++++++++
```
```
error[E0382]: use of moved value: `blk`
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:8:5
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| --- move occurs because `blk` has type `F`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
LL | blk();
| ----- `blk` moved due to this call
LL | blk();
| ^^^ value used here after move
|
note: `FnOnce` closures can only be called once
--> $DIR/once-cant-call-twice-on-heap.rs:6:10
|
LL | fn foo<F:FnOnce()>(blk: F) {
| ^^^^^^^^ `F` is made to be an `FnOnce` closure here
LL | blk();
| ----- this value implements `FnOnce`, which causes it to be moved when called
```
```
error[E0505]: cannot move out of `a` because it is borrowed
--> $DIR/variance-issue-20533.rs:28:14
|
LL | let a = AffineU32(1);
| - binding `a` declared here
LL | let x = foo(&a);
| -- borrow of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(a);
| ^ move out of `a` occurs here
LL | drop(x);
| - borrow later used here
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | let x = foo(&a).clone();
| ++++++++
```
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `val`, a captured variable in an `FnMut` closure
--> $DIR/issue-87456-point-to-closure.rs:10:28
|
LL | let val = String::new();
| --- captured outer variable
LL |
LL | take_mut(|| {
| -- captured by this `FnMut` closure
LL |
LL | let _foo: String = val;
| ^^^ move occurs because `val` has type `String`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
help: consider borrowing here
|
LL | let _foo: String = &val;
| +
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL | let _foo: String = val.clone();
| ++++++++
```
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `*x` which is behind a shared reference
--> $DIR/borrowck-fn-in-const-a.rs:6:16
|
LL | return *x
| ^^ move occurs because `*x` has type `String`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
|
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
|
LL - return *x
LL + return x.clone()
|
```
Make the computation of `coroutine_captures_by_ref_ty` more sophisticated
Currently, we treat all the by-(mut/)ref borrows of a coroutine-closure as having a "closure env" borrowed lifetime.
When we have the given code:
```rust
let x: &'a i32 = ...;
let c = async || {
let _x = *x;
};
```
Then when we call:
```rust
c()
// which, because `AsyncFn` takes a `&self`, we insert an autoref:
(&c /* &'env {coroutine-closure} */)()
```
We will return a future whose captures contain `&'env i32` instead of `&'a i32`, which is way more restrictive than necessary. We should be able to drop `c` while the future is alive since it's not actually borrowing any data *originating from within* the closure's captures, but since the capture has that `'env` lifetime, this is not possible.
This wouldn't be true, for example, if the closure captured `i32` instead of `&'a i32`, because the `'env` lifetime is actually *necessary* since the data (`i32`) is owned by the closure.
This PR identifies two criteria where we *need* to take the borrow with the closure env lifetime:
1. If the closure borrows data from inside the closure's captures. This is not true if the parent capture is by-ref, OR if the parent capture is by-move and the child capture begins with a deref projection. This is the example described above.
2. If we're dealing with mutable references, since we cannot reborrow `&'env mut &'a mut i32` into `&'a mut i32`, *only* `&'env mut i32`.
See the documentation on `should_reborrow_from_env_of_parent_coroutine_closure` for more info.
**important:** As disclaimer states on that function, luckily, if this heuristic is not correct, then the program is not unsound, since we still borrowck and validate the choices made from this function -- the only side-effect is that the user may receive unnecessary borrowck errors.
Fixes#123241
Tweak value suggestions in `borrowck` and `hir_analysis`
Unify the output of `suggest_assign_value` and `ty_kind_suggestion`.
Ideally we'd make these a single function, but doing so would likely require modify the crate dependency tree.
Rework ptr-to-ref conversion suggestion for method calls
If we have a value `z` of type `*const u8` and try to call `z.to_string()`, the upstream compiler will show you a note suggesting to call `<*const u8>::as_ref` first.
This PR extends that:
- The note will only be shown when the method would exist on the corresponding reference type
- It can now suggest any of `<*const u8>::as_ref`, `<*mut u8>::as_ref` and `<*mut u8>::as_mut`, depending on what the method needs.
I didn't introduce a `help` message because that's not a good idea with `unsafe` functions (and you'd also need to unwrap the `Option<&_>` somehow).
People should check the safety requirements.
For the simplest case
```rust
fn main() {
let x = 8u8;
let z: *const u8 = &x;
// issue #21596
println!("{}", z.to_string()); //~ ERROR E0599
}
```
the output changes like this:
```diff
error[E0599]: `*const u8` doesn't implement `std::fmt::Display`
--> $DIR/suggest-convert-ptr-to-ref.rs:5:22
|
LL | println!("{}", z.to_string());
| ^^^^^^^^^ `*const u8` cannot be formatted with the default formatter
|
- = note: try using `<*const T>::as_ref()` to get a reference to the type behind the pointer: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.pointer.html#method.as_ref
- = note: using `<*const T>::as_ref()` on a pointer which is unaligned or points to invalid or uninitialized memory is undefined behavior
+note: the method `to_string` exists on the type `&u8`
+ --> $SRC_DIR/alloc/src/string.rs:LL:COL
+ = note: try using the unsafe method `<*const T>::as_ref` to get an optional reference to the value behind the pointer: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.pointer.html#method.as_ref
= note: the following trait bounds were not satisfied:
`*const u8: std::fmt::Display`
which is required by `*const u8: ToString`
```
I removed the separate note about the safety requirements because it was incomplete and the linked doc page already has the information you need.
Fixes#83695, but that's more of a side effect. The upstream compiler already suggests the right method name here.
Provide suggestion to dereference closure tail if appropriate
When encoutnering a case like
```rust
use std::collections::HashMap;
fn main() {
let vs = vec![0, 0, 1, 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 3, 3, 3];
let mut counts = HashMap::new();
for num in vs {
let count = counts.entry(num).or_insert(0);
*count += 1;
}
let _ = counts.iter().max_by_key(|(_, v)| v);
```
produce the following suggestion
```
error: lifetime may not live long enough
--> $DIR/return-value-lifetime-error.rs:13:47
|
LL | let _ = counts.iter().max_by_key(|(_, v)| v);
| ------- ^ returning this value requires that `'1` must outlive `'2`
| | |
| | return type of closure is &'2 &i32
| has type `&'1 (&i32, &i32)`
|
help: dereference the return value
|
LL | let _ = counts.iter().max_by_key(|(_, v)| **v);
| ++
```
Fix#50195.
When the build is configured with `[rust] rpath = false`, we need to set
`LD_LIBRARY_PATH` (or equivalent) to what would have been the `RPATH`,
so the compiler can find its own libraries. The old `tools.mk` code has
this environment prefixed in the `$(BARE_RUSTC)` variable, so we just
need to wire up something similar for run-make v2.
This is now set while building each `rmake.rs` itself, as well as in the
`rust-make-support` helpers for `rustc` and `rustdoc` commands. This is
also available in a `set_host_rpath` function for manual commands, like
in the `compiler-builtins` test.
Use `suggest_impl_trait` in return type suggestion on type error
Discovered while doing other refactoring. Review with whitespace disabled.
r? estebank
Use `fn` ptr signature instead of `{closure@..}` in infer error
When suggesting a type on inference error, do not use `{closure@..}`. Instead, replace with an appropriate `fn` ptr.
On the error message, use `short_ty_string` and write long types to disk.
```
error[E0284]: type annotations needed for `Select<{closure@lib.rs:2782:13}, _, Expression<'_>, _>`
--> crates/lang/src/parser.rs:41:13
|
41 | let lit = select! {
| ^^^
42 | Token::Int(i) = e => Expression::new(Expr::Lit(ast::Lit::Int(i.parse().unwrap())), e.span()),
| ---- type must be known at this point
|
= note: the full type name has been written to '/home/gh-estebank/iowo/target/debug/deps/lang-e2d6e25819442273.long-type-4587393693885174369.txt'
= note: cannot satisfy `<_ as chumsky::input::Input<'_>>::Span == SimpleSpan`
help: consider giving `lit` an explicit type, where the type for type parameter `I` is specified
|
41 | let lit: Select<for<'a, 'b> fn(tokens::Token<'_>, &'a mut MapExtra<'_, 'b, _, _>) -> Option<Expression<'_>>, _, Expression<'_>, _> = select! {
| +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
instead of
```
error[E0284]: type annotations needed for `Select<{closure@/home/gh-estebank/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/chumsky-1.0.0-alpha.6/src/lib.rs:2782:13: 2782:28}, _, Expression<'_>, _>`
--> crates/lang/src/parser.rs:41:13
|
41 | let lit = select! {
| ^^^
42 | Token::Int(i) = e => Expression::new(Expr::Lit(ast::Lit::Int(i.parse().unwrap())), e.span()),
| ---- type must be known at this point
|
= note: cannot satisfy `<_ as chumsky::input::Input<'_>>::Span == SimpleSpan`
help: consider giving `lit` an explicit type, where the type for type parameter `I` is specified
|
41 | let lit: Select<{closure@/home/gh-estebank/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/chumsky-1.0.0-alpha.6/src/lib.rs:2782:13: 2782:28}, _, Expression<'_>, _> = select! {
| ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
Address #123630 (test missing).
Skip `unused_parens` report for `Paren(Path(..))` in macro.
fixes#120642
In following code, `unused_parens` suggest change `<($($rest),*)>::bar()` to `<$rest>::bar()` which will cause another err: `error: variable 'rest' is still repeating at this depth`:
```rust
trait Foo {
fn bar();
}
macro_rules! problem {
($ty:ident) => {
impl<$ty: Foo> Foo for ($ty,) {
fn bar() { <$ty>::bar() }
}
};
($ty:ident $(, $rest:ident)*) => {
impl<$ty: Foo, $($rest: Foo),*> Foo for ($ty, $($rest),*) {
fn bar() {
<$ty>::bar();
<($($rest),*)>::bar()
}
}
problem!($($rest),*);
}
}
```
I think maybe we can handle this by avoid warning for `Paren(Path(..))` in the macro. Is this reasonable approach?
`f16` and `f128` step 4: basic library support
This is the next step after https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121926, another portion of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114607
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116909
This PR adds the most basic operations to `f16` and `f128` that get lowered as LLVM intrinsics. This is a very small step but it seemed reasonable enough to add unopinionated basic operations before the larger modules that are built on top of them.
r? ```@Amanieu``` since you were pretty involved in the RFC
cc ```@compiler-errors```
```@rustbot``` label +T-libs-api +S-blocked +F-f16_and_f128
Do not accept the following
```rust
macro_rules! lexes {($($_:tt)*) => {}}
lexes!(🐛"foo");
```
Before, invalid emoji identifiers were gated during parsing instead of lexing in all cases, but this didn't account for macro expansion of literal prefixes.
Fix#123696.
Propagate temporary lifetime extension into if and match.
This PR makes this work:
```rust
let a = if true {
..;
&temp() // used to error, but now gets lifetime extended
} else {
..;
&temp() // used to error, but now gets lifetime extended
};
```
and
```rust
let a = match () {
_ => {
..;
&temp() // used to error, but now gets lifetime extended
}
};
```
to make it consistent with:
```rust
let a = {
..;
&temp() // lifetime is extended
};
```
This is one small part of [the temporary lifetimes work](https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/issues/253).
This part is backwards compatible (so doesn't need be edition-gated), because all code affected by this change previously resulted in a hard error.
Further cleanup cfgs in the UI test suite
This PR does more cleanup of cfgs in our UI test suite, in preparation for adding automatic always on check-cfg (but is IMO worth landing even without that follow up).
To be more specific this PR:
- replaces (the last remaining) never true cfgs by the `FALSE` cfg
- fix `proc-macro/derive-helper-configured.rs` *(typo in directive)*
- and comment some current unused `#[cfg_attr]` *(missing revisions)*
Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123577.
Only assert for child/parent projection compatibility AFTER checking that theyre coming from the same place
This assertion doesn't make sense until we check that these captures are actually equivalent.
Fixes#123697
<sub>Some days I wonder how I even write code that works...</sub>
Add support to intrinsics fallback body
Before this fix, the call to `body()` would crash, since `has_body()` would return true, but we would try to retrieve the body of an intrinsic which is not allowed.
Instead, the `Instance::body()` function will now convert an Intrinsic into an Item before retrieving its body.
Note: I also changed how we monomorphize the instance body. Unfortunately, the call still ICE for some shims.
r? `@oli-obk`
Add `REDUNDANT_LIFETIMES` lint to detect lifetimes which are semantically redundant
There already is a `UNUSED_LIFETIMES` lint which is fired when we detect where clause bounds like `where 'a: 'static`, however, it doesn't use the full power of lexical region resolution to detect failures.
Right now `UNUSED_LIFETIMES` is an `Allow` lint, though presumably we could bump it to warn? I can (somewhat) easily implement a structured suggestion so this can be rustfix'd automatically, since we can just walk through the HIR body, replacing instances of the redundant lifetime.
Fixes#118376
r? lcnr
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #121884 (Port exit-code run-make test to use rust)
- #122200 (Unconditionally show update nightly hint on ICE)
- #123568 (Clean up tests/ui by removing `does-nothing.rs`)
- #123609 (Don't use bytepos offsets when computing semicolon span for removal)
- #123612 (Set target-abi module flag for RISC-V targets)
- #123633 (Store all args in the unsupported Command implementation)
- #123668 (async closure coroutine by move body MirPass refactoring)
Failed merges:
- #123701 (Only assert for child/parent projection compatibility AFTER checking that theyre coming from the same place)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Don't use bytepos offsets when computing semicolon span for removal
Causes problems when we recover confusable characters w/ a different byte width
Fixes#123607
Clean up tests/ui by removing `does-nothing.rs`
In [a previous PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123297#issuecomment-2039887806), it was suggested that this test be removed:
> it's testing a basic diagnostic for an unknown variable (added over a decade ago for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/154) that is already covered by probably dozens or hundreds of other tests.
It was then suggested that [opening a new PR](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123563#discussion_r1554654102) for this would be more organized.
I'm setting this as a draft, as:
1. The tests/ui directory is rather disorganized, a large quantity of tests are not even contained inside their own directories. This PR could turn into "clean up the UI tests directory", if I were to place everything into categories (for example, everything related to CLI flags could get placed in a cli directory).
2. This will have a merge conflict with #123563 should that get merged. I trust that _this time_, I won't run into [The Incident](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123297#issuecomment-2041137569) while rebasing. Edit: Yay, I did it properly!
Unconditionally show update nightly hint on ICE
Instead of trying to guess if a update nightly hint should be shown (by checking for system time, querying version and channel info etc.), just show the update nightly hint for nightly compilers. This avoids breaking tests that match on ICE test outputs on nightly/dev channels.
> Another issue is that the outdated nightly hint triggers for ICE tests, causing a mismatch with the test expectation. There doesn't seem to be any env var to suppress this.
See <https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/326414-t-infra.2Fbootstrap/topic/stage0.20compiletest.20broken/near/425543681> for context.
Port exit-code run-make test to use rust
As part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/121876
~~As draft because formatting will fail because `x fmt` isn't working for me for some reason, I'll debug that later, just opening this now for review, will mark as ready when formatting is fixed~~ (misleading message from x fmt)
cc `@jieyouxu`
When suggesting a type on inference error, do not use `{closure@..}`.
Instead, replace with an appropriate `fn` ptr.
On the error message, use `short_ty_string` and write long types to
disk.
```
error[E0284]: type annotations needed for `Select<{closure@lib.rs:2782:13}, _, Expression<'_>, _>`
--> crates/lang/src/parser.rs:41:13
|
41 | let lit = select! {
| ^^^
42 | Token::Int(i) = e => Expression::new(Expr::Lit(ast::Lit::Int(i.parse().unwrap())), e.span()),
| ---- type must be known at this point
|
= note: the full type name has been written to '/home/gh-estebank/iowo/target/debug/deps/lang-e2d6e25819442273.long-type-4587393693885174369.txt'
= note: cannot satisfy `<_ as chumsky::input::Input<'_>>::Span == SimpleSpan`
help: consider giving `lit` an explicit type, where the type for type parameter `I` is specified
|
41 | let lit: Select<for<'a, 'b> fn(tokens::Token<'_>, &'a mut MapExtra<'_, 'b, _, _>) -> Option<Expression<'_>>, _, Expression<'_>, _> = select! {
| +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
instead of
```
error[E0284]: type annotations needed for `Select<{closure@/home/gh-estebank/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/chumsky-1.0.0-alpha.6/src/lib.rs:2782:13: 2782:28}, _, Expression<'_>, _>`
--> crates/lang/src/parser.rs:41:13
|
41 | let lit = select! {
| ^^^
42 | Token::Int(i) = e => Expression::new(Expr::Lit(ast::Lit::Int(i.parse().unwrap())), e.span()),
| ---- type must be known at this point
|
= note: cannot satisfy `<_ as chumsky::input::Input<'_>>::Span == SimpleSpan`
help: consider giving `lit` an explicit type, where the type for type parameter `I` is specified
|
41 | let lit: Select<{closure@/home/gh-estebank/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/chumsky-1.0.0-alpha.6/src/lib.rs:2782:13: 2782:28}, _, Expression<'_>, _> = select! {
| ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
```
Fix#123630.
Unify the output of `suggest_assign_value` and `ty_kind_suggestion`.
Ideally we'd make these a single function, but doing so would likely require modify the crate dependency tree.
This commit does three things:
1. replaces (the last remaining) never true cfgs by the FALSE cfg
2. fix derive-helper-configured.rs (typo in directive)
3. and comment some current unused #[cfg_attr] (missing revisions)
I added this back in 111999, but I no longer think it's a good idea
- It had to get scaled back to only power-of-two things to not break a bunch of targets
- LLVM seems to be getting better at memcpy removal anyway
- Introducing vector instructions has seemed to sometimes (115515) make autovectorization worse
So this removes it from the codegen crates entirely, and instead just tries to use <https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_codegen_ssa/traits/builder/trait.BuilderMethods.html#method.typed_place_copy> instead of direct `memcpy` so things will still use load/store for immediates.
Don't rely on upvars being assigned just because coroutine-closure kind is assigned
Previously, code relied on the implicit assumption that if a coroutine-closure's kind variable was constrained, then its upvars were also constrained. This is because we assign all of them at once at the end up upvar analysis.
However, there's another way that a coroutine-closure's kind can be constrained: from a signature hint in closure signature deduction. After #123350, we use these hints, which means the implicit assumption above no longer holds.
This PR adds the necessary checks so that we don't ICE.
r? oli-obk
Stop making any assumption about the projections applied to the upvars in the `ByMoveBody` pass
So it turns out that because of subtle optimizations like [`truncate_capture_for_optimization`](ab5bda1aa7/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/upvar.rs (L2351)), we simply cannot make any assumptions about the shape of the projections applied to the upvar locals in a coroutine body.
So stop doing that -- the code is resilient to such projections, so the assertion really existed only to "protect against the unknown".
r? oli-obk
Fixes#123650
Split `non_local_definitions` lint tests in separate test files
This PR splits the giant `non_local_definitions` lint UI test in separate test files.
This change is extracted from #123594 (where it was requested https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123594#discussion_r1555261772), to ease the review of the other PR and to reduce the size of the other PR.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
rustdoc: synthetic auto: filter out clauses from the implementor's ParamEnv
... not just the elaborated clauses.
Fixes another regression introduced by me in #123340, oops!
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/123340#issuecomment-2034195786, cc ``@tamird.``
An earlier local iteration of branch `rustdoc-simplify-auto-trait-impl-synth` (PR #123340) contained a fix for issue #111101 before I decided to limit the scope. I must've introduced this bug when manually reverting that part of the code.
r? ``@GuillaumeGomez`` or rustdoc
Fix UI tests with dist-vendored dependencies
There is already a workaround in `compiletest` to deal with custom
`CARGO_HOME` using `-Zignore-directory-in-diagnostics-source-blocks={}`.
A similar need exists when dependencies come from the local `vendor`
directory, which distro builds often use, so now we ignore that too.
Also, `issue-21763.rs` was normalizing `hashbrown-` paths, presumably
expecting a version suffix, but the vendored path doesn't include the
version. Now that matches `[\\/]hashbrown` instead.
KCFI: Use legal charset in shim encoding
To separate `ReifyReason::FnPtr` from `ReifyReason::VTable`, we hyphenated the shims. Hyphens are not actually legal, but underscores are, so use those instead.
r? `@compiler-errors`