Fixes#92266
In some `HashStable` impls, we use a cache to avoid re-computing
the same `Fingerprint` from the same structure (e.g. an `AdtDef`).
However, the `StableHashingContext` used can be configured to
perform hashing in different ways (e.g. skipping `Span`s). This
configuration information is not included in the cache key,
which will cause an incorrect `Fingerprint` to be used if
we hash the same structure with different `StableHashingContext`
settings.
To fix this, the configuration settings of `StableHashingContext`
are split out into a separate `HashingControls` struct. This
struct is used as part of the cache key, ensuring that our caches
always produce the correct result for the given settings.
With this in place, we now turn off `Span` hashing during the
entire process of computing the hash included in legacy symbols.
This current has no effect, but will matter when a future PR
starts hashing more `Span`s that we currently skip.
Remove `NullOp::Box`
Follow up of #89030 and MCP rust-lang/compiler-team#460.
~1 month later nothing seems to be broken, apart from a small regression that #89332 (1aac85bb716c09304b313d69d30d74fe7e8e1a8e) shows could be regained by remvoing the diverging path, so it shall be safe to continue and remove `NullOp::Box` completely.
r? `@jonas-schievink`
`@rustbot` label T-compiler
Continue supporting -Z instrument-coverage for compatibility for now,
but show a deprecation warning for it.
Update uses and documentation to use the -C option.
Move the documentation from the unstable book to stable rustc
documentation.
Instead of special-casing mutable pointers/references, we
now support general generic types (currently, we handle
`ty::Ref`, `ty::RawPtr`, and `ty::Adt`)
When a `ty::Adt` is involved, we show an additional note
explaining which of the type's generic parameters is
invariant (e.g. the `T` in `Cell<T>`). Currently, we don't
explain *why* a particular generic parameter ends up becoming
invariant. In the general case, this could require printing
a long 'backtrace' of types, so doing this would be
more suitable for a follow-up PR.
We still only handle the case where our variance switches
to `ty::Invariant`.
rustc_metadata: Encode list of all crate's traits into metadata
While working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88679 I noticed that rustdoc is casually doing something quite expensive, something that is used only for error reporting in rustc - collecting all traits from all crates in the dependency tree.
This PR trades some minor extra time spent by metadata encoder in rustc for major gains for rustdoc (and for rustc runs with errors, which execute the `all_traits` query for better diagnostics).
CTFE eval_fn_call: use FnAbi to determine argument skipping and compatibility
This makes use of the `FnAbi` type in CTFE/Miri, which `@eddyb` has been saying for years is what we should do.^^ `FnAbi` is used to
- determine which arguments to skip (rather than the previous heuristic of skipping ZST arguments with the Rust ABI)
- impose further restrictions on whether caller and callee are consistent in how a given argument is passed
I was hoping it would also simplify the code, but that is not the case -- the previous type compatibility checks are still required (AFAIK), only the ZST skipping is gone and that took barely any code. We also need some hacks because `FnAbi` assumes a certain way of implementing `caller_location` (by passing extra arguments), but Miri can just read the caller location from the call stack so it doesn't need those arguments. (The fact that every backend has to separately implement support for these arguments seems suboptimal -- looks like this might have been better implemented on the MIR level.) To avoid having to implement those unnecessary arguments in Miri, we just compute *whether* the argument is present on the caller/callee side, but don't actually pass that argument around.
I have no idea if this looks the way `@eddyb` thinks it should look... but it makes Miri's test suite pass. ;)
One of rustc's tests fails unfortunately (`ui/const-generics/issues/issue-67739.rs`), some const generic code that is evaluated too early -- I think that should raise `TooGeneric` but instead it ICEs. My assumption is this is some FnAbi code that has not been properly tested on polymorphic code, but it might also be me calling that FnAbi code the wrong way.
r? `@oli-obk` `@eddyb`
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/56166
Miri PR at https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/1928
Store a `DefId` instead of an `AdtDef` in `AggregateKind::Adt`
The `AggregateKind` enum ends up in the final mir `Body`. Currently,
any changes to `AdtDef` (regardless of how significant they are)
will legitimately cause the overall result of `optimized_mir` to change,
invalidating any codegen re-use involving that mir.
This will get worse once we start hashing the `Span` inside `FieldDef`
(which is itself contained in `AdtDef`).
To try to reduce these kinds of invalidations, this commit changes
`AggregateKind::Adt` to store just the `DefId`, instead of the full
`AdtDef`. This allows the result of `optimized_mir` to be unchanged
if the `AdtDef` changes in a way that doesn't actually affect any
of the MIR we build.
Update chalk to 0.75.0
- Compute flags in `intern_ty`
- Remove `tracing-serde` from `PERMITTED_DEPENDENCIES`
- Bump `tracing-tree` to 0.2.0
- Bump `tracing-subscriber` to 0.3.3
The `AggregateKind` enum ends up in the final mir `Body`. Currently,
any changes to `AdtDef` (regardless of how significant they are)
will legitimately cause the overall result of `optimized_mir` to change,
invalidating any codegen re-use involving that mir.
This will get worse once we start hashing the `Span` inside `FieldDef`
(which is itself contained in `AdtDef`).
To try to reduce these kinds of invalidations, this commit changes
`AggregateKind::Adt` to store just the `DefId`, instead of the full
`AdtDef`. This allows the result of `optimized_mir` to be unchanged
if the `AdtDef` changes in a way that doesn't actually affect any
of the MIR we build.
The issue here is that the logic used to determine which CGU to put the
dead function stubs in doesn't handle cases where a module is never
assigned to a CGU.
The partitioning logic also caused issues in #85461 where inline
functions were duplicated into multiple CGUs resulting in duplicate
symbols.
This commit fixes the issue by removing the complex logic used to assign
dead code stubs to CGUs and replaces it with a much simplier model: we
pick one CGU to hold all the dead code stubs. We pick a CGU which has
exported items which increases the likelihood the linker won't throw
away our dead functions and we pick the smallest to minimize the impact
on compilation times for crates with very large CGUs.
Fixes#86177Fixes#85718Fixes#79622
This makes `Obligation` two words bigger, but avoids allocating a lot of
the time.
I previously tried this in #73983 and it didn't help much, but local
timings look more promising now.
Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_middle`
See #91867
This was mostly straightforward. In several places, I take advantage
of the fact that lifetimes are non-hygenic: a macro declares the
'tcx' lifetime, which is then used in types passed in as macro
arguments.
Remove `SymbolStr`
This was originally proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/74554#discussion_r466203544. As well as removing the icky `SymbolStr` type, it allows the removal of a lot of `&` and `*` occurrences.
Best reviewed one commit at a time.
r? `@oli-obk`
Add user seed to `-Z randomize-layout`
Allows users of -`Z randomize-layout` to provide `-Z layout-seed=<seed>` in order to further randomizing type layout randomization. Extension of [compiler-team/#457](https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/457), allows users to change struct layouts without changing code and hoping that item path hashes change, aiding in detecting layout errors
hir: Do not introduce dummy type names for `extern` blocks in def paths
Use a separate nameless `DefPathData` variant instead.
Extracted from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91795.
Implement normalize_erasing_regions queries in terms of 'try' version
Attempt to lessen performance regression caused by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91255
r? `@jackh726`
See #91867
This was mostly straightforward. In several places, I take advantage
of the fact that lifetimes are non-hygenic: a macro declares the
'tcx' lifetime, which is then used in types passed in as macro
arguments.
extend `simplify_type`
might cause a slight perf inprovement and imo more accurately represents what types there are.
considering that I was going to use this in #85048 it seems like we might need this in the future anyways 🤷
Make `TyS::is_suggestable` check for non-suggestable types structually
Not sure if I went overboard checking substs in dyn types, etc. Let me know if I should simplify this function.
Fixes#91832
By changing `as_str()` to take `&self` instead of `self`, we can just
return `&str`. We're still lying about lifetimes, but it's a smaller lie
than before, where `SymbolStr` contained a (fake) `&'static str`!
Stabilize `iter::zip`
Hello all!
As the tracking issue (#83574) for `iter::zip` completed the final commenting period without any concerns being raised, I hereby submit this stabilization PR on the issue.
As the pull request that introduced the feature (#82917) states, the `iter::zip` function is a shorter way to zip two iterators. As it's generally a quality-of-life/ergonomic improvement, it has been integrated into the codebase without any trouble, and has been
used in many places across the rust compiler and standard library since March without any issues.
For more details, I would refer to `@cuviper's` original PR, or the [function's documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/fn.zip.html).
Tweak errors coming from `for`-loop, `?` and `.await` desugaring
* Suggest removal of `.await` on non-`Future` expression
* Keep track of obligations introduced by desugaring
* Remove span pointing at method for obligation errors coming from desugaring
* Point at called local sync `fn` and suggest making it `async`
```
error[E0277]: `()` is not a future
--> $DIR/unnecessary-await.rs:9:10
|
LL | boo().await;
| -----^^^^^^ `()` is not a future
| |
| this call returns `()`
|
= help: the trait `Future` is not implemented for `()`
help: do not `.await` the expression
|
LL - boo().await;
LL + boo();
|
help: alternatively, consider making `fn boo` asynchronous
|
LL | async fn boo () {}
| +++++
```
Fix#66731.
Stabilise `feature(const_generics_defaults)`
`feature(const_generics_defaults)` is complete implementation wise and has a pretty extensive test suite so I think is ready for stabilisation.
needs stabilisation report and maybe an RFC 😅
r? `@lcnr`
cc `@rust-lang/project-const-generics`
Tweak assoc type obligation spans
* Point at RHS of associated type in obligation span
* Point at `impl` assoc type on projection error
* Reduce verbosity of recursive obligations
* Point at source of binding lifetime obligation
* Tweak "required bound" note
* Tweak "expected... found opaque (return) type" labels
* Point at set type in impl assoc type WF errors
r? `@oli-obk`
This is a(n uncontroversial) subset of #85799.
Point at capture points for non-`'static` reference crossing a `yield` point
```
error[E0759]: `self` has an anonymous lifetime `'_` but it needs to satisfy a `'static` lifetime requirement
--> $DIR/issue-72312.rs:10:24
|
LL | pub async fn start(&self) {
| ^^^^^ this data with an anonymous lifetime `'_`...
...
LL | require_static(async move {
| -------------- ...is required to live as long as `'static` here...
LL | &self;
| ----- ...and is captured here
|
note: `'static` lifetime requirement introduced by this trait bound
--> $DIR/issue-72312.rs:2:22
|
LL | fn require_static<T: 'static>(val: T) -> T {
| ^^^^^^^
error: aborting due to previous error
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0759`.
```
Fix#72312.
Suggest using a temporary variable to fix borrowck errors
Fixes#77834.
In Rust, nesting method calls with both require `&mut` access to `self`
produces a borrow-check error:
error[E0499]: cannot borrow `*self` as mutable more than once at a time
--> src/lib.rs:7:14
|
7 | self.foo(self.bar());
| ---------^^^^^^^^^^-
| | | |
| | | second mutable borrow occurs here
| | first borrow later used by call
| first mutable borrow occurs here
That's because Rust has a left-to-right evaluation order, and the method
receiver is passed first. Thus, the argument to the method cannot then
mutate `self`.
There's an easy solution to this error: just extract a local variable
for the inner argument:
let tmp = self.bar();
self.foo(tmp);
However, the error doesn't give any suggestion of how to solve the
problem. As a result, new users may assume that it's impossible to
express their code correctly and get stuck.
This commit adds a (non-structured) suggestion to extract a local
variable for the inner argument to solve the error. The suggestion uses
heuristics that eliminate most false positives, though there are a few
false negatives (cases where the suggestion should be emitted but is
not). Those other cases can be implemented in a future change.
Improve the readability of `List<T>`.
This commit does the following.
- Expands on some of the things already mentioned in comments.
- Describes the uniqueness assumption, which is critical but wasn't
mentioned at all.
- Rewrites `empty()` into a clearer form, as provided by Daniel
Henry-Mantilla on Zulip.
- Reorders things slightly so that more important things
are higher up, and incidental things are lower down, which makes
reading the code easier.
r? ````@lcnr````
* Point at RHS of associated type in obligation span
* Point at `impl` assoc type on projection error
* Reduce verbosity of recursive obligations
* Point at source of binding lifetime obligation
* Tweak "required bound" note
* Tweak "expected... found opaque (return) type" labels
* Point at set type in impl assoc type WF errors
In Rust, nesting method calls with both require `&mut` access to `self`
produces a borrow-check error:
error[E0499]: cannot borrow `*self` as mutable more than once at a time
--> src/lib.rs:7:14
|
7 | self.foo(self.bar());
| ---------^^^^^^^^^^-
| | | |
| | | second mutable borrow occurs here
| | first borrow later used by call
| first mutable borrow occurs here
That's because Rust has a left-to-right evaluation order, and the method
receiver is passed first. Thus, the argument to the method cannot then
mutate `self`.
There's an easy solution to this error: just extract a local variable
for the inner argument:
let tmp = self.bar();
self.foo(tmp);
However, the error doesn't give any suggestion of how to solve the
problem. As a result, new users may assume that it's impossible to
express their code correctly and get stuck.
This commit adds a (non-structured) suggestion to extract a local
variable for the inner argument to solve the error. The suggestion uses
heuristics that eliminate most false positives, though there are a few
false negatives (cases where the suggestion should be emitted but is
not). Those other cases can be implemented in a future change.
This commit does the following.
- Expands on some of the things already mentioned in comments.
- Describes the uniqueness assumption, which is critical but wasn't
mentioned at all.
- Rewrites `empty()` into a clearer form, as provided by Daniel
Henry-Mantilla on Zulip.
- Reorders things slightly so that more important things
are higher up, and incidental things are lower down, which makes
reading the code easier.
Allow for failure of subst_normalize_erasing_regions in const_eval
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72845
Using associated types that cannot be normalized previously resulted in an ICE. We now allow for normalization failure and return a "TooGeneric" error in that case.
r? ```@RalfJung``` maybe?
Add a MIR pass manager (Taylor's Version)
The final draft of #91386 and #77665.
While the compile-time constraints in #91386 are cool, I decided on a more minimal approach for now. I want to explore phase constraints and maybe relative-ordering constraints in the future, though. This should preserve existing behavior **exactly** (please let me know if it doesn't) while making the following changes to the way we organize things today:
- Each `MirPhase` now corresponds to a single MIR pass. `run_passes` is not responsible for listing the correct MIR phase.
- `run_passes` no longer silently skips passes if the declared MIR phase is greater than or equal to the body's. This has bitten me multiple times. If you want this behavior, you can always branch on `body.phase` yourself.
- If your pass is solely to emit errors, you can use the `MirLint` interface instead, which gets a shared reference to `Body` instead of a mutable one. By differentiating the two, I hope to make it clearer in the short term where lints belong in the pipeline. In the long term perhaps we could enforce this at compile-time?
- MIR is no longer dumped for passes that aren't enabled, or for lints.
I tried to check that `-Zvalidate` still works correctly, since the MIR phase is now updated as soon as the associated pass is done, instead of at the end of all the passes in `run_passes`. However, it looks like `-Zvalidate` is broken with current nightlies anyways 😢 (it spits out a bunch of errors).
cc `@oli-obk` `@wesleywiser`
r? rust-lang/wg-mir-opt
std: Stabilize the `thread_local_const_init` feature
This commit is intended to follow the stabilization disposition of the
FCP that has now finished in #84223. This stabilizes the ability to flag
thread local initializers as `const` expressions which enables the macro
to generate more efficient code for accessing it, notably removing
runtime checks for initialization.
More information can also be found in #84223 as well as the tests where
the feature usage was removed in this PR.
Closes#84223
Keep spans for generics in `#[derive(_)]` desugaring
Keep the spans for generics coming from a `derive`d Item, so that errors
and suggestions have better detail.
Fix#84003.
* Annotate `derive`d spans from the user's code with the appropciate context
* Add `Span::can_be_used_for_suggestion` to query if the underlying span
at the users' code
Rollup of 12 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #89954 (Fix legacy_const_generic doc arguments display)
- #91321 (Handle placeholder regions in NLL type outlive constraints)
- #91329 (Fix incorrect usage of `EvaluatedToOk` when evaluating `TypeOutlives`)
- #91364 (Improve error message for incorrect field accesses through raw pointers)
- #91387 (Clarify and tidy up explanation of E0038)
- #91410 (Move `#![feature(const_precise_live_drops)]` checks earlier in the pipeline)
- #91435 (Improve diagnostic for missing half of binary operator in `if` condition)
- #91444 (disable tests in Miri that take too long)
- #91457 (Add additional test from rust issue number 91068)
- #91460 (Document how `last_os_error` should be used)
- #91464 (Document file path case sensitivity)
- #91466 (Improve the comments in `Symbol::interner`.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Move `#![feature(const_precise_live_drops)]` checks earlier in the pipeline
Should mitigate the issues found during MCP on #73255.
Once this is done, we should clean up the queries a bit, since I think `mir_drops_elaborated_and_const_checked` can be merged back into `mir_promoted`.
Fixes#90770.
cc ``@rust-lang/wg-const-eval``
r? ``@nikomatsakis`` (since they reviewed #71824)
Cleanup: Eliminate ConstnessAnd
This is almost a behaviour-free change and purely a refactoring. "almost" because we appear to be using the wrong ParamEnv somewhere already, and this is now exposed by failing a test using the unstable `~const` feature.
We most definitely need to review all `without_const` and at some point should probably get rid of many of them by using `TraitPredicate` instead of `TraitRef`.
This is a continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90274.
r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@spastorino` `@ecstatic-morse`
... if they use arbitrary enum discriminant. Code like
```rust
enum Enum {
Foo = 1,
Bar(),
Baz{}
}
```
seems to be unintentionally allowed so we couldn't disallow them now,
but we could disallow them if arbitrary enum discriminant is used before
1.56 hits stable.
Add support for LLVM coverage mapping format versions 5 and 6
This PR cherry-pick's Swatinem's initial commit in unsubmitted PR #90047.
My additional commit augments Swatinem's great starting point, but adds full support for LLVM
Coverage Mapping Format version 6, conditionally, if compiling with LLVM 13.
Version 6 requires adding the compilation directory when file paths are
relative, and since Rustc coverage maps use relative paths, we should
add the expected compilation directory entry.
Note, however, that with the compilation directory, coverage reports
from `llvm-cov show` can now report file names (when the report includes
more than one file) with the full absolute path to the file.
This would be a problem for test results, but the workaround (for the
rust coverage tests) is to include an additional `llvm-cov show`
parameter: `--compilation-dir=.`
This commit is intended to follow the stabilization disposition of the
FCP that has now finished in #84223. This stabilizes the ability to flag
thread local initializers as `const` expressions which enables the macro
to generate more efficient code for accessing it, notably removing
runtime checks for initialization.
More information can also be found in #84223 as well as the tests where
the feature usage was removed in this PR.
Closes#84223
Take a LocalDefId in expect_*item.
Items and item-likes are always HIR owners.
When trying to find such nodes, there is no ambiguity, the `LocalDefId` and the `HirId::owner` always match.
In such cases, `local_def_id_to_hir_id` does not carry any meaningful information, so we can just skip calling it altogether.
Nothing else makes sense, and there is no "danger" in doing so, as it only does something if there are const bounds, which are unstable. This used to happen implicitly via the inferctxt before, which was much more fragile.
Print associated types on opaque `impl Trait` types
This PR generalizes #91021, printing associated types for all opaque `impl Trait` types instead of just special-casing for future.
before:
```
error[E0271]: type mismatch resolving `<impl Iterator as Iterator>::Item == u32`
```
after:
```
error[E0271]: type mismatch resolving `<impl Iterator<Item = usize> as Iterator>::Item == u32`
```
---
Questions:
1. I'm kinda lost in binders hell with this one. Is all of the `rebind`ing necessary?
2. Is there a map collection type that will give me a stable iteration order? Doesn't seem like TraitRef is Ord, so I can't just sort later..
3. I removed the logic that suppresses printing generator projection types. It creates outputs like this [gist](https://gist.github.com/compiler-errors/d6f12fb30079feb1ad1d5f1ab39a3a8d). Should I put that back?
4. I also added spaces between traits, `impl A+B` -> `impl A + B`. I quite like this change, but is there a good reason to keep it like that?
r? ````@estebank````
Suggestion to wrap inner types using 'allocator_api' in tuple
This PR provides a suggestion to wrap the inner types in tuple when being along with 'allocator_api'.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83250
```rust
fn main() {
let _vec: Vec<u8, _> = vec![]; //~ ERROR use of unstable library feature 'allocator_api'
}
```
```diff
error[E0658]: use of unstable library feature 'allocator_api'
--> $DIR/suggest-vec-allocator-api.rs:2:23
|
LL | let _vec: Vec<u8, _> = vec![];
- | ^
+ | ----^
+ | |
+ | help: consider wrapping the inner types in tuple: `(u8, _)`
|
= note: see issue #32838 <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/32838> for more information
= help: add `#![feature(allocator_api)]` to the crate attributes to enable
```
Elaborate `Future::Output` when printing opaque `impl Future` type
I would love to see the `Output =` type when printing type errors involving opaque `impl Future`.
[Test code](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=a800b481edd31575fbcaf5771a9c3678)
Before (cut relevant part of output):
```
note: while checking the return type of the `async fn`
--> /home/michael/test.rs:5:19
|
5 | async fn bar() -> usize {
| ^^^^^ checked the `Output` of this `async fn`, found opaque type
= note: expected type `usize`
found opaque type `impl Future`
```
After:
```
note: while checking the return type of the `async fn`
--> /home/michael/test.rs:5:19
|
5 | async fn bar() -> usize {
| ^^^^^ checked the `Output` of this `async fn`, found opaque type
= note: expected type `usize`
found opaque type `impl Future<Output = usize>`
```
Note the "found opaque type `impl Future<Output = usize>`" in the new output.
----
Questions:
1. We skip printing the output type when it's a projection, since I have been seeing some types like `impl Future<Output = <[static generator@/home/michael/test.rs:2:11: 2:21] as Generator<ResumeTy>>::Return>` which are not particularly helpful and leak implementation detail.
* Am I able to normalize this type within `rustc_middle::ty::print::pretty`? Alternatively, can we normalize it when creating the diagnostic? Otherwise, I'm fine with skipping it and falling back to the old output.
* Should I suppress any other types? I didn't encounter anything other than this generator projection type.
2. Not sure what the formatting of this should be. Do I include spaces in `Output = `?
fix CTFE/Miri simd_insert/extract on array-style repr(simd) types
The changed test would previously fail since `place_index` would just return the only field of `f32x4`, i.e., the array -- rather than *indexing into* the array which is what we have to do.
The new helper methods will also be needed for https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/1912.
r? ``````@oli-obk``````
This function parameter attribute was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/44866 as an intermediate step in implementing `impl Trait`, it's not necessary or used anywhere by itself.
Because it's always `'tcx`. In fact, some of them use a mixture of
passed-in `$tcx` and hard-coded `'tcx`, so no other lifetime would even
work.
This makes the code easier to read.
Remove `DropArena`.
Most arena-allocate types that impl `Drop` get their own `TypedArena`, but a
few infrequently used ones share a `DropArena`. This sharing adds complexity
but doesn't help performance or memory usage. Perhaps it was more effective in
the past prior to some other improvements to arenas.
This commit removes `DropArena` and the sharing of arenas via the `few`
attribute of the `arena_types` macro. This change removes over 100 lines of
code and nine uses of `unsafe` (one of which affects the parallel compiler) and
makes the remaining code easier to read.
Most arena-allocate types that impl `Drop` get their own `TypedArena`, but a
few infrequently used ones share a `DropArena`. This sharing adds complexity
but doesn't help performance or memory usage. Perhaps it was more effective in
the past prior to some other improvements to arenas.
This commit removes `DropArena` and the sharing of arenas via the `few`
attribute of the `arena_types` macro. This change removes over 100 lines of
code and nine uses of `unsafe` (one of which affects the parallel compiler) and
makes the remaining code easier to read.
selection deduplicates obligations through a hashset at some point, computing the hashes for ObligationCauseCode
appears to dominate the hashing cost. bodyid + span + discriminant hash hopefully will sufficiently unique
unique enough.
implement rfc-2528 type_changing-struct-update
This PR implement rfc2528-type_changing-struct-update.
The main change process is as follows:
1. Move the processing part of `base_expr` into `check_expr_struct_fields` to avoid returning `remaining_fields` (a relatively complex hash table)
2. Before performing the type consistency check(`check_expr_has_type_or_error`), if the `type_changing_struct_update` feature is set, enter a different processing flow, otherwise keep the original flow
3. In the case of the same structure definition, check each field in `remaining_fields`. If the field in `base_expr` is not the suptype of the field in `adt_ty`, an error(`FeildMisMatch`) will be reported.
The MIR part does not need to be changed, because only the items contained in `remaining_fields` will be extracted from `base_expr` when MIR is generated. This means that fields with different types in `base_expr` will not be used
Updates #86618
cc `@nikomatsakis`
Type inference for inline consts
Fixes#78132Fixes#78174Fixes#81857Fixes#89964
Perform type checking/inference of inline consts in the same context as the outer def, similar to what is currently done to closure.
Doing so would require `closure_base_def_id` of the inline const to return the outer def, and since `closure_base_def_id` can be called on non-local crate (and thus have no HIR available), a new `DefKind` is created for inline consts.
The type of the generated anon const can capture lifetime of outer def, so we couldn't just use the typeck result as the type of the inline const's def. Closure has a similar issue, and it uses extra type params `CK, CS, U` to capture closure kind, input/output signature and upvars. I use a similar approach for inline consts, letting it have an extra type param `R`, and then `typeof(InlineConst<[paremt generics], R>)` would just be `R`. In borrowck region requirements are also propagated to the outer MIR body just like it's currently done for closure.
With this PR, inline consts in expression position are quitely usable now; however the usage in pattern position is still incomplete -- since those does not remain in the MIR borrowck couldn't verify the lifetime there. I have left an ignored test as a FIXME.
Some disucssions can be found on [this Zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/260443-project-const-generics/topic/inline.20consts.20typeck).
cc `````@spastorino````` `````@lcnr`````
r? `````@nikomatsakis`````
`````@rustbot````` label A-inference F-inline_const T-compiler
The only reason to use `abort_if_errors` is when the program is so broken that either:
1. later passes get confused and ICE
2. any diagnostics from later passes would be noise
This is never the case for lints, because the compiler has to be able to deal with `allow`-ed lints.
So it can continue to lint and compile even if there are lint errors.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #90487 (Add a chapter on reading Rustdoc output)
- #90508 (Apply adjustments for field expression even if inaccessible)
- #90627 (Suggest dereference of `Box` when inner type is expected)
- #90642 (use matches!() macro in more places)
- #90646 (type error go brrrrrrrr)
- #90649 (Run reveal_all on MIR when inlining is activated.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
type error go brrrrrrrr
Fixes#90444
when we relate something like:
`fn(fn((), (), u32))` with `fn(fn((), (), ()))`
we relate the inner fn ptrs:
`fn((), (), u32)` with `fn((), (), ())`
yielding a `TypeError::ArgumentSorts(_, 2)` which we then use as the `TypeError` for the `fn(fn(..))` which later causes the ICE as the `2` does not correspond to any input or output types in `fn(_)`
r? `@estebank`