Give a name to each distinct manipulation of pretty-printer FixupContext
There are only 7 distinct ways that the AST pretty-printer interacts with FixupContext: 3 constructors (including Default), 2 transformations, and 2 queries.
This PR turns these into associated functions which can be documented with examples.
This PR unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119427#discussion_r1439481201. In order to improve the pretty-printer's behavior regarding parenthesization of braced macro calls in match arms, which have different grammar than macro calls in statements, FixupContext needs to be extended with 2 new fields. In the previous approach, that would be onerous. In the new approach, all it entails is 1 new constructor (`FixupContext::new_match_arm()`).
This handles using deref patterns to choose the correct match arm. This
does not handle bindings or guards.
Co-authored-by: Deadbeef <ent3rm4n@gmail.com>
PatRangeBoundary::compare_with: als add a fast-path for signed integers
Not sure if we have a benchmark that hits this... but it seems odd to only do this for unsigned integers.
Fix capturing duplicated lifetimes via parent in `precise_captures` (`impl use<'...>`)
For technical reasons related to the way that `Self` and `T::Assoc` are lowered from HIR -> `rustc_middle::ty`, an opaque may mention in its bounds both the original early-bound lifetime from the parent `impl`/`fn`, *and* the *duplicated* early-bound lifetime on the opaque.
This is fine -- and has been fine since `@cjgillot` rewrote the way we handled opaque lifetime captures, and we went further to allow this behavior explicitly in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/115659. It's worthwhile to read this PR's technical section to recall how this duplication works and when it acts surprisingly.
The problem here is that the check that make sure that `impl use<'a, 'b>` lists all of the opaque's captured lifetimes wasn't smart enough to consider both these captured lifetimes and the original lifetimes they're duplicated from to be equal. This PR fixes that.
r? oli-obk
Implement Modified Condition/Decision Coverage
This is an implementation based on llvm backend support (>= 18) by `@evodius96` and branch coverage support by `@Zalathar.`
### Major changes:
* Add -Zcoverage-options=mcdc as switch. Now coverage options accept either `no-branch`, `branch`, or `mcdc`. `mcdc` also enables `branch` because it is essential to work.
* Add coverage mapping for MCDCBranch and MCDCDecision. Note that MCDCParameter evolves from llvm 18 to llvm 19. The mapping in rust side mainly references to 19 and is casted to 18 types in llvm wrapper.
* Add wrapper for mcdc instrinc functions from llvm. And inject associated statements to mir.
* Add BcbMappingKind::Decision, I'm not sure is it proper but can't find a better way temporarily.
* Let coverage-dump support parsing MCDCBranch and MCDCDecision from llvm ir.
* Add simple tests to check whether mcdc works.
* Same as clang, currently rustc does not generate instrument for decision with more than 6 condtions or only 1 condition due to considerations of resource.
### Implementation Details
1. To get information about conditions and decisions, `MCDCState` in `BranchInfoBuilder` is used during hir lowering to mir. For expressions with logical op we call `Builder::visit_coverage_branch_operation` to record its sub conditions, generate condition ids for them and save their spans (to construct the span of whole decision). This process mainly references to the implementation in clang and is described in comments over `MCDCState::record_conditions`. Also true marks and false marks introduced by branch coverage are used to detect where the decision evaluation ends: the next id of the condition == 0.
2. Once the `MCDCState::decision_stack` popped all recorded conditions, we can ensure that the decision is checked over and push it into `decision_spans`. We do not manually insert decision span to avoid complexity from then_else_break in nested if scopes.
3. When constructing CoverageSpans, add condition info to BcbMappingKind::Branch and decision info to BcbMappingKind::Decision. If the branch mapping has non-zero condition id it will be transformed to MCDCBranch mapping and insert `CondBitmapUpdate` statements to its evaluated blocks. While decision bcb mapping will insert `TestVectorBitmapUpdate` in all its end blocks.
### Usage
```bash
echo "[build]\nprofiler=true" >> config.toml
./x build --stage 1
./x test tests/coverage/mcdc_if.rs
```
to build the compiler and run tests.
```shell
export PATH=path/to/llvm-build:$PATH
rustup toolchain link mcdc build/host/stage1
cargo +mcdc rustc --bin foo -- -Cinstrument-coverage -Zcoverage-options=mcdc
cd target/debug
LLVM_PROFILE_FILE="foo.profraw" ./foo
llvm-profdata merge -sparse foo.profraw -o foo.profdata
llvm-cov show ./foo -instr-profile=foo.profdata --show-mcdc
```
to check "foo" code.
### Problems to solve
For now decision mapping will insert statements to its all end blocks, which may be optimized by inserting a final block of the decision. To do this we must also trace the evaluated value at each end of the decision and join them separately.
This implementation is not heavily tested so there should be some unrevealed issues. We are going to check our rust products in the next. Please let me know if you had any suggestions or comments.
Disable SimplifyToExp in MatchBranchSimplification
Due to the miscompilation mentioned in #124150, We need to disable MatchBranchSimplification temporarily.
To fully resolve this issue, my plan is:
1. Disable SimplifyToExp in MatchBranchSimplification (this PR).
2. Remove all potentially unclear transforms in #124122.
3. Gradually add back the removed transforms (possibly multiple PRs).
r? `@Nilstrieb` or `@oli-obk`
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123571 (Correctly change type when adding adjustments on top of `NeverToAny`)
- #123729 (run-make: refactor out command wrappers for `clang` and `llvm-readobj`)
- #124106 (Don't repeatedly duplicate TAIT lifetimes for each subsequently nested TAIT)
- #124149 (rustdoc-search: fix description on aliases in results)
- #124155 (bootstrap: don't use rayon for sysinfo)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Don't repeatedly duplicate TAIT lifetimes for each subsequently nested TAIT
Make it so that nested TAITs inherit the lifetimes from their parent item, not their parent TAIT. This is because we don't need to re-duplicate lifetimes for nested TAITs over and over, since the only lifetimes they can capture are from the parent item anyways.
This mirrors how RPITs work. This is **not** a functional change that should be observable, since the whole point of duplicating lifetimes and marking the shadowed ones (and uncaptured ones) as bivariant is designed to *not* be observable.
r? oli-obk
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123406 (Force exhaustion in iter::ArrayChunks::into_remainder)
- #123752 (Properly handle emojis as literal prefix in macros)
- #123935 (Don't inline integer literals when they overflow - new attempt)
- #123980 ( Add an opt-in to store incoming edges in `VecGraph` + misc)
- #124019 (Use raw-dylib for Windows synchronization functions)
- #124110 (Fix negating `f16` and `f128` constants)
- #124116 (when suggesting RUST_BACKTRACE=1, add a special note for Miri's env var isolation)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Use raw-dylib for Windows synchronization functions
Fixes#123999 by using the raw-dylib feature to specify the DLL to load the Windows futex functions from (e.g. [`WaitOnAddress`](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/synchapi/nf-synchapi-waitonaddress)). This avoids reliance on the import library causing that issue.
With apologies to ``@bjorn3,`` as it's currently necessary to revert this for cranelift.
Don't inline integer literals when they overflow - new attempt
Basically #116633 but I implemented the suggested changes.
Fixes#115423. Fixes#116631.
This is my first contribution to this repo so please let me know if I'm supposed to change something :)
Properly handle emojis as literal prefix in macros
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 pre-expansion of literal prefixes.
Fix#123696.
Introduce perma-unstable `wasm-c-abi` flag
Now that `wasm-bindgen` v0.2.88 supports the spec-compliant C ABI, the idea is to switch to that in a future version of Rust. In the meantime it would be good to let people test and play around with it.
This PR introduces a new perma-unstable `-Zwasm-c-abi` compiler flag, which switches to the new spec-compliant C ABI when targeting `wasm32-unknown-unknown`.
Alternatively, we could also stabilize this and then deprecate it when we switch. I will leave this to the Rust maintainers to decide.
This is a companion PR to #117918, but they could be merged independently.
MCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/703
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122532
Add support for Arm64EC to the Standard Library
Adds the final pieces so that the standard library can be built for arm64ec-pc-windows-msvc (initially added in #119199)
* Bumps `windows-sys` to 0.56.0, which adds support for Arm64EC.
* Correctly set the `isEC` parameter for LLVM's `writeArchive` function.
* Add `#![feature(asm_experimental_arch)]` to library crates where Arm64EC inline assembly is used, as it is currently unstable.
Move confusing comment about otherwise blocks in `lower_match_tree`
This comment was historically inside a block guarded by `if let Some(otherwise_block) = otherwise`.
When #120978 made the “otherwise block” non-optional, it also flattened that region of code. Doing so left this comment awkwardly stranded above an unrelated line of code, without its original context.
We can restore that context by moving it above the declaration of `otherwise`.
r? ``@Nadrieril``
Match ergonomics 2024: miscellaneous code cleanups
- Store `ByRef` instead of `BindingAnnotation` in `PatInfo`
- Rename `BindingAnnotation` to `BindingMode`
r? ``@Nadrieril``
cc #123076
``@rustbot`` label A-patterns
Delay interning errors to after validation
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/122398fixes#122548
This improves diagnostics since validation errors are usually more helpful compared with interning errors that just make broad statements about the entire constant
r? `@RalfJung`
Codegen ZSTs without an allocation
This makes sure that &[] is equivalent to unsafe code (from_raw_parts(dangling, 0)). No new stable guarantee is intended about whether or not we do this, this is just an optimization.
This regressed in #67000 (no comments I can see about that regression in the PR, though it did change the test modified here). We had previously performed this optimization since #63635.
interpret: pass MemoryKind to adjust_alloc_base_pointer
Another puzzle piece for https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/pull/3475.
The 2nd commit renames base_pointer -> root_pointer; that's how Tree Borrows already calls them and I think the term is more clear than "base pointer". In particular, this distinguishes it from "base address", since a root pointer can point anywhere into an allocation, not just its base address.
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124018 has been rolled up already so I couldn't add it there any more.
r? ```@oli-obk```
This comment was historically inside a block guarded by
`if let Some(otherwise_block) = otherwise`.
When #120978 made the otherwise block non-optional, it also flattened that
region of code. Doing so left this comment awkwardly stranded above an
unrelated line of code, without its original context.
We can restore that context by moving it above the declaration of `otherwise`.
Delay span bug when `Self` kw resolves to `DefKind::{Mod,Trait}`
Catch the case where `kw::Self` is recovered in the parser and causes us to subsequently resolve `&self`'s implicit type to something that's not a type.
This check could be made more accurate, though I'm not sure how hard we have to try here.
Fixes#123988
This makes sure that &[] is just as efficient as indirecting through
unsafe code (from_raw_parts). No new stable guarantee is intended about
whether or not we do this, this is just an optimization.
Co-authored-by: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #123673 (Don't ICE for kind mismatches during error rendering)
- #123675 (Taint const qualifs if a static is referenced that didn't pass wfcheck)
- #123975 (Port the 2 `rust-lld` run-make tests to `rmake`)
- #124000 (Use `/* value */` as a placeholder)
- #124013 (Box::into_raw: make Miri understand that this is a box-to-raw cast)
- #124027 (Prefer identity equality over equating types during coercion.)
- #124036 (Remove `default_hidden_visibility: false` from wasm targets)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove `default_hidden_visibility: false` from wasm targets
To the best of my ability I believe that this is no longer necessary. I don't fully recall why this was first added but I believe it had to do with symbols all being exported by default and this was required to undo that. Regardless nowadays the default output of rustc seems suitable so it seems best to keep wasm in line with other targets.
Prefer identity equality over equating types during coercion.
These types are always generic only over their own generic parameters with no inference variables involved.
r? `@compiler-errors`
I love touching code that [hasn't changed meaningfully since 2016](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/41937)
Use `/* value */` as a placeholder
The expression `value` isn't a valid suggestion; let's use `/* value */` as a placeholder (which is also invalid) since it more clearly signals to the user that they need to fill it in with something meaningful. This parallels the suggestions we have in a couple other places, like arguments.
We could also print the type name instead of `/* value */`, especially if it's suggestable, but I don't care strongly about that.
Taint const qualifs if a static is referenced that didn't pass wfcheck
It is correct to only check the signature here, as the ICE is caused by `USE_WITH_ERROR` trying to allocate memory to store the result of `WITH_ERROR` before evaluating it.
fixes#123153
To the best of my ability I believe that this is no longer necessary. I
don't fully recall why this was first added but I believe it had to do
with symbols all being exported by default and this was required to undo
that. Regardless nowadays the default output of rustc seems suitable so
it seems best to keep wasm in line with other targets.
Allow workproducts without object files.
This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44
Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:
For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234
Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
Outline default query and hook provider function implementations
The default query and hook provider functions call `bug!` with a decently long message.
Due to argument inlining in `format_args!` ([`flatten_format_args`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78356)), this ends up duplicating the message for each query, adding ~90KB to `librustc_driver.so` of unreachable panic messages.
To avoid this, we can outline the common `bug!` logic.
Subtype predicates only exist on inference types, so we can allow them to register opaque types within them.
We were unable to come up with an example where this could be reached (subtype predicates with either side not being an infer var gets consumed during any `select_where_possible` invocation, of which we have a lot in typeck). To ensure we don't silently accept new behaviour in case we missed a situation where this could occur, I have added an assert that prevents opaque types from having their hidden type constrained.
r? `@compiler-errors`
interpret: remove outdated comment
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107756, allocation became generally fallible, so the "only panic if there is provenance" no longer applies.
r? ``@oli-obk``
Change a diagnostics-path-only `DefineOpaqueTypes` to `Yes`.
This can't possibly affect compilation, so it's safe to flip, even if I couldn't come up with an affected test
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Stabilize checking of cfgs at compile-time: `--check-cfg` option
This PR stabilize the `--check-cfg` CLI option of `rustc` (and `rustdoc`) 🎉.
In particular this PR does two things:
1. it makes the `--check-cfg` option stable
2. and it moves the documentation to the stable books
FCP: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82450#issuecomment-1965328542Resolves#82450
``@rustbot`` labels +S-blocked +F-check-cfg
r? ``@petrochenkov``
This pull request partially reverts changes from e16c3b4a44
Original motivation for this assert was described with "A WorkProduct without a saved file is useless"
which was true at the time but now it is possible to have work products with other types of files
(llvm-ir, asm, etc) and there are bugreports for this failure:
For example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123695
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/123234
Now existing `assert` and `.unwrap_or_else` are unified into a single
check that emits slightly more user friendly error message if an object
files was meant to be produced but it's missing
Move size assertions for `mir::syntax` types into the same file
A redundant size assertion for `StatementKind` was added in #122937, because the existing assertion was in a different file.
This PR cleans that up, and also moves the `TerminatorKind` assertion into the same file where it belongs, to avoid the same thing happening again.
r? `@nnethercote`
Opaque types have no namespace
Opaques are never referenced by name -- even when we have `type X = impl Sized;`, `X` is the name of the type alias, not the opaque.
Make `suggest_deref_closure_return` more idiomatic/easier to understand
The only functional change here really is just making it not use a fresh type variable for upvars. I'll point that out in the code.
The rest of the changes are just stylistic, because reading this code was really confusing me (variable names were vague, ways of accessing types were unidiomatic, order of operations was kind of strange, etc).
This is stacked on #123989.
r? oli-obk since you approved #122213
Better graphviz output for SCCs and NLL constraints
This PR modifies the output for `-Z dump-mir-graphviz=yes`. Specifically, it changes the output of the files `.-------.nll.0.regioncx.all.dot` and `nll.0.regioncx.scc.dot` to be easier to read and contain some information that helped me during debugging. In particular:
- SCC indices are contracted to `SCC(n)` instead of `ConstraintSccIndex(n)` to compress the nodes
- SCC regions are in `{}` rather than `[]` (controversial since they are technically ordered by index, but I figured they're more sets than arrays conceptually since they're equivalence classes).
- For regions in other universes than the root, also show the region universe (as ?8/U1)
- For regions with external names, show the external name in parenthesis
- For the region graph where edges are locations, render the All variant of the enum without the file since it's extremely long and often destroys the rendering
- For region graph edge annotations for single locations, remove the wrapping around the Location variant and just add its contents since this can be unambiguously done
Example output (from the function `foo()` of `tests/ui/error-codes/E0582.rs`) for an SCC graph:
![a graph showing SCCs](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/102855/0b998338-0379-4829-b99e-d8105c094897)
...and for the constraints:
![a graph showing regions and their constraints](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/assets/102855/e984c4ca-7aa2-4db2-9878-bf38fe8208d5)
This PR also gives `UniverseIndex`es the `is_root()` method since this is now an operation that happens three times in the borrowck crate.
Update ar_archive_writer to 0.2.0
This adds a whole bunch of tests checking for any difference with llvm's archive writer. It also fixes two mistakes in the porting from C++ to Rust. The first one causes a divergence for Mach-O archives which may or may not be harmless. The second will definitively cause issues, but only applies to thin archives, which rustc currently doesn't create.