In #101230, the internal diagnostic migration lints -
`diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and `untranslatable_diagnostic` - were
modified so that they wouldn't trigger on functions annotated with
`#[rustc_lint_diagnostics]`. However, this change has to make it into
the bootstrap compiler before the `#[allow]` annotations that it aims to
remove can be removed, which is possible now that #102051 has landed.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
macros: diagnostic derive on enums
Part of #100717.
Extends `#[derive(Diagnostic)]` to work on enums too where each variant acts like a distinct diagnostic - being able to represent diagnostics this way can be quite a bit simpler for some parts of the compiler.
r? `@compiler-errors`
cc `@Xiretza`
LLVM 15 added `Optional::has_value`, and LLVM `main` (16) has deprecated
`hasValue`. However, its `explicit operator bool` does the same thing,
and was added long ago, so we can use that across our full LLVM range of
compatibility.
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #101875 (Allow more `!Copy` impls)
- #101996 (Don't duplicate region names for late-bound regions in print of Binder)
- #102181 (Add regression test)
- #102273 (Allow `~const` bounds on non-const functions)
- #102286 (Recover some items that expect braces and don't take semicolons)
Failed merges:
- #102314 (Add a label to struct/enum/union ident name)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Allow more `!Copy` impls
You can already implement `!Copy` for a lot of types (with `#![feature(negative_impls)]`). However, before this PR you could not implement `!Copy` for ADTs whose fields don't implement `Copy` which didn't make any sense. Further, you couldn't implement `!Copy` for types impl'ing `Drop` (equally nonsensical).
``@rustbot`` label T-types F-negative_impls
Fixes#101836.
r? types
Fix lint scoping for let-else.
The scoping for let-else is inconsistent with HIR nesting. This creates cases, in `ui/let-else/let-else-allow-unused.rs` for instance, where an `allow` lint attribute does not apply to the bindings created by `let-else`.
This PR is an attempt to correct this.
As there is no lint that currently relies on this, the test for this behaviour is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101500.
cc `@dingxiangfei2009` as you filed https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101894
Update bootstrap compiler to 1.65.0
This PR updates the bootstrap compiler to Rust 1.65.0, removing the various `cfg(bootstrap)`s.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #102143 (Recover from struct nested in struct)
- #102178 (bootstrap: the backtrace feature is stable, no need to allow it any more)
- #102197 (Stabilize const `BTree{Map,Set}::new`)
- #102267 (Don't set RUSTC in the bootstrap build script)
- #102270 (Remove benches from `rustc_middle`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove benches from `rustc_middle`
These benches benchmark rust langauge features and not the compiler, so they seem to be in the wrong place here. They also all take <1ns, making them pretty useless. Looking at their git history, they just seem to have been carried around for many, many years. This commit ends their journey.
Stabilize const `BTree{Map,Set}::new`
The FCP was completed in #71835.
Since `len` and `is_empty` are not const stable yet, this also creates a new feature for them since they previously used the same `const_btree_new` feature.
`Cursor` keeps track of the position within the current token. But it
uses confusing names that don't make it clear that the "length consumed"
is just within the current token.
This commit renames things to make this clearer.
`Cursor` is currently hidden, and the main tokenization path uses
`rustc_lexer::first_token` which involves constructing a new `Cursor`
for every single token, which is weird. Also, `first_token` also can't
handle empty input, so callers have to check for that first.
This commit makes `Cursor` public, so `StringReader` can contain a
`Cursor`, which results in a simpler structure. The commit also changes
`StringReader::advance_token` so it returns an `Option<Token>`,
simplifying the the empty input case.
`TokenTreesReader` wraps a `StringReader`, but the `into_token_trees`
function obscures this. This commit moves to a more straightforward
control flow.
The spacing computation is done in two parts. In the first part
`next_token` and `bump` use `Spacing::Alone` to mean "preceded by
whitespace" and `Spacing::Joint` to mean the opposite. In the second
part `parse_token_tree_other` then adjusts the `spacing` value to mean
the usual thing (i.e. "is the following token joinable punctuation?").
This shift in meaning is very confusing and it took me some time to
understand what was going on.
This commit changes the first part to use a bool, and adds some
comments, which makes things much clearer.
Clean up (sub)diagnostic derives
The biggest chunk of this is unifying the parsing of subdiagnostic attributes (`#[error]`, `#[suggestion(...)]`, `#[label(...)]`, etc) between `Subdiagnostic` and `Diagnostic` type attributes as well as `Diagnostic` field attributes.
It also improves a number of proc macro diagnostics.
Waiting for #101558.
Use function pointers instead of macro-unrolled loops in rustc_query_impl
By making these standalone functions, we
a) allow making them extensible in the future with a new `QueryStruct`
b) greatly decrease the amount of code in each individual function, avoiding exponential blowup in llvm
Helps with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/96524. Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101173; only the last commit is relevant.
r? `@cjgillot`
`parse_token_tree` is basically a match with four arms: `Eof`,
`OpenDelim`, `CloseDelim`, and "other". It has two call sites, and at
each call site one of the arms is unreachable. It's also not inlined.
This commit removes `parse_token_tree` by splitting it into four
functions and inlining them. This avoids some repeated conditional
tests and also some non-inlined function calls on the hot path.
Neither require nor imply lifetime bounds on opaque type for well formedness
The actual hidden type can live arbitrarily longer than any individual lifetime and arbitrarily shorter than all but one of the lifetimes.
fixes#86218fixes#84305
This is a **breaking change** but it is a necessary soundness fix
These benches benchmark rust langauge features and not the compiler,
so they seem to be in the wrong place here. They also all take <1ns,
making them pretty useless. Looking at their git history, they just
seem to have been carried around for many, many years. This commit
ends their journey.
By making these standalone functions, we
a) allow making them extensible in the future with a new `QueryStruct`
b) greatly decrease the amount of code in each individual function, avoiding exponential blowup in llvm
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #98111 (Clarify `[T]::select_nth_unstable*` return values)
- #101431 (Look at move place's type when suggesting mutable reborrow)
- #101800 (Constify slice.split_at_mut(_unchecked))
- #101997 (Remove support for legacy PM)
- #102194 (Note the type when unable to drop values in compile time)
- #102200 (Constify Default impl's for Arrays and Tuples.)
- #102245 (Constify cmp_min_max_by.)
- #102259 (Type-annotate and simplify documentation of Option::unwrap_or_default)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove support for legacy PM
This removes support for optimizing with LLVM's legacy pass manager, as well as the unstable `-Znew-llvm-pass-manager` option. We have been defaulting to the new PM since LLVM 13 (except for s390x that waited for 14), and LLVM 15 removed support altogether. The only place we still use the legacy PM is for writing the output file, just like `llc` does.
cc #74705
r? ``@nikic``
Look at move place's type when suggesting mutable reborrow
Not sure why we are looking at the use site's ty instead of the move site's ty in order to suggest reborrowing the move site, but it was suppressing a perfectly valid reborrow suggestion.
r? `@estebank` who i think touched this last in 520461f1fb, though that was quite a while ago so feel free to reassign.
Don't drop parent substs when we have no generic parameters in `create_substs_for_ast_path`
This bug is being shadowed by an explicit check for `generics.params.is_empty()` in the only parent caller that could trigger it (`create_substs_for_associated_item`). I triggered it on another branch where I'm messing around with astconv stuff.
Also, the second commit simplifies `create_substs_for_associated_item`. Removing that explicit check I mentioned above^ and also the special case call to `Astconv::prohibit_generics` causes the UI test `src/test/ui/structs/struct-path-associated-type.stderr` to change, but I think that it's clearer now. The suggestion to remove the generics is actually useful.
Resolve async fn signature even without body (e.g., in trait)
Fixes#102138
This "bail if no body" behavior was introduced in #69539 to fix#69401, but that ICE does not reproduce any more. The error message changes a bit, but that's all, and I don't think it's a particularly diagnostic bad regression.
implied_bounds: deal with inference vars
fixes#101951
while computing implied bounds for `<<T as ConstructionFirm>::Builder as BuilderFn<'_>>::Output` normalization replaces a projection with an inference var (adding a `Projection` obligation). Until we prove that obligation, this inference var remains unknown, which caused us to miss an implied bound necessary to prove that the unnormalized projection from the trait method signature is wf.
r? types
fix a ui test
use `into`
fix clippy ui test
fix a run-make-fulldeps test
implement `IntoQueryParam<DefId>` for `OwnerId`
use `OwnerId` for more queries
change the type of `ParentOwnerIterator::Item` to `(OwnerId, OwnerNode)`