Commit Graph

38597 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zalathar
f53eb2724d Add print::PatKind::Print
This will allow for the gradual removal of all other variants.
2024-08-11 19:57:30 +10:00
Zalathar
0a777090d8 Avoid matching on PatKind::Wild in write_struct_like 2024-08-11 19:57:30 +10:00
Matthias Krüger
eff9120b7c
Rollup merge of #128875 - bvanjoi:cleanup-import-used, r=petrochenkov
rm `import.used`

By the way, `import_used_map` will only be used during `build_reduced_graph` and `finalize`, so it can be split from `Resolver` in the future.

r? ``@petrochenkov``
2024-08-11 07:51:52 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
32e0fe129d
Rollup merge of #128762 - fmease:use-more-slice-pats, r=compiler-errors
Use more slice patterns inside the compiler

Nothing super noteworthy. Just replacing the common 'fragile' pattern of "length check followed by indexing or unwrap" with slice patterns for legibility and 'robustness'.

r? ghost
2024-08-11 07:51:51 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
bd7075c69e
Rollup merge of #128592 - evelynharthbrooke:master, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Promote aarch64-apple-darwin to Tier 1

This promotes aarch64-apple-darwin to Tier 1 status as per rust-lang/rfcs#3671 and tracking issue #73908. Not sure what else is necessary for this to impement the aforementioned RFC, however I figured I'd try. I did read in previous issues and PRs that the necessary infrastructure was already in place for the aarch64-apple-darwin target, and the RFC mentions the same. So this should be all thats necessary in order for the target to be promoted.

This is a recreation of my previous PR because I accidentally did an incorrect git rebase which caused unnecessary changes to various commit SHAs. So this PR is a recreation of my previous PR without said stumble. My bad.
2024-08-11 07:51:51 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
853255e28d
Rollup merge of #128536 - Zalathar:print-cleanup, r=Nadrieril
Preliminary cleanup of `WitnessPat` hoisting/printing

Follow-up to #128430.

The eventual goal is to remove `print::Pat` entirely, but in the course of working towards that I made so many small improvements that it seems wise to let those be reviewed/merged on their own first.

Best reviewed commit-by-commit, most of which should be pretty simple and straightforward.

r? ``@Nadrieril``
2024-08-11 07:51:50 +02:00
bors
730d5d4095 Auto merge of #128572 - compiler-errors:fix-elaborate-box-derefs-on-debug, r=saethlin
Fix `ElaborateBoxDerefs` on debug varinfo

Slightly simplifies the `ElaborateBoxDerefs` pass to fix cases where it was applying the wrong projections to debug var infos containing places that deref boxes.

From what I can tell[^1], we don't actually have any tests (or code anywhere, really) that exercise `debug x => *(...: Box<T>)`, and it's very difficult to trigger this in surface Rust, so I wrote a custom MIR test.

What happens is that the pass was turning `*(SOME_PLACE: Box<T>)` into `*(*((((SOME_PLACE).0: Unique<T>).0: NonNull<T>).0: *const T))` in debug var infos. In particular, notice the *double deref*, which was wrong.

This is the root cause of #128554, so this PR fixes #128554 as well. The reason that async closures was affected is because of the way that we compute the [`ByMove` body](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/coroutine/by_move_body.rs), which resulted in `*(...: Box<T>)` in debug var info. But this really has nothing to do with async closures.

[^1]: Validated by literally replacing the `if elem == PlaceElem::Deref && base_ty.is_box() { ... }` innards with a `panic!()`, which compiled all of stage2 without panicking.
2024-08-10 21:24:25 +00:00
bors
04dff01740 Auto merge of #128400 - petrochenkov:nowhole3, r=bjorn3
linker: Remove the "`--whole-archive` in test mode" backcompat hack

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116910.
2024-08-10 18:57:58 +00:00
bors
04ba50e823 Auto merge of #128927 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-ei2lr0f, r=GuillaumeGomez
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #128273 (Improve `Ord` violation help)
 - #128807 (run-make: explaing why fmt-write-bloat is ignore-windows)
 - #128903 (rustdoc-json-types `Discriminant`: fix typo)
 - #128905 (gitignore: Add Zed and Helix editors)
 - #128908 (diagnostics: do not warn when a lifetime bound infers itself)
 - #128909 (Fix dump-ice-to-disk for RUSTC_ICE=0 users)
 - #128910 (Differentiate between methods and associated functions in diagnostics)
 - #128923 ([rustdoc] Stop showing impl items for negative impls)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-08-10 15:13:38 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
50e9fd1a1d
Rollup merge of #128910 - estebank:assoc-fn, r=compiler-errors
Differentiate between methods and associated functions in diagnostics

Accurately refer to assoc fn without receiver as assoc fn instead of methods. Add `AssocItem::descr` method to centralize where we call methods and associated functions.
2024-08-10 16:23:55 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
0d0265c1f0
Rollup merge of #128908 - notriddle:notriddle/self-inferred-lifetime-bounds, r=compiler-errors
diagnostics: do not warn when a lifetime bound infers itself

Fixes #119228
2024-08-10 16:23:53 +02:00
bors
8291d68d92 Auto merge of #122792 - Nadrieril:stabilize-min-exh-pats2, r=fee1-dead
Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns`

## Stabilisation report

I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119612) language feature.

With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows:
```rust
enum Void {}
fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>;

fn main() {
  let Ok(x) = foo();
  // also
  match foo() {
    Ok(x) => ...,
  }
}
```

This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky.

The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g.
```rust
enum Void {}
fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>;

fn main() {
  let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)`
}
```

The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible.

### Comparison with today's rust

This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions.

To be precise, a visibly empty type is:
- an enum with no variants;
- the never type `!`;
- a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation);
- a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty;
- en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation);
- a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty;
- all other types are nonempty.

(An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one)

For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature.

#### Today's rust

Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required.

```rust
let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ...,
    Err(_) => ..., // required
}
let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ...,
    Err(_) => ..., // required
}
let foo: &! = ...;
match foo {
    _ => ..., // required
}
fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) {
    match foo {
        _ => ..., // required
    }
}
unsafe {
    let ptr: *const ! = ...;
    match *ptr {} // allowed
    let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...;
    match *ptr {
        (x, _) => { ... } // required
    }
    let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...;
    match *ptr {
        Ok(x) => { ... }
        Err(_) => { ... } // required
    }
}
```

#### After this PR

After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if):
- the match scrutinee expression has type  `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before);
- *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior).

In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type.

```rust
let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required
}
let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ...,
    Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference
}
let foo: &! = ...;
match foo {
    _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference
}
fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) {
    match foo {} // allowed
}
unsafe {
    let ptr: *const ! = ...;
    match *ptr {} // allowed
    let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...;
    match *ptr {
        (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference
    }
    let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...;
    match *ptr {
        Ok(x) => { ... }
        Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference
    }
}
```

### Documentation

The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened https://github.com/rust-lang/nomicon/pull/445 to reflect the changes.

### Tests

The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`.

### Unresolved Questions

None that I know of.

try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
2024-08-10 12:48:29 +00:00
bohan
217ee32ac7 rm import.used 2024-08-10 20:19:53 +08:00
bors
48090b11b5 Auto merge of #128746 - compiler-errors:cache-super-outlives, r=lcnr
Cache supertrait outlives of impl header for soundness check

This caches the results of computing the transitive supertraits of an impl and filtering it to its outlives obligations. This is purely an optimization to improve https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124336.
2024-08-10 10:22:06 +00:00
Nadrieril
e77612d3e4 Fixes in various places 2024-08-10 12:08:46 +02:00
Nadrieril
c256de2253 Update std and compiler 2024-08-10 12:07:17 +02:00
Nadrieril
cd40769c02 Stabilize min_exhaustive_patterns 2024-08-10 12:07:17 +02:00
bors
7347f8e4e0 Auto merge of #128740 - compiler-errors:generic-preds, r=estebank
Stop unnecessarily taking GenericPredicates by `&self`

This results in overcapturing in edition 2024, and is unnecessary since `GenericPredicates: Copy`.
2024-08-10 07:54:26 +00:00
bors
19469cb536 Auto merge of #128714 - camelid:wf-struct-exprs, r=BoxyUwU
WF-check struct field types at construction site

Fixes #126272.
Fixes #127299.

Rustc of course already WF-checked the field types at the definition
site, but for error tainting of consts to work properly, there needs to
be an error emitted at the use site. Previously, with no use-site error,
we proceeded with CTFE and ran into ICEs since we are running code with
type errors.

Emitting use-site errors also brings struct-like constructors more in
line with fn-like constructors since they already emit use-site errors
for WF issues.

r? `@BoxyUwU`
2024-08-10 05:27:17 +00:00
Esteban Küber
860c8cdeaf Differentiate between methods and associated functions
Accurately refer to assoc fn without receiver as assoc fn instead of methods.
Add `AssocItem::descr` method to centralize where we call methods and associated functions.
2024-08-10 00:54:16 +00:00
Michael Howell
4dc13c5471 diagnostics: do not warn when a lifetime bound infers itself 2024-08-09 16:16:16 -07:00
Evelyn Harthbrooke
1c02e2b5f1
fix incorrect value 2024-08-09 16:59:36 -06:00
bors
68d2e8a66e Auto merge of #125642 - khuey:zstd, r=Kobzol
Enable zstd for debug compression.

Set LLVM_ENABLE_ZSTD alongside LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB so that --compress-debug-sections=zstd is an option.

See #120953

try-job: x86_64-gnu-tools
2024-08-09 22:44:37 +00:00
bors
ca5d25e2c4 Auto merge of #128896 - bjorn3:sync_cg_clif-2024-08-09, r=bjorn3
Subtree sync for rustc_codegen_cranelift

The main highlight this time is support for raw-dylib on Windows thanks to `@dpaoliello.` Compiling the ring crate for arm64 macOS has been fixed too.

r? `@ghost`

`@rustbot` label +A-codegen +A-cranelift +T-compiler
2024-08-09 20:18:10 +00:00
bjorn3
6e5873c08c Use ar_archive_writer from sysroot for cg_clif 2024-08-09 17:23:50 +00:00
bjorn3
af7ea3135d Merge commit '69b3f5a426a5c1c05236a45b36f6679d95fbe01b' into sync_cg_clif-2024-08-09 2024-08-09 17:18:46 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
665a1a4b55
Rollup merge of #128865 - jieyouxu:unicurd, r=Urgau
Ensure let stmt compound assignment removal suggestion respect codepoint boundaries

Previously we would try to issue a suggestion for `let x <op>= 1`, i.e.
a compound assignment within a `let` binding, to remove the `<op>`. The
suggestion code unfortunately incorrectly assumed that the `<op>` is an
exactly-1-byte ASCII character, but this assumption is incorrect because
we also recover Unicode-confusables like `=` as `-=`. In this example,
the suggestion code used a `+ BytePos(1)` to calculate the span of the
`<op>` codepoint that looks like `-` but the mult-byte Unicode
look-alike would cause the suggested removal span to be inside a
multi-byte codepoint boundary, triggering a codepoint boundary
assertion.

The fix is to use `SourceMap::start_point(token_span)` which properly accounts for codepoint boundaries.

Fixes #128845.

cc #128790

r? ````@fmease````
2024-08-09 18:25:00 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
9eb77ac3e0
Rollup merge of #128864 - jieyouxu:funnicode, r=Urgau
Use `SourceMap::end_point` instead of `- BytePos(1)` in arg removal suggestion

Previously, we tried to remove extra arg commas when providing extra arg removal suggestions. One of
the edge cases is having to account for an arg that has a closing delimiter `)` following it.
However, the previous suggestion code assumed that the delimiter is in fact exactly the 1-byte `)`
character. This assumption was proven incorrect, because we recover from Unicode-confusable
delimiters in the parser, which means that the ending delimiter could be a multi-byte codepoint
that looks *like* a `)`. Subtracing 1 byte could land us in the middle of a codepoint, triggering a
codepoint boundary assertion.

This is fixed by using `SourceMap::end_point` which properly accounts for codepoint boundaries.

Fixes #128717.

cc ````@fmease```` and #128790
2024-08-09 18:24:59 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
2066002b86
Rollup merge of #128852 - folkertdev:multipart-suggestion-stable-sort, r=compiler-errors
use stable sort to sort multipart diagnostics

I think a stable sort should be used to sort the different parts of a multipart selection. The current unstable sort uses the text of the suggestion as a tie-breaker. That just doesn't seem right, and the order of the input is a better choice I think, because it gives the diagnostic author more control.

This came up when I was building a suggestion where

```rust
fn foo() {}
```

must be turned into an unsafe function, and an attribute must be added

```rust
#[target_feature(enable = "...")]
unsafe fn foo() {}
```

In this example, the two suggestions occur at the same position, but the order is extremely important: unsafe must come after the attribute. But the situation changes if there is a pub/pub(crate), and if the unsafe is already present. It just out that because of the suggestion text, there is no way for me to order the suggestions correctly.

This change probably should be tested, but are there tests of the diagnostics code itself in the tests?

r? ```@estebank```
2024-08-09 18:24:58 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
55329cce76
Rollup merge of #128815 - Nadrieril:is_stolen, r=jieyouxu,lcnr
Add `Steal::is_stolen()`

Writers of rustc drivers (such as myself) often encounter stealing issues. It is currently impossible to gracefully handle them. This PR adds a `Steal::is_stolen()` function for that purpose.
2024-08-09 18:24:56 +02:00
Kyle Huey
6e9afb8dde Enable zstd for debug compression.
Set LLVM_ENABLE_ZSTD alongside LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB so that --compress-debug-sections=zstd is an option.
Use static linking to avoid a new runtime dependency. Add an llvm.libzstd bootstrap option for LLVM
with zstd. Set it off by default except for the dist builder. Handle llvm-config --system-libs output
that contains static libraries.
2024-08-09 05:55:23 -07:00
bors
899eb03926 Auto merge of #128703 - compiler-errors:normalizing-tails, r=lcnr
Miscellaneous improvements to struct tail normalization

1. Make checks for foreign tails more accurate by normalizing the struct tail. I didn't write a test for this one.
2. Normalize when computing struct tail for `offset_of` for slice/str. This fixes the new solver only.
3. Normalizing when computing tails for disaligned reference check. This fixes both solvers.

r? lcnr
2024-08-09 11:36:01 +00:00
Folkert
38874a6927
use stable sort to sort multipart diagnostics 2024-08-09 09:45:01 +02:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
d65f1316bb parser: ensure let stmt compound assignment removal suggestion respect codepoint boundaries
Previously we would try to issue a suggestion for `let x <op>= 1`, i.e.
a compound assignment within a `let` binding, to remove the `<op>`. The
suggestion code unfortunately incorrectly assumed that the `<op>` is an
exactly-1-byte ASCII character, but this assumption is incorrect because
we also recover Unicode-confusables like `=` as `-=`. In this example,
the suggestion code used a `+ BytePos(1)` to calculate the span of the
`<op>` codepoint that looks like `-` but the mult-byte Unicode
look-alike would cause the suggested removal span to be inside a
multi-byte codepoint boundary, triggering a codepoint boundary
assertion.

Issue: <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128845>
2024-08-09 05:56:50 +00:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
879bfd7ad0 hir_typeck: use end_point over BytePos manipulations
Parser has error recovery for Unicode-confusables, which includes the
right parentheses `)`. If a multi-byte right parentheses look-alike
reaches the argument removal suggestion diagnostics, it would trigger an
assertion because the diagnostics used `- BytePos(1)` which can land
within a multi-byte codepoint.

This is fixed by using `SourceMap::end_point` to find the final right
delimiter codepoint, which correctly respects codepoint boundaries.
2024-08-09 05:04:51 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
e88067927a
Rollup merge of #128824 - GuillaumeGomez:update-compiler-builtins, r=Amanieu
Update compiler-builtins version to 0.1.118

r? `@Amanieu`
2024-08-09 05:52:16 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
7485f8b9ab
Rollup merge of #128616 - compiler-errors:mir-inline-tainted, r=cjgillot
Don't inline tainted MIR bodies

Don't inline MIR bodies that are tainted, since they're not necessarily well-formed.

Fixes #128601 (I didn't add a new test, just copied one from the crashes, since they're the same root cause).
Fixes #122909.
2024-08-09 05:52:14 +02:00
Michael Goulet
65b029b468 Don't inline tainted MIR bodies 2024-08-08 20:53:25 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
9243aeecda
Rollup merge of #128851 - compiler-errors:validate-mir-opt-mir, r=matthiaskrgr
Add comment that bors did not see pushed before it merged

In #128612, bors merged 470ada2de0 instead of 1e07c19.

This means it dropped a useful comment I added, and a stage rename that is more descriptive.
2024-08-09 00:03:39 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
f106496b82
Rollup merge of #128806 - estebank:color-config, r=jieyouxu
Split `ColorConfig` off of `HumanReadableErrorType`

The previous setup tied two unrelated things together. Splitting these two is a better model.

Identified by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126597/files#r1667800754
2024-08-09 00:03:36 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
bcf6f9fa76
Rollup merge of #128791 - compiler-errors:async-fn-unsafe, r=lcnr
Don't implement `AsyncFn` for `FnDef`/`FnPtr` that wouldnt implement `Fn`

Due to unsafety, ABI, or the presence of target features, some `FnDef`/`FnPtr` types don't implement `Fn*`. Do the same for `AsyncFn*`.

Noticed this due to #128764, but this isn't really related to that ICE, which is fixed in #128792.
2024-08-09 00:03:36 +02:00
Michael Goulet
524e7689a9 Add comment that bors did not see pushed before it merged 2024-08-08 17:57:31 -04:00
Nadrieril
c966370b19
Tweak wording
Co-authored-by: lcnr <rust@lcnr.de>
2024-08-08 21:51:50 +02:00
Michael Goulet
ec1c424293 Don't implement AsyncFn for FnDef/FnPtr that wouldnt implement Fn 2024-08-08 14:07:31 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
70dccc2e9b
Rollup merge of #128826 - Alexendoo:lint-override-suggestions, r=compiler-errors
Only suggest `#[allow]` for `--warn` and `--deny` lint level flags

`--force-warn` and `--forbid` cannot be overridden
2024-08-08 18:57:04 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
f6e00f012d
Rollup merge of #128825 - bvanjoi:useless-resolver-field, r=petrochenkov
rm `declared_features` field in resolver

r? ``@petrochenkov``
2024-08-08 18:57:03 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
25fc71b7a1
Rollup merge of #128795 - zachs18:e0517-update-for-rfc-2195, r=jieyouxu
Update E0517 message to reflect RFC 2195.

E0517 occurs when a `#[repr(..)]` attribute is placed on an unsupported item. Currently, the explanation of the error implies that `#[repr(u*/i*)]` cannot be placed on fieldful enums, which is no longer the case since [RFC 2195](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2195) was [stabilized](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60553), which allows placing `#[repr(u*/i*)]` and/or `#[repr(C)]` on fieldful enums to produce a defined layout.

This PR doesn't (currently) add a description of the semantics of placing `#[repr(u*/i*)]` on a fieldful enum to the error explanation, it just removes the claims/implications that it is not allowed.
2024-08-08 18:57:02 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
2d7075cf00
Rollup merge of #128612 - compiler-errors:validate-mir-opt-mir, r=davidtwco
Make `validate_mir` ensure the final MIR for all bodies

A lot of the crashes tests use `-Zpolymorphize` or `-Zdump-mir` for their side effect of computing the `optimized_mir` for all bodies, which will uncover bugs with late MIR passes like the inliner. I don't like having all these tests depend on `-Zpolymorphize` (or other hacky ways) for no reason, so this PR extends the `-Zvalidate-mir` flag to ensure `optimized_mir`/`mir_for_ctfe` for all body owners during the analysis phase.

Two thoughts:
1. This could be moved later in the compilation pipeline I guess? I don't really think it matters, though.
1. This could alternatively be expressed using a new flag, though I don't necessarily see much value in separating these.

For example, #128171 could have used this flag, in the `tests/ui/polymorphization/inline-incorrect-early-bound.rs`.

r? mir
2024-08-08 18:57:00 +02:00
Michael Goulet
b916431976 Rename struct_tail_erasing_lifetimes to struct_tail_for_codegen 2024-08-08 12:15:16 -04:00
Michael Goulet
f81549c9ca Normalize struct tail properly in disalignment check 2024-08-08 11:58:11 -04:00