Commit Graph

39758 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
0e08d7002b
Rollup merge of #130715 - compiler-errors:mir-build-const-eval, r=BoxyUwU
Replace calls to `ty::Const::{try_}eval` in mir build/pattern analysis

We normalize consts in writeback: #130645. This means that consts are gonna be as normalized as they're ever gonna get in MIR building and pattern analysis. Therefore we can just use `try_to_target_usize` rather than calling `eval_target_usize`.

Regarding the `.expect` calls, I'm not totally certain whether they're correct given rigid unevaluated consts. But this PR shouldn't make *more* ICEs occur; we may have to squash these ICEs when mGCE comes around, tho 😺
2024-09-23 06:45:36 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
2bca5c4fc1
Rollup merge of #130714 - compiler-errors:try-structurally-resolve-const, r=BoxyUwU
Introduce `structurally_normalize_const`, use it in `rustc_hir_typeck`

Introduces `structurally_normalize_const` to typecking to separate the "eval a const" step from the "try to turn a valtree into a target usize" in HIR typeck, where we may still have infer vars and stuff around.

I also changed `check_expr_repeat` to move a double evaluation of a const into a single one. I'll leave inline comments.

r? ```@BoxyUwU```

I hesitated to really test this on the new solver where it probably matters for unevaluated consts. If you're worried about the side-effects, I'd be happy to craft some more tests 😄
2024-09-23 06:45:36 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
82060368e6
Rollup merge of #130712 - compiler-errors:const-eval-error-reporting, r=BoxyUwU
Don't call `ty::Const::normalize` in error reporting

We do this to ensure that trait refs with unevaluated consts have those consts simplified to their evaluated forms. Instead, use `try_normalize_erasing_regions`.

**NOTE:** This has the side-effect of erasing regions from all of our trait refs. If this is too much to review or you think it's too opinionated of a diagnostics change, then I could split out the effective change (i.e. erasing regions from this impl suggestion) into another PR and have someone else review it.
2024-09-23 06:45:34 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
9f5cbfb455
Rollup merge of #130705 - compiler-errors:rtn-complete, r=jackh726
No longer mark RTN as incomplete

The RFC is accepted and the feature is basically fully implemented. This doesn't mean it's necesarily *ready* for stabiliation; there's probably some diagnostic improvements to be made, and as always, users uncover the most creative bugs.

But marking this feature as incomplete no longer serves any purpose, so let's fix that.
2024-09-23 06:45:34 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
23393de793
Rollup merge of #130344 - Jaic1:fix-116306, r=BoxyUwU
Handle unsized consts with type `str`  in v0 symbol mangling

This PR fixes #116303 by handling consts with type `str` in v0 symbol mangling as partial support for unsized consts.

This PR is related to `#![feature(adt_const_params)]` (#95174) and `#![feature(unsized_const_params)]` (#128028).

r? ``@BoxyUwU``
2024-09-23 06:45:33 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
510fc3432e
Rollup merge of #129550 - kornelski:boxasstr, r=joshtriplett,dtolnay
Add str.as_str() for easy Deref to string slices

Working with `Box<str>` is cumbersome, because in places like `iter.filter()` it can end up being `&Box<str>` or even `&&Box<str>`, and such type doesn't always get auto-dereferenced as expected.

Dereferencing such box to `&str` requires ugly syntax like `&**boxed_str` or `&***boxed_str`, with the exact amount of `*`s.

`Box<str>` is [not easily comparable with other string types](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129852) via `PartialEq`. `Box<str>` won't work for lookups in types like `HashSet<String>`, because `Borrow<String>` won't take types like `&Box<str>`. OTOH `set.contains(s.as_str())` works nicely regardless of levels of indirection.

`String` has a simple solution for this: the `as_str()` method, and `Box<str>` should too.
2024-09-23 06:45:32 +02:00
bors
66b0b29e65 Auto merge of #130724 - compiler-errors:bump, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Bump stage0 to beta-2024-09-22 and rustfmt to nightly-2024-09-22

I'm doing this to apply the changes to version sorting (https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/pull/6284) that have occurred since rustfmt last upgraded (and a few other miscellaneous changes, like changes to expression overflowing: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/pull/6260). Eagerly updating rustfmt and formatting-the-world will ideally move some of the pressure off of the beta bump which will happen at the beginning of the next release cycle.

You can verify this is correct by checking out the changes, reverting the last commit, reapplying them, and diffing the changes:

```
git fetch git@github.com:compiler-errors/rust.git bump
git checkout -b bump FETCH_HEAD
git reset --hard HEAD~5
./x.py fmt --all
git diff FETCH_HEAD
# ignore the changes to stage0, and rustfmt.toml,
# and test file changes in rustdoc-js-std, run-make.
```

Or just take my word for it? Up to the reviewer.

r? release
2024-09-23 02:02:22 +00:00
bors
d14c1c75ab Auto merge of #130680 - saethlin:module-name-to-str, r=jieyouxu
Call module_name_to_str instead of just unwrapping

This makes the ICE message in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130678 more clear. It looks like not calling this function was just an oversight in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/76859, but clearly not a major one because it's taken us 4 years to notice.

try-job: i686-msvc
2024-09-22 23:14:12 +00:00
Michael Goulet
c682aa162b Reformat using the new identifier sorting from rustfmt 2024-09-22 19:11:29 -04:00
Michael Goulet
2273aeed9d Replace calls to Const::eval in mir build 2024-09-22 14:12:37 -04:00
Michael Goulet
01d19d7be9 Don't call try_eval_target_usize in error reporting 2024-09-22 13:55:06 -04:00
Michael Goulet
8f579497f7 Don't call const normalize in error reporting 2024-09-22 13:55:06 -04:00
Michael Goulet
3b8089a320 Introduce structurally_normalize_const, use it in hir_typeck 2024-09-22 13:54:16 -04:00
Guillaume Gomez
f40efa44ab
Rollup merge of #130690 - RalfJung:interpret-abi-compat-fixme, r=jieyouxu
interpret: remove outdated FIXME

The rule about `repr(C)` types with compatible fields got removed from the ABI compat docs before they landed, so this FIXME here is no longer correct. (So this is basically a follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130185, doing some more cleanup around deciding not to guarantee ABI compatibility for structurally compatible `repr(C)` types.)
2024-09-22 19:19:15 +02:00
Michael Goulet
95469dc09a No longer mark RTN as incomplete 2024-09-22 10:46:59 -04:00
bors
4ae36d906f Auto merge of #130689 - RalfJung:rustc_nonnull_optimization_guaranteed, r=jieyouxu
fix rustc_nonnull_optimization_guaranteed docs

As far as I can tell, even back when this was [added](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/60300) it never *enabled* any optimizations. It just indicates that the FFI compat lint should accept those types for NPO.
2024-09-22 10:18:59 +00:00
Ralf Jung
8103505a4d fix rustc_nonnull_optimization_guaranteed docs 2024-09-22 10:00:24 +02:00
bors
80aa6fa731 Auto merge of #130688 - workingjubilee:rollup-ovre6p7, r=workingjubilee
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #130648 (move enzyme flags from general cargo to rustc-specific cargo)
 - #130650 (Fixup Apple target's description strings)
 - #130664 (Generate line numbers for non-rust code examples as well)
 - #130665 (Prevent Deduplication of `LongRunningWarn`)
 - #130669 (tests: Test that `extern "C" fn` ptrs lint on slices)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-09-22 07:48:56 +00:00
Ralf Jung
27400ea4ed interpret: remove outdated FIXME 2024-09-22 08:18:30 +02:00
Jubilee
b0208640c6
Rollup merge of #130665 - veera-sivarajan:fix-118612, r=compiler-errors
Prevent Deduplication of `LongRunningWarn`

Fixes #118612

As mention in the issue, `LongRunningWarn` is meant to be repeated multiple times.

Therefore, this PR stores a unique number in every instance of `LongRunningWarn` so that it's not hashed into the same value and omitted by the deduplication mechanism.
2024-09-21 22:34:34 -07:00
Jubilee
2875d6f98e
Rollup merge of #130650 - BlackHoleFox:apple-target-desc-consistency, r=jieyouxu
Fixup Apple target's description strings

Noticed this inconsistency in how the Apple target's had their new descriptions written while looking at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130614, and figured it was easy enough to fixup shortly. I think prefixing every OS with `Apple` is clearer, especially for less known ones like `visionOS` and `watchOS`; so that's what was done here along with making the architecture names more consistent and then some other small tweaks.

~~r​? `@thomcc~~`

cc `@madsmtm`
2024-09-21 22:34:32 -07:00
bors
1f9a018fa3 Auto merge of #130446 - durin42:llvm-20-fix-CommandLineArgs, r=workingjubilee
rustc_llvm: adapt to flattened CLI args in LLVM

This changed in
llvm/llvm-project@e190d074a0. I decided to stick with more duplication between the ifdef blocks to make the code easier to read for the next two years before we can plausibly drop LLVM 19.

`@rustbot` label: +llvm-main

try-job: x86_64-msvc
2024-09-22 05:26:41 +00:00
bors
6ce376774c Auto merge of #130246 - dianne:issue-97589-fix, r=petrochenkov
rustc_expand: remember module `#[path]`s during expansion

During invocation collection, if a module item parsed from a `#[path]` attribute needed a second pass after parsing, its path wouldn't get added to the file path stack, so cycle detection broke. This checks the `#[path]` in such cases, so that it gets added appropriately. I think it should work identically to the case for external modules that don't need a second pass, but I'm not 100% sure.

Fixes #97589
2024-09-22 02:59:38 +00:00
bors
55043f067d Auto merge of #130337 - BoxyUwU:anon_const_macro_call, r=camelid
Fix anon const def-creation when macros are involved take 2

Fixes #130321

There were two cases that #129137 did not handle correctly:

- Given a const argument `Foo<{ bar!() }>` in which `bar!()` expands to `N`, we would visit the anon const and then visit the `{ bar() }` expression instead of visiting the macro call. This meant that we would build a def for the anon const as `{ bar!() }` is not a trivial const argument as `bar!()` is not a path.
- Given a const argument `Foo<{ bar!() }>` is which `bar!()` expands to `{ qux!() }` in which `qux!()` expands to `N`, it should not be considered a trivial const argument as `{{ N }}` has two pairs of braces.  If we only looked at `qux`'s expansion it would *look* like a trivial const argument even though it is not. We have to track whether we have "unwrapped" a brace already when recursing into the expansions of `bar`/`qux`/any macro

r? `@camelid`
2024-09-22 00:31:03 +00:00
Ben Kimock
6419aeb1ec Call module_name_to_str instead of just unwrapping 2024-09-21 18:42:51 -04:00
Boxy
781ec111b7 Handle macro calls in anon const def creation take 2 2024-09-21 22:17:18 +01:00
Michael Goulet
52f146d363
Rollup merge of #130673 - GrigorenkoPV:path-triple-colon, r=compiler-errors
Parser: recover from `:::` to `::`

Closes #130613
2024-09-21 15:18:59 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a66563ff0e
Rollup merge of #130667 - workingjubilee:she-is-c-c-c-cold, r=compiler-errors
compiler: Accept "improper" ctypes in extern "rust-cold" fn
2024-09-21 15:18:58 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d1b43d09e3
Rollup merge of #130666 - compiler-errors:super-bounds, r=fee1-dead,fmease
Assert that `explicit_super_predicates_of` and `explicit_item_super_predicates` truly only contains bounds for the type itself

We distinguish _implied_ predicates (anything that is implied from elaborating a trait bound) from _super_ predicates, which are are the subset of implied predicates that share the same self type as the trait predicate we're elaborating. This was originally done in #107614, which fixed a large class of ICEs and strange errors where the compiler expected the self type of a trait predicate not to change when elaborating super predicates.

Specifically, super predicates are special for various reasons: they're the valid candidates for trait upcasting, are the only predicates we elaborate when doing closure signature inference, etc. So making sure that we get this list correct and don't accidentally "leak" any other predicates into this list is quite important.

This PR adds some debug assertions that we're in fact not doing so, and it fixes an oversight in the effect desugaring rework.
2024-09-21 15:18:58 -04:00
Michael Goulet
d72d44d8ed
Rollup merge of #129629 - compiler-errors:rtn-in-path, r=jackh726
Implement Return Type Notation (RTN)'s path form in where clauses

Implement return type notation (RTN) in path position for where clauses. We already had RTN in associated type position ([e.g.](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=nightly&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=627a4fb8e2cb334863fbd08ed3722c09)), but per [the RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3654-return-type-notation.html#where-rtn-can-be-used-for-now):

> As a standalone type, RTN can only be used as the Self type of a where-clause [...]

Specifically, in order to enable code like:

```rust
trait Foo {
    fn bar() -> impl Sized;
}

fn is_send(_: impl Send) {}

fn test<T>()
where
    T: Foo,
    T::bar(..): Send,
{
    is_send(T::bar());
}
```

* In the resolver, when we see a `TyKind::Path` whose final segment is `GenericArgs::ParenthesizedElided` (i.e. `(..)`), resolve that path in the *value* namespace, since we're looking for a method.
* When lowering where clauses in HIR lowering, we first try to intercept an RTN self type via `lower_ty_maybe_return_type_notation`. If we find an RTN type, we lower it manually in a way that respects its higher-ranked-ness (see below) and resolves to the corresponding RPITIT. Anywhere else, we'll emit the same "return type notation not allowed in this position yet" error we do when writing RTN in every other position.
* In `resolve_bound_vars`, we add some special treatment for RTN types in where clauses. Specifically, we need to add new lifetime variables to our binders for the early- and late-bound vars we encounter on the method. This implements the higher-ranked desugaring [laid out in the RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3654-return-type-notation.html#converting-to-higher-ranked-trait-bounds).

This PR also adds a bunch of tests, mostly negative ones (testing error messages).

In a follow-up PR, I'm going to mark RTN as no longer incomplete, since this PR basically finishes the impl surface that we should initially stabilize, and the RFC was accepted.

cc [RFC 3654](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3654) and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109417
2024-09-21 15:18:56 -04:00
Michael Goulet
2a9525bb90
Rollup merge of #127766 - folkertdev:c-cmse-nonsecure-entry, r=jackh726
add `extern "C-cmse-nonsecure-entry" fn`

tracking issue #75835

in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75835#issuecomment-1183517255 it was decided that using an abi, rather than an attribute, was the right way to go for this feature.

This PR adds that ABI and removes the `#[cmse_nonsecure_entry]` attribute. All relevant tests have been updated, some are now obsolete and have been removed.

Error 0775 is no longer generated. It contains the list of targets that support the CMSE feature, and maybe we want to still use this? right now a generic "this abi is not supported on this platform" error is returned when this abi is used on an unsupported platform. On the other hand, users of this abi are likely to be experienced rust users, so maybe the generic error is good enough.
2024-09-21 15:18:55 -04:00
Pavel Grigorenko
82482dc357 Parser: recover from ::: to :: in delegations 2024-09-21 20:29:22 +03:00
Pavel Grigorenko
e90e2593ea Parser: recover from ::: to :: 2024-09-21 20:07:52 +03:00
Michael Goulet
4f3d06f5aa Don't elaborate effects predicates into bounds list unless we're actually collecting implied bounds, not super bounds 2024-09-21 12:20:40 -04:00
Michael Goulet
a846d55d46 Assert that explicit_super_predicates_of and explicit_item_bounds truly only bounds for the type itself 2024-09-21 12:20:40 -04:00
bors
1d68e6dd1d Auto merge of #127546 - workingjubilee:5-level-paging-exists, r=saethlin
Correct outdated object size limit

The comment here about 48 bit addresses being enough was written in 2016 but was made incorrect in 2019 by 5-level paging, and then persisted for another 5 years before being noticed and corrected.

The bolding of the "exclusive" part is merely to call attention to something I missed when reading it and doublechecking the math.

try-job: i686-msvc
try-job: test-various
2024-09-21 16:20:10 +00:00
Jubilee Young
93993c77f5 compiler: Accept "improper" ctypes in extern "rust-cold" fn 2024-09-21 08:59:52 -07:00
BlackHoleFox
114093cdf1 Fixup Apple target's description strings 2024-09-21 10:59:01 -05:00
Veera
669f610f74 Prevent Deduplication of LongRunningWarn 2024-09-21 11:23:34 -04:00
Jubilee
cf78f26d5e
compiler: Precisely name units of object size
Co-authored-by: Ralf Jung <post@ralfj.de>
2024-09-21 07:54:54 -07:00
Michael Goulet
1de894f0c1 More tests and tweak comments 2024-09-21 10:10:40 -04:00
bors
2836482241 Auto merge of #129283 - saethlin:unreachable-allocas, r=scottmcm
Don't alloca for unused locals

We already have a concept of mono-unreachable basic blocks; this is primarily useful for ensuring that we do not compile code under an `if false`. But since we never gave locals the same analysis, a large local only used under an `if false` will still have stack space allocated for it.

There are 3 places we traverse MIR during monomorphization: Inside the collector, `non_ssa_locals`, and the walk to generate code. Unfortunately, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129283#issuecomment-2297925578 indicates that we cannot afford the expense of tracking reachable locals during the collector's traversal, so we do need at least two mono-reachable traversals. And of course caching is of no help here because the benchmarks that regress are incr-unchanged; they don't do any codegen.

This fixes the second problem in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129282, and brings us anther step toward `const if` at home.
2024-09-21 13:48:14 +00:00
bors
f48c99a004 Auto merge of #130599 - jieyouxu:snake_case_binary_cleanup, r=petrochenkov
Explain why `non_snake_case` is skipped for binary crates and cleanup tests

- Explain `non_snake_case` lint is skipped for bin crate names because binaries are not intended to be distributed or consumed like library crates (#45127).
- Coalesce the bunch of tests into a single one but with revisions, which is easier to compare the differences for `non_snake_case` behavior with respect to crate types.

Follow-up to #121749 with some more comments and test cleanup.

cc `@saethlin` who bumped into one of the tests and was confused why it was `only-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu`.

try-job: dist-i586-gnu-i586-i686-musl
2024-09-21 11:16:38 +00:00
Folkert de Vries
ac9a49f62d mark E0775 as no longer emitte by the compiler 2024-09-21 13:09:09 +02:00
Folkert
4d75a4f0f2 disallow cmse ABIs on unsupported platforms 2024-09-21 13:05:23 +02:00
Folkert
5722a80782 remove #[cmse_nonsecure_entry] 2024-09-21 13:05:21 +02:00
Folkert de Vries
1ddd67a79a add C-cmse-nonsecure-entry ABI 2024-09-21 13:04:14 +02:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
43ede7331d Explain why non_snake_case is skipped for binary crates 2024-09-21 05:24:26 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
5770ba8686
Rollup merge of #130646 - workingjubilee:literally-factorize-int-lint, r=compiler-errors
compiler: factor out `OVERFLOWING_LITERALS` impl

This puts it into `rustc_lint/src/types/literal.rs`. It then uses the fact that it's easier to navigate the logic to identify something that can easily be factored out, as an instance of "why".
2024-09-21 07:22:50 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
e6cf3bd267
Rollup merge of #130645 - compiler-errors:normalize-gce-writeback, r=BoxyUwU
Normalize consts in writeback when GCE is enabled

GCE lazily normalizes its unevaluated consts. This PR ensures that, like the new solver with its lazy norm types, we can assume that the writeback results are fully normalized.

This is important since we're trying to eliminate unnecessary calls to `ty::Const::{eval,normalize}` since they won't work with mGCE. Previously, we'd keep those consts unnormalized in writeback all the way through MIR build, and they'd only get normalized if we explicitly called `ty::Const::{eval,normalize}`, or during codegen since that calls `normalize_erasing_regions` (which invokes the `QueryNormalizer`, which evaluates the const accordingly).

This hack can (hopefully obviously) be removed when mGCE is implemented and we yeet the old GCE; it's only reachable with the GCE flag anyways, so I'm not worried about the implications here.

r? `@BoxyUwU`
2024-09-21 07:22:49 +02:00