Commit Graph

2291 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nicholas Nethercote
2aae619edb Move MirPass to rustc_mir_transform.
Because that's now the only crate that uses it.

Moving stuff out of `rustc_middle` is always welcome.

I chose to use `impl crate::MirPass`/`impl crate::MirLint` (with
explicit `crate::`) everywhere because that's the only mention of
`MirPass`/`MirLint` used in all of these files. (Prior to this change,
`MirPass` was mostly imported via `use rustc_middle::mir::*` items.)
2024-09-03 16:03:46 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5410900aaa Adjust SanityCheck.
The actual implementation remains in `rustc_mir_dataflow`, but this
commit moves the `MirPass` impl to `rustc_mir_transform` and changes it
to a `MirLint` (fixing a `FIXME` comment).

(I originally tried moving the full implementation from
`rustc_mir_dataflow` but I had some trait problems with `HasMoveData`
and `RustcPeekAt` and `MaybeLiveLocals`. This commit was much smaller
and simpler, but still will allow some follow-up cleanups.)
2024-09-03 15:18:30 +10:00
Matthias Krüger
1d9eb9df7f
Rollup merge of #129877 - Sajjon:sajjon_fix_typos_batch_2, r=fee1-dead
chore: Fix typos in 'compiler' (batch 2)

Batch 2/3: Fixes typos in `compiler`

(See [issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129874) tracking all PRs with typos fixes)
2024-09-02 22:35:21 +02:00
Alexander Cyon
00de006f22
chore: Fix typos in 'compiler' (batch 2) 2024-09-02 07:50:22 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
dce26656ea
Rollup merge of #129738 - nnethercote:rustc_mir_transform-cleanups, r=cjgillot
`rustc_mir_transform` cleanups

A bunch of small improvements I made while looking closely at this code.

r? `@saethlin`
2024-09-02 04:19:28 +02:00
Michael Goulet
384aed834c Do not call query to compute coroutine layout for synthetic body of async closure 2024-09-01 06:13:04 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
830b1deaee
Rollup merge of #129812 - RalfJung:box-custom-alloc, r=compiler-errors
interpret, codegen: tweak some comments and checks regarding Box with custom allocator

Cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/95453
2024-08-31 14:46:14 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
7d025bb63d
Rollup merge of #129767 - nnethercote:rm-extern-crate-tracing-4, r=jieyouxu
Remove `#[macro_use] extern crate tracing`, round 4

Because explicit importing of macros via use items is nicer (more standard and readable) than implicit importing via #[macro_use]. Continuing the work from #124511, #124914, and #125434. After this PR no `rustc_*` crates use `#[macro_use] extern crate tracing` except for `rustc_codegen_gcc` which is a special case and I will do separately.

r? ```@jieyouxu```
2024-08-31 14:46:11 +02:00
Ralf Jung
d0aedfbb90 interpret, codegen: tweak some comments and checks regarding Box with custom allocator 2024-08-31 11:29:02 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
44185520cf
Rollup merge of #129724 - nnethercote:rm-Option-bang, r=fee1-dead
Remove `Option<!>` return types.

Several compiler functions have `Option<!>` for their return type. That's odd. The only valid return value is `None`, so why is this type used?

Because it lets you write certain patterns slightly more concisely. E.g. if you have these common patterns:
```
    let Some(a) = f() else { return };
    let Ok(b) = g() else { return };
```
you can shorten them to these:
```
    let a = f()?;
    let b = g().ok()?;
```
Huh.

An `Option` return type typically designates success/failure. How should I interpret the type signature of a function that always returns (i.e. doesn't panic), does useful work (modifying `&mut` arguments), and yet only ever fails? This idiom subverts the type system for a cute syntactic trick.

Furthermore, returning `Option<!>` from a function F makes things syntactically more convenient within F, but makes things worse at F's callsites. The callsites can themselves use `?` with F but should not, because they will get an unconditional early return, which is almost certainly not desirable. Instead the return value should be ignored. (Note that some of callsites of `process_operand`, `process_immedate`, `process_assign` actually do use `?`, though the early return doesn't matter in these cases because nothing of significance comes after those calls. Ugh.)

When I first saw this pattern I had no idea how to interpret it, and it took me several minutes of close reading to understand everything I've written above. I even started a Zulip thread about it to make sure I understood it properly. "Save a few characters by introducing types so weird that compiler devs have to discuss it on Zulip" feels like a bad trade-off to me. This commit replaces all the `Option<!>` return values and uses `else`/`return` (or something similar) to replace the relevant `?` uses. The result is slightly more verbose but much easier to understand.

r? ``````@cjgillot``````
2024-08-31 10:08:56 +02:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ac7a293336 Avoid repeated interning in SelfArgVisitor. 2024-08-30 13:35:41 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
8541b0f1f3 Use let/else to reduce some indentation. 2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
243109e006 Remove an unnecessary continue. 2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
590a02173b Factor out some repetitive code. 2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
408481f4d8 Remove some unnecessary constants.
These are just renamings of `CoroutineArgs` constants.
2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
d7cb1181dc Merge DerefArgVisitor and PinArgVisitor.
They are almost identical, differing only in the `ProjectionElem` they
insert. This commit merges them into a new type `SelfArgVisitor`.
2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5331280a2b Merge some ifs.
For more concise code.
2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
3b6af9a451 Use a local variable. 2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
66b3585145 Simplify a pattern. 2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
2932e097f4 Simplify creation of a set. 2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fda52b8f63 Simplify a provider definition. 2024-08-30 10:30:57 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
016a709b24 Condense use rustc_* declarations.
No reason to have two of them listed separately, after modules.
2024-08-30 10:30:56 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
016a2e30a9 Remove unused features. 2024-08-30 10:30:56 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ed5161c5ac Remove #[macro_use] extern crate tracing from rustc_mir_transform. 2024-08-30 10:01:34 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fa4f8925f1 Remove Option<!> return types.
Several compiler functions have `Option<!>` for their return type.
That's odd. The only valid return value is `None`, so why is this type
used?

Because it lets you write certain patterns slightly more concisely. E.g.
if you have these common patterns:
```
    let Some(a) = f() else { return };
    let Ok(b) = g() else { return };
```
you can shorten them to these:
```
    let a = f()?;
    let b = g().ok()?;
```
Huh.

An `Option` return type typically designates success/failure. How should
I interpret the type signature of a function that always returns (i.e.
doesn't panic), does useful work (modifying `&mut` arguments), and yet
only ever fails? This idiom subverts the type system for a cute
syntactic trick.

Furthermore, returning `Option<!>` from a function F makes things
syntactically more convenient within F, but makes things worse at F's
callsites. The callsites can themselves use `?` with F but should not,
because they will get an unconditional early return, which is almost
certainly not desirable. Instead the return value should be ignored.
(Note that some of callsites of `process_operand`, `process_immedate`,
`process_assign` actually do use `?`, though the early return doesn't
matter in these cases because nothing of significance comes after those
calls. Ugh.)

When I first saw this pattern I had no idea how to interpret it, and it
took me several minutes of close reading to understand everything I've
written above. I even started a Zulip thread about it to make sure I
understood it properly. "Save a few characters by introducing types so
weird that compiler devs have to discuss it on Zulip" feels like a bad
trade-off to me. This commit replaces all the `Option<!>` return values
and uses `else`/`return` (or something similar) to replace the relevant
`?` uses. The result is slightly more verbose but much easier to
understand.
2024-08-30 08:18:41 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
1be2204363 Simplify Candidate.
By making it own the index maps, instead of holding references to them.
This requires moving the free function `find_candidate` into
`Candidate::reset_and_find`. It lets the `'alloc` lifetime be removed
everywhere that still has it.
2024-08-29 12:13:22 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
ad5a6e11c7 Remove Allocations.
It's not necessary, and just complicates things.
2024-08-29 12:00:40 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0a282ea717 Move WriteInfo out of Allocations.
It doesn't need to be in there, and the move simplifies lifetimes.
2024-08-29 12:00:40 +10:00
Nicholas Nethercote
c6111c0e80 Remove the 'body lifetime on FilterInformation.
It's not needed.
2024-08-29 12:00:40 +10:00
Ben Kimock
950437a035 Use a reduced recursion limit in the MIR inliner's cycle breaker 2024-08-28 19:52:23 -04:00
Zalathar
46e1b5b6dd coverage: Rename CodeRegion to SourceRegion
LLVM uses the word "code" to refer to a particular kind of coverage mapping.
This unrelated usage of the word is confusing, and makes it harder to introduce
types whose names correspond to the LLVM classification of coverage kinds.
2024-08-28 22:17:42 +10:00
Zalathar
5e162a8f48 coverage: Simplify some debug logging 2024-08-28 22:07:57 +10:00
Michael Goulet
4609841c07 Stop using a special inner body for the coroutine by-move body for async closures 2024-08-26 18:44:19 -04:00
Michael Goulet
0b2525c787 Simplify some redundant field names 2024-08-21 01:31:42 -04:00
Trevor Gross
5044b20028
Rollup merge of #128628 - khuey:simply-cfg-erase-source-info, r=nnethercote
When deduplicating unreachable blocks, erase the source information.

After deduplication the block conceptually belongs to multiple locations in the source. Although these blocks are unreachable, in #123341 we did come across a real side effect, an unreachable block that survives into the compiled code can cause a debugger to set a breakpoint on the wrong instruction. Erasing the source information ensures that a debugger will never be misled into thinking that the unreachable block is worth setting a breakpoint on, especially after #128627.

Technically we don't need to erase the source information if all the deduplicated blocks have identical source information, but tracking that seems like more effort than it's worth.

I'll let njn redirect this one too. r? `@nnethercote`
2024-08-18 23:41:47 -05:00
Ralf Jung
35709be02d rename AddressOf -> RawBorrow inside the compiler 2024-08-18 19:46:53 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
6c898d2b03
Rollup merge of #129101 - compiler-errors:deref-on-parent-by-ref, r=lcnr
Fix projections when parent capture is by-ref but child capture is by-value in the `ByMoveBody` pass

This fixes a somewhat strange bug where we build the incorrect MIR in #129074. This one is weird, but I don't expect it to actually matter in practice since it almost certainly results in a move error in borrowck. However, let's not ICE.

Given the code:

```
#![feature(async_closure)]

// NOT copy.
struct Ty;

fn hello(x: &Ty) {
    let c = async || {
        *x;
        //~^ ERROR cannot move out of `*x` which is behind a shared reference
    };
}

fn main() {}
```

The parent coroutine-closure captures `x: &Ty` by-ref, resulting in an upvar of `&&Ty`. The child coroutine captures `x` by-value, resulting in an upvar of `&Ty`. When constructing the by-move body for the coroutine-closure, we weren't applying an additional deref projection to convert the parent capture into the child capture, resulting in an type error in assignment, which is a validation ICE.

As I said above, this only occurs (AFAICT) in code that eventually results in an error, because it is only triggered by HIR that attempts to move a non-copy value out of a ref. This doesn't occur if `Ty` is `Copy`, since we'd instead capture `x` by-ref in the child coroutine.

Fixes #129074
2024-08-15 19:32:37 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
c582c0c137
Rollup merge of #129067 - cuviper:append, r=wesleywiser
Use `append` instead of `extend(drain(..))`

The first commit adds `IndexVec::append` that forwards to `Vec::append`, and uses it in a couple places.

The second commit updates `indexmap` for its new `IndexMap::append`, and also uses that in a couple places.

These changes are similar to what [`clippy::extend_with_drain`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/extend_with_drain) would suggest, just for other collection types.
2024-08-15 00:02:27 +02:00
Michael Goulet
1e1d839388 Fix projections when parent capture is by-ref 2024-08-14 13:24:07 -04:00
bors
e9c965df7b Auto merge of #128812 - nnethercote:shrink-TyKind-FnPtr, r=compiler-errors
Shrink `TyKind::FnPtr`.

By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and `FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms. This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-08-14 00:56:53 +00:00
Josh Stone
0a34ce49ce Add and use IndexVec::append 2024-08-13 13:40:05 -07:00
Guillaume Gomez
7c6dca9050
Rollup merge of #128978 - compiler-errors:assert-matches, r=jieyouxu
Use `assert_matches` around the compiler more

It's a useful assertion, especially since it actually prints out the LHS.
2024-08-12 17:09:19 +02:00
Michael Goulet
c361c924a0 Use assert_matches around the compiler 2024-08-11 12:25:39 -04:00
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
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
Nicholas Nethercote
c4717cc9d1 Shrink TyKind::FnPtr.
By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and
`FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size
of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms.
This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It
also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't
translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI.
2024-08-09 14:33:25 +10:00
Michael Goulet
65b029b468 Don't inline tainted MIR bodies 2024-08-08 20:53:25 -04:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
c4c518d2d4
Use more slice patterns inside the compiler 2024-08-07 13:37:52 +02:00
Caleb Zulawski
83276f5680 Hide implicit target features from diagnostics when possible 2024-08-07 00:43:52 -04:00
Kyle Huey
709406fc6c When deduplicating unreachable blocks, erase the source information.
After deduplication the block conceptually belongs to multiple locations
in the source. Although these blocks are unreachable, in #123341 we did
come across a real side effect, an unreachable block that survives into
the compiled code can cause a debugger to set a breakpoint on the wrong
instruction. Erasing the source information ensures that a debugger will
never be misled into thinking that the unreachable block is worth setting
a breakpoint on, especially after #128627.

Technically we don't need to erase the source information if all the
deduplicated blocks have identical source information, but tracking
that seems like more effort than it's worth.
2024-08-03 21:23:35 -07:00
DianQK
1f9d9603c0
Re-enable SimplifyToExp in match_branches. 2024-08-03 10:55:46 +08:00
DianQK
8b9d7b1489
Simplify match based on the cast result of IntToInt. 2024-08-03 10:55:43 +08:00
Michael Goulet
2e52d61807 Stop doing weird index stuff in ElaborateBoxDerefs 2024-08-02 17:45:55 -04:00
Ralf Jung
6d312d7bd1 MIR required_consts, mentioned_items: ensure we do not forget to fill these lists 2024-08-01 15:49:25 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
4067795d8c Do not intern if we have provenance. 2024-07-31 00:59:13 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
98c1ea8e82 Simplify constant creation. 2024-07-31 00:59:13 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
61ef0441b8 Encode constant determinism in disambiguator. 2024-07-31 00:59:12 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
9d23c86176 Reduce allocations in GVN. 2024-07-31 00:59:12 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
70ee6e4b23 Amortize growing rev_locals. 2024-07-31 00:59:12 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
95986dd279 Indirect places can only appear as first projection in runtime MIR. 2024-07-31 00:59:12 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
a0b4d6dfb8 Do not normalize constants eagerly. 2024-07-31 00:59:12 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f990239b34 Stop using MoveDataParamEnv for places that don't need a param-env 2024-07-29 11:59:47 -04:00
DianQK
ae681c940d
Perform instsimplify before inline to eliminate some trivial calls 2024-07-29 18:14:35 +08:00
Nicholas Nethercote
84ac80f192 Reformat use declarations.
The previous commit updated `rustfmt.toml` appropriately. This commit is
the outcome of running `x fmt --all` with the new formatting options.
2024-07-29 08:26:52 +10:00
Matthias Krüger
99204047c9
Rollup merge of #128279 - slanterns:is_sorted, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `is_sorted`

Closes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/53485.

~~Question: does~~ 8fe0c753f2/compiler/rustc_lint_defs/src/builtin.rs (L1986-L1994) ~~need a new example?~~
edit: It causes a test failure and needs to be changed anyway.

``@rustbot`` label: +T-libs-api

r? libs-api
2024-07-28 08:57:17 +02:00
Slanterns
ec0b354092
stabilize is_sorted 2024-07-28 03:11:54 +08:00
Nilstrieb
f305e18804 Disable jump threading of float equality
Jump threading stores values as `u128` (`ScalarInt`) and does its
comparisons for equality as integer comparisons.
This works great for integers. Sadly, not everything is an integer.

Floats famously have wonky equality semantcs, with `NaN!=NaN` and
`0.0 == -0.0`. This does not match our beautiful integer bitpattern
equality and therefore causes things to go horribly wrong.

While jump threading could be extended to support floats by remembering
that they're floats in the value state and handling them properly,
it's signficantly easier to just disable it for now.
2024-07-27 15:11:59 +02:00
Michael Goulet
d5656059a1 Make coroutine-closures possible to be cloned 2024-07-26 12:53:53 -04:00
bors
2d5a628a1d Auto merge of #128165 - saethlin:optimize-clone-shims, r=compiler-errors
Let InstCombine remove Clone shims inside Clone shims

The Clone shims that we generate tend to recurse into other Clone shims, which gets very silly very quickly. Here's our current state: https://godbolt.org/z/E69YeY8eq

So I've added InstSimplify to the shims optimization passes, and improved `is_trivially_pure_clone_copy` so that it can delete those calls inside the shim. This makes the shim way smaller because most of its size is the required ceremony for unwinding.

This change also completely breaks the UI test added for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104870. With this PR, that program ICEs in MIR type checking because `is_trivially_pure_clone_copy` and the trait solver disagree on whether `*mut u8` is `Copy`. And adding the requisite `Copy` impl to make them agree makes the test not generate any diagnostics. Considering that I spent most of my time on this PR fixing `#![no_core]` tests, I would prefer to just delete this one. The maintenance burden of `#![no_core]` is uniquely high because when they break they tend to break in very confusing ways.

try-job: x86_64-mingw
2024-07-26 13:13:04 +00:00
Trevor Gross
97eade42f7
Rollup merge of #128170 - saethlin:clone-fn, r=compiler-errors
Make Clone::clone a lang item

I want to absorb all the logic for picking whether an Instance is LocalCopy or GloballyShared into one place. As part of this, I wanted to identify Clone shims inside `cross_crate_inlinable` and found that rather tricky. `@compiler-errors` suggested that I add a lang item for `Clone::clone` because that would produce other cleanups in the compiler.

That sounds good to me, but I have looked and I've only been able to find one.

r? compiler-errors
2024-07-26 02:20:31 -04:00
Ben Kimock
f4f57bfccb Make Clone::clone a lang item 2024-07-25 18:46:07 -04:00
Ben Kimock
a7d57aa7c8 Let InstCombine remove Clone shims inside Clone shims
Co-authored-by: scottmcm <scottmcm@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-07-25 15:14:42 -04:00
Michael Goulet
ce8a625092 Move all error reporting into rustc_trait_selection 2024-07-21 22:34:35 -04:00
Yuri Astrakhan
aef0e346de Avoid ref when using format! in compiler
Clean up a few minor refs in `format!` macro, as it has a performance cost. Apparently the compiler is unable to inline `format!("{}", &variable)`, and does a run-time double-reference instead (format macro already does one level referencing).  Inlining format args prevents accidental `&` misuse.
2024-07-19 14:52:07 -04:00
Zalathar
d4f1f92426 coverage: Restrict ExpressionUsed simplification to Code mappings
In the future, branch and MC/DC mappings might have expressions that don't
correspond to any single point in the control-flow graph. That makes it
trickier to keep track of which expressions should expect an `ExpressionUsed`
node.

We therefore sidestep that complexity by only performing `ExpressionUsed`
simplification for expressions associated directly with ordinary `Code`
mappings.
2024-07-15 20:54:28 +10:00
Zalathar
741ed01646 coverage: Store a copy of num_bcbs in ExtractedMappings
This makes it possible to allocate per-BCB data structures without needing
access to the whole graph.
2024-07-15 20:37:14 +10:00
Camille GILLOT
76f5bc6a9f Create mapped places upon seeing them in the body. 2024-07-13 11:54:25 +00:00
bors
6be96e3865 Auto merge of #127234 - ZhuUx:inlined-expr, r=davidtwco,Zalathar
[Coverage][MCDC] Group mcdc tests and fix panic when generating mcdc code for inlined expressions.

### Changes

1. Group all mcdc tests to one directory.
2. Since mcdc instruments different mappings for boolean expressions with normal branch coverage as #125766 introduces, it would be better also trace branch coverage results in mcdc tests.
3. So far rustc does not call `CoverageInfoBuilderMethods::init_coverage` for inlined functions. As a result, it could panic if it tries to instrument mcdc statements for inlined functions due to uninitialized cond bitmaps. We can reproduce this issue by current nightly rustc and [the test](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127234/files#diff-c81af6bf4869aa42f5c7334e3e86344475de362f673f54ce439ec75fcb5ac3e5) with flag `--release`. This patch fixes it.
2024-07-09 20:24:30 +00:00
zhuyunxing
83fa6b726a coverage. Fix panic when generating mcdc code for inlined functions 2024-07-09 14:28:40 +08:00
Michael Goulet
fe4c995ccb Move trait selection error reporting to its own top-level module 2024-07-08 16:04:47 -04:00
bors
a06e9c83f6 Auto merge of #127486 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-lvv018b, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 5 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #120248 (Make casts of pointers to trait objects stricter)
 - #127355 (Mark format! with must_use hint)
 - #127399 (Verify that allocations output by GVN are sufficiently aligned.)
 - #127460 (clarify `sys::unix::fd::FileDesc::drop` comment)
 - #127467 (bootstrap: once_cell::sync::Lazy -> std::sync::LazyLock)

Failed merges:

 - #127357 (Remove `StructuredDiag`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-07-08 16:01:38 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
3e8e8df7c0
Rollup merge of #127399 - cjgillot:issue-127396, r=oli-obk
Verify that allocations output by GVN are sufficiently aligned.

Fixes #127396

r? `@oli-obk`
2024-07-08 16:28:16 +02:00
Zalathar
63c04f05e6 coverage: Extract hole spans from HIR instead of MIR
This makes it possible to treat more kinds of nested item/code as holes,
instead of being restricted to closures.
2024-07-08 21:22:56 +10:00
bors
9af6fee87d Auto merge of #113128 - WaffleLapkin:become_trully_unuwuable, r=oli-obk,RalfJung
Support tail calls in mir via `TerminatorKind::TailCall`

This is one of the interesting bits in tail call implementation — MIR support.

This adds a new `TerminatorKind` which represents a tail call:
```rust
    TailCall {
        func: Operand<'tcx>,
        args: Vec<Operand<'tcx>>,
        fn_span: Span,
    },
```

*Structurally* this is very similar to a normal `Call` but is missing a few fields:
- `destination` — tail calls don't write to destination, instead they pass caller's destination to the callee (such that eventual `return` will write to the caller of the function that used tail call)
- `target` — similarly to `destination` tail calls pass the caller's return address to the callee, so there is nothing to do
- `unwind` — I _think_ this is applicable too, although it's a bit confusing
- `call_source` — `become` forbids operators and is not created as a lowering of something else; tail calls always come from HIR (at least for now)

It might be helpful to read the interpreter implementation to understand what `TailCall` means exactly, although I've tried documenting it too.

-----

There are a few `FIXME`-questions still left, ideally we'd be able to answer them during review ':)

-----

r? `@oli-obk`
cc `@scottmcm` `@DrMeepster` `@JakobDegen`
2024-07-08 04:35:04 +00:00
Maybe Lapkin
7fd0c55a1a Fix conflicts after rebase
- r-l/r 126784
- r-l/r 127113
- r-l/miri 3562
2024-07-07 18:16:38 +02:00
Maybe Waffle
484152d562 Support tail calls in mir via TerminatorKind::TailCall 2024-07-07 17:11:04 +02:00
Camille Gillot
12edc8db87
Update compiler/rustc_mir_transform/src/gvn.rs
Co-authored-by: Michael Goulet <michael@errs.io>
2024-07-06 12:45:23 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
b97f83b27f Verify that allocations output by GVN are sufficiently aligned. 2024-07-05 22:59:10 +00:00
Alona Enraght-Moony
f763d62149 Fix a few doc comment for compiler-interal API docs.
They only used `//` instead of `///` so weren't picked up by rustdoc.
2024-07-05 14:14:35 +00:00
Zalathar
f095de4bf1 coverage: Rename mir::coverage::BranchInfo to CoverageInfoHi
This opens the door to collecting and storing coverage information that is
unrelated to branch coverage or MC/DC.
2024-07-05 13:53:05 +10:00
bors
486bc278ab Auto merge of #127293 - ldm0:ldm_coroutine, r=saethlin
Use `IndexVec` for coroutine local mapping

Resolves a old FIXME
2024-07-04 06:18:55 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
79bdb89a4a
Rollup merge of #127294 - ldm0:ldm_coroutine2, r=lcnr
Less magic number for corountine
2024-07-03 23:30:10 +02:00
Liu Dingming
4930937960 Less magic number for corountine 2024-07-04 05:13:35 +08:00
Liu Dingming
a9194f30eb Use IndexVec for coroutine local mapping 2024-07-04 05:09:23 +08:00
bors
2b90614e94 Auto merge of #127036 - cjgillot:sparse-state, r=oli-obk
Make jump threading state sparse

Continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127024

Both dataflow const-prop and jump threading involve cloning the state vector a lot. This PR replaces the data structure by a sparse vector, considering:
- that jump threading state is typically very sparse (at most 1 or 2 set entries);
- that dataflow const-prop is disabled by default;
- that place/value map is very eager, and prone to creating an overly large state.

The first commit is shared with the previous PR to avoid needless conflicts.

r? `@oli-obk`
2024-07-03 18:52:04 +00:00
bors
c872a1418a Auto merge of #125507 - compiler-errors:type-length-limit, r=lcnr
Re-implement a type-size based limit

r? lcnr

This PR reintroduces the type length limit added in #37789, which was accidentally made practically useless by the caching changes to `Ty::walk` in #72412, which caused the `walk` function to no longer walk over identical elements.

Hitting this length limit is not fatal unless we are in codegen -- so it shouldn't affect passes like the mir inliner which creates potentially very large types (which we observed, for example, when the new trait solver compiles `itertools` in `--release` mode).

This also increases the type length limit from `1048576 == 2 ** 20` to `2 ** 24`, which covers all of the code that can be reached with craterbot-check. Individual crates can increase the length limit further if desired.

Perf regression is mild and I think we should accept it -- reinstating this limit is important for the new trait solver and to make sure we don't accidentally hit more type-size related regressions in the future.

Fixes #125460
2024-07-03 11:56:36 +00:00
Michael Goulet
b1059ccda2 Instance::resolve -> Instance::try_resolve, and other nits 2024-07-02 17:28:03 -04:00
Matthias Krüger
a10c231118
Rollup merge of #127230 - hattizai:patch01, r=saethlin
chore: remove duplicate words

remove duplicate words in comments to improve readability.
2024-07-02 17:47:50 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
3cf567e3c0
Rollup merge of #127136 - compiler-errors:coroutine-closure-env-shim, r=oli-obk
Fix `FnMut::call_mut`/`Fn::call` shim for async closures that capture references

I adjusted async closures to be able to implement `Fn` and `FnMut` *even if* they capture references, as long as those references did not need to borrow data from the closure captures themselves. See #125259.

However, when I did this, I didn't actually relax an assertion in the `build_construct_coroutine_by_move_shim` shim code, which builds the `Fn`/`FnMut`/`FnOnce` implementations for async closures. Therefore, if we actually tried to *call* `FnMut`/`Fn` on async closures, it would ICE.

This PR adjusts this assertion to ensure that we only capture immutable references in closures if they implement `Fn`/`FnMut`. It also adds a bunch of tests and makes more of the async-closure tests into `build-pass` since we often care about these tests actually generating the right closure shims and stuff. I think it might be excessive to *always* use build-pass here, but 🤷 it's not that big of a deal.

Fixes #127019
Fixes #127012

r? oli-obk
2024-07-02 17:47:46 +02:00
hattizai
ada9fda7c3 chore: remove duplicate words 2024-07-02 11:25:31 +08:00