Commit Graph

276 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Oli Scherer
aef0f4024a Error on using yield without also using #[coroutine] on the closure
And suggest adding the `#[coroutine]` to the closure
2024-04-24 08:05:29 +00:00
Ralf Jung
173d1bd36b properly fill a promoted's required_consts
then we can also make all_required_consts_are_checked a constant instead of a function
2024-04-23 23:02:54 +02:00
Ralf Jung
b2b617a88e compute required_consts before promotion, and add promoteds that may fail 2024-04-23 22:52:43 +02:00
Ralf Jung
7183fa09bb promotion: do not promote const-fn calls in const when that may fail without the entire const failing 2024-04-23 22:52:43 +02:00
Ben Kimock
1567d4d850 Remove libc from more tests 2024-04-17 08:36:49 -04:00
Esteban Küber
10c2fbec24 Suggest .clone() in some move errors
```
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `*x` which is behind a shared reference
  --> $DIR/borrowck-fn-in-const-a.rs:6:16
   |
LL |         return *x
   |                ^^ move occurs because `*x` has type `String`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
   |
help: consider cloning the value if the performance cost is acceptable
   |
LL -         return *x
LL +         return x.clone()
   |
```
2024-04-11 16:41:41 +00:00
Urgau
0c3f5cce89 Further cleanup cfgs in the UI test suite
This commit does three things:
 1. replaces (the last remaining) never true cfgs by the FALSE cfg
 2. fix derive-helper-configured.rs (typo in directive)
 3. and comment some current unused #[cfg_attr] (missing revisions)
2024-04-09 23:58:18 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
cb7f1eec04
Rollup merge of #122291 - lilasta:stabilize_const_location_fields, r=dtolnay
Stabilize `const_caller_location` and `const_location_fields`

Closes #102911. Closes #76156.

tests: [library/core/tests/panic/location.rs](3521a2f2f3/library/core/tests/panic/location.rs)

API:
```rust
// core::panic::location
impl Location {
    pub const fn caller() -> &'static Location<'static>;
    pub const fn file(&self) -> &str;
    pub const fn line(&self) -> u32;
    pub const fn column(&self) -> u32;
}
```
2024-04-06 13:00:05 +02:00
Eduardo Sánchez Muñoz
858a1dfd5b Remove dangling .mir.stderr and .thir.stderr test files 2024-04-02 18:02:06 +02:00
lilasta
d324d6de0e Stabilize const_caller_location and const_location_fields 2024-03-21 22:19:57 +09:00
Michael Goulet
ce5f8c93fa Bless test fallout (duplicate diagnostics) 2024-03-20 13:00:34 -04:00
Oli Scherer
7f9830b16c Make const_eval_select a rustc_intrinsic 2024-03-19 09:12:58 +00:00
bors
21d94a3d2c Auto merge of #122055 - compiler-errors:stabilize-atb, r=oli-obk
Stabilize associated type bounds (RFC 2289)

This PR stabilizes associated type bounds, which were laid out in [RFC 2289]. This gives us a shorthand to express nested type bounds that would otherwise need to be expressed with nested `impl Trait` or broken into several `where` clauses.

### What are we stabilizing?

We're stabilizing the associated item bounds syntax, which allows us to put bounds in associated type position within other bounds, i.e. `T: Trait<Assoc: Bounds...>`. See [RFC 2289] for motivation.

In all position, the associated type bound syntax expands into a set of two (or more) bounds, and never anything else (see "How does this differ[...]" section for more info).

Associated type bounds are stabilized in four positions:
* **`where` clauses (and APIT)** - This is equivalent to breaking up the bound into two (or more) `where` clauses. For example, `where T: Trait<Assoc: Bound>` is equivalent to `where T: Trait, <T as Trait>::Assoc: Bound`.
* **Supertraits** - Similar to above, `trait CopyIterator: Iterator<Item: Copy> {}`. This is almost equivalent to breaking up the bound into two (or more) `where` clauses; however, the bound on the associated item is implied whenever the trait is used. See #112573/#112629.
* **Associated type item bounds** - This allows constraining the *nested* rigid projections that are associated with a trait's associated types. e.g. `trait Trait { type Assoc: Trait2<Assoc2: Copy>; }`.
* **opaque item bounds (RPIT, TAIT)** - This allows constraining associated types that are associated with the opaque without having to *name* the opaque. For example, `impl Iterator<Item: Copy>` defines an iterator whose item is `Copy` without having to actually name that item bound.

The latter three are not expressible in surface Rust (though for associated type item bounds, this will change in #120752, which I don't believe should block this PR), so this does represent a slight expansion of what can be expressed in trait bounds.

### How does this differ from the RFC?

Compared to the RFC, the current implementation *always* desugars associated type bounds to sets of `ty::Clause`s internally. Specifically, it does *not* introduce a position-dependent desugaring as laid out in [RFC 2289], and in particular:
* It does *not* desugar to anonymous associated items in associated type item bounds.
* It does *not* desugar to nested RPITs in RPIT bounds, nor nested TAITs in TAIT bounds.

This position-dependent desugaring laid out in the RFC existed simply to side-step limitations of the trait solver, which have mostly been fixed in #120584. The desugaring laid out in the RFC also added unnecessary complication to the design of the feature, and introduces its own limitations to, for example:
* Conditionally lowering to nested `impl Trait` in certain positions such as RPIT and TAIT means that we inherit the limitations of RPIT/TAIT, namely lack of support for higher-ranked opaque inference. See this code example: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120752#issuecomment-1979412531.
* Introducing anonymous associated types makes traits no longer object safe, since anonymous associated types are not nameable, and all associated types must be named in `dyn` types.

This last point motivates why this PR is *not* stabilizing support for associated type bounds in `dyn` types, e.g, `dyn Assoc<Item: Bound>`. Why? Because `dyn` types need to have *concrete* types for all associated items, this would necessitate a distinct lowering for associated type bounds, which seems both complicated and unnecessary compared to just requiring the user to write `impl Trait` themselves. See #120719.

### Implementation history:

Limited to the significant behavioral changes and fixes and relevant PRs, ping me if I left something out--
* #57428
* #108063
* #110512
* #112629
* #120719
* #120584

Closes #52662

[RFC 2289]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2289-associated-type-bounds.html
2024-03-19 00:04:09 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
980248605a
Rollup merge of #122158 - estebank:feature-sugg, r=WaffleLapkin
Provide structured suggestion for `#![feature(foo)]`

```
error: `S2<'_>` is forbidden as the type of a const generic parameter
  --> $DIR/lifetime-in-const-param.rs:5:23
   |
LL | struct S<'a, const N: S2>(&'a ());
   |                       ^^
   |
   = note: the only supported types are integers, `bool` and `char`
help: add `#![feature(adt_const_params)]` to the crate attributes to enable more complex and user defined types
   |
LL + #![feature(adt_const_params)]
   |
```

Fix #55941.
2024-03-18 22:24:38 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
2d3dcfaade
Rollup merge of #121823 - Nadrieril:never-witnesses, r=compiler-errors
never patterns: suggest `!` patterns on non-exhaustive matches

When a match is non-exhaustive we now suggest never patterns whenever it makes sense.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2024-03-18 22:24:36 +01:00
Esteban Küber
6c31f6ce12 Provide structured suggestion for #![feature(foo)]
```
error: `S2<'_>` is forbidden as the type of a const generic parameter
  --> $DIR/lifetime-in-const-param.rs:5:23
   |
LL | struct S<'a, const N: S2>(&'a ());
   |                       ^^
   |
   = note: the only supported types are integers, `bool` and `char`
help: add `#![feature(adt_const_params)]` to the crate attributes to enable more complex and user defined types
   |
LL + #![feature(adt_const_params)]
   |
```

Fix #55941.
2024-03-18 16:08:58 +00:00
lcnr
24a1729566 eagerly instantiate binders to avoid relying on sub 2024-03-14 17:19:40 +01:00
Nadrieril
b878ab6a27 Don't suggest an arm when suggesting a never pattern 2024-03-12 21:38:31 +01:00
Nadrieril
9f2aa5b85a Suggest never pattern instead of _ for empty types 2024-03-12 21:38:30 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
39e00760ec
Rollup merge of #122343 - compiler-errors:rando, r=fmease
Remove some unnecessary `allow(incomplete_features)` in the test suite

A useless change, but I like things to be clean.
2024-03-12 06:29:05 +01:00
bors
dc2ffa4054 Auto merge of #122036 - alexcrichton:test-wasm-with-wasi, r=oli-obk
Test wasm32-wasip1 in CI, not wasm32-unknown-unknown

This commit changes CI to no longer test the `wasm32-unknown-unknown` target and instead test the `wasm32-wasip1` target. There was some discussion of this in a [Zulip thread], and the motivations for this PR are:

* Runtime failures on `wasm32-unknown-unknown` print nothing, meaning all you get is "something failed". In contrast `wasm32-wasip1` can print to stdout/stderr.

* The unknown-unknown target is missing lots of pieces of libstd, and while `wasm32-wasip1` is also missing some pieces (e.g. threads) it's missing fewer pieces. This means that many more tests can be run.

Overall my hope is to improve the debuggability of wasm failures on CI and ideally be a bit less of a maintenance burden.

This commit specifically removes the testing of `wasm32-unknown-unknown` and replaces it with testing of `wasm32-wasip1`. Along the way there were a number of other archiectural changes made as well, including:

* A new `target.*.runtool` option can now be specified in `config.toml` which is passed as `--runtool` to `compiletest`. This is used to reimplement execution of WebAssembly in a less-wasm-specific fashion.

* The default value for `runtool` is an ambiently located WebAssembly runtime found on the system, if any. I've implemented logic for Wasmtime.

* Existing testing support for `wasm32-unknown-unknown` and Emscripten has been removed. I'm not aware of Emscripten testing being run any time recently and otherwise `wasm32-wasip1` is in theory the focus now.

* I've added a new `//@ needs-threads` directive for `compiletest` and classified a bunch of wasm-ignored tests as needing threads. In theory these tests can run on `wasm32-wasi-preview1-threads`, for example.

* I've tried to audit all existing tests that are either `ignore-emscripten` or `ignore-wasm*`. Many now run on `wasm32-wasip1` due to being able to emit error messages, for example. Many are updated with comments as to why they can't run as well.

* The `compiletest` output matching for `wasm32-wasip1` automatically uses "match a subset" mode implemented in `compiletest`. This is because WebAssembly runtimes often add extra information on failure, such as the `unreachable` instruction in `panic!`, which isn't able to be matched against the golden output from native platforms.

* I've ported most existing `run-make` tests that use custom Node.js wrapper scripts to the new run-make-based-in-Rust infrastructure. To do this I added `wasmparser` as a dependency of `run-make-support` for the various wasm tests to use that parse wasm files. The one test that executed WebAssembly now uses `wasmtime`-the-CLI to execute the test instead. I have not ported over an exception-handling test as Wasmtime doesn't implement this yet.

* I've updated the `test` crate to print out timing information for WASI targets as it can do that (gets a previously ignored test now passing).

* The `test-various` image now builds a WASI sysroot for the WASI target and additionally downloads a fixed release of Wasmtime, currently the latest one at 18.0.2, and uses that for testing.

[Zulip thread]: https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Have.20wasm.20tests.20ever.20caused.20problems.20on.20CI.3F/near/424317944
2024-03-12 00:03:54 +00:00
Michael Goulet
f614eaea2c Remove some unnecessary allow(incomplete_features) 2024-03-11 19:42:04 +00:00
Alex Crichton
cf6d6050f7 Update test directives for wasm32-wasip1
* The WASI targets deal with the `main` symbol a bit differently than
  native so some `codegen` and `assembly` tests have been ignored.
* All `ignore-emscripten` directives have been updated to
  `ignore-wasm32` to be more clear that all wasm targets are ignored and
  it's not just Emscripten.
* Most `ignore-wasm32-bare` directives are now gone.
* Some ignore directives for wasm were switched to `needs-unwind`
  instead.
* Many `ignore-wasm32*` directives are removed as the tests work with
  WASI as opposed to `wasm32-unknown-unknown`.
2024-03-11 09:36:35 -07:00
Michael Goulet
383051092f Ignore tests w/ current/next revisions from compare-mode=next-solver 2024-03-10 21:18:41 -04:00
Michael Goulet
c63f3feb0f Stabilize associated type bounds 2024-03-08 20:56:25 +00:00
Oli Scherer
ae50e36dfa Merge collect_mod_item_types query into check_well_formed 2024-03-07 14:26:31 +00:00
Oli Scherer
ebf1b92417 Use the same collection order as check_mod_type_wf 2024-03-07 13:37:06 +00:00
Oli Scherer
8206cffc48 Merge check_mod_impl_wf and check_mod_type_wf 2024-03-07 06:27:09 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
327842b4ab
Rollup merge of #121894 - RalfJung:const_eval_select, r=oli-obk
const_eval_select: make it safe but be careful with what we expose on stable for now

As this is all still nightly-only I think `````@rust-lang/wg-const-eval````` can do that without involving t-lang.

r? `````@oli-obk`````
Cc `````@Nilstrieb````` -- the updated version of your RFC would basically say that we can remove these comments about not making behavior differences visible in stable `const fn`
2024-03-05 22:10:01 +01:00
Esteban Küber
f0c93117ed Use root obligation on E0277 for some cases
When encountering trait bound errors that satisfy some heuristics that
tell us that the relevant trait for the user comes from the root
obligation and not the current obligation, we use the root predicate for
the main message.

This allows to talk about "X doesn't implement Pattern<'_>" over the
most specific case that just happened to fail, like  "char doesn't
implement Fn(&mut char)" in
`tests/ui/traits/suggest-dereferences/root-obligation.rs`

The heuristics are:

 - the type of the leaf predicate is (roughly) the same as the type
   from the root predicate, as a proxy for "we care about the root"
 - the leaf trait and the root trait are different, so as to avoid
   talking about `&mut T: Trait` and instead remain talking about
   `T: Trait` instead
 - the root trait is not `Unsize`, as to avoid talking about it in
   `tests/ui/coercion/coerce-issue-49593-box-never.rs`.

```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `&char: Pattern<'_>` is not satisfied
  --> $DIR/root-obligation.rs:6:38
   |
LL |         .filter(|c| "aeiou".contains(c))
   |                             -------- ^ the trait `Fn<(char,)>` is not implemented for `&char`, which is required by `&char: Pattern<'_>`
   |                             |
   |                             required by a bound introduced by this call
   |
   = note: required for `&char` to implement `FnOnce<(char,)>`
   = note: required for `&char` to implement `Pattern<'_>`
note: required by a bound in `core::str::<impl str>::contains`
  --> $SRC_DIR/core/src/str/mod.rs:LL:COL
help: consider dereferencing here
   |
LL |         .filter(|c| "aeiou".contains(*c))
   |                                      +
```

Fix #79359, fix #119983, fix #118779, cc #118415 (the suggestion needs
to change).
2024-03-03 18:53:35 +00:00
Ralf Jung
374607d6b9 const_eval_select: make it safe but be careful with what we expose on stable for now 2024-03-02 16:09:31 +01:00
Michael Goulet
1feef44daf rename RPITIT from opaque to synthetic 2024-02-27 17:43:40 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
26cb6c7287
Rollup merge of #120742 - Nadrieril:use-min_exh_pats, r=compiler-errors
mark `min_exhaustive_patterns` as complete

This is step 1 and 2 of my [proposal](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119612#issuecomment-1918097361) to move `min_exhaustive_patterns` forward. The vast majority of in-tree use cases of `exhaustive_patterns` are covered by `min_exhaustive_patterns`. There are a few cases that still require `exhaustive_patterns` in tests and they're all behind references.

r? ``@ghost``
2024-02-23 17:02:03 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
6e00f0d189
Rollup merge of #121434 - nnethercote:fix-121208-fallout, r=lcnr
Fix #121208 fallout

#121208 converted lots of delayed bugs to bugs. Unsurprisingly, there were a few invalid conversion found via fuzzing.

r? `@lcnr`
2024-02-23 09:42:10 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4f83e50f98 Revert some span_bugs to span_delayed_bug.
Fixes #121410.
Fixes #121414.
Fixes #121418.
Fixes #121431.
2024-02-23 08:35:18 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
379ef9bd36
Rollup merge of #121386 - oli-obk:no_higher_ranked_opaques, r=lcnr
test that we do not support higher-ranked regions in opaque type inference

We already do all the right checks in `check_opaque_type_parameter_valid`, and we have done so since at least 2 years.

I collected the tests from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116935 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/100503 and added some more

cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/96146

r? `@lcnr`
2024-02-22 18:09:52 +01:00
Oli Scherer
1efb7479ef Remove some annotations that just specify the default 2024-02-22 16:56:26 +00:00
Oli Scherer
9e016a8b84 Avoid emitting type mismatches against {type error} 2024-02-22 09:22:50 +00:00
Ali MJ Al-Nasrawy
66bd6453e0 test that we do not support higher-ranked regions in opaque type inference 2024-02-21 09:08:45 +00:00
Michael Goulet
9c8b107955 Support async trait bounds in macros 2024-02-20 16:09:09 +00:00
Oli Scherer
9062697917 Always evaluate free constants and statics, even if previous errors occurred 2024-02-19 22:11:13 +00:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
ec2cc761bc
[AUTO-GENERATED] Migrate ui tests from // to //@ directives 2024-02-16 20:02:50 +00:00
Oli Scherer
5f6390f947 Continue compilation after check_mod_type_wf errors 2024-02-14 11:00:30 +00:00
Nadrieril
8e83d0cd75 Prefer min_exhaustive_patterns in tests 2024-02-13 16:45:53 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
949e55299d
Rollup merge of #120775 - Nadrieril:more-min_exh_pats, r=compiler-errors
Make `min_exhaustive_patterns` match `exhaustive_patterns` better

Split off from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120742.

There remained two edge cases where `min_exhaustive_patterns` wasn't behaving like `exhaustive_patterns`. This fixes them, and tests the feature in a bunch more cases. I essentially went through all uses of `exhaustive_patterns` to see which ones would be interesting to compare between the two features.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-02-08 20:34:59 +01:00
Nadrieril
4733b1bba5 Test min_exhaustive_patterns in more cases 2024-02-08 11:48:38 +01:00
Oli Scherer
eab2adb660 Continue to borrowck even if there were previous errors 2024-02-08 08:10:43 +00:00
r0cky
c7519d42c2 Update tests 2024-02-07 10:42:01 +08:00
Ralf Jung
45d01b8131 update the tracking issue for structural match violations
and bless a test I missed
2024-02-05 20:36:11 +01:00
Ralf Jung
48abca761a show indirect_structural_match and pointer_structural_match in future compat reports 2024-02-05 20:36:11 +01:00