Commit Graph

2611 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nicholas Nethercote
ff0a5fe975 Remove #![warn(unreachable_pub)] from all compiler/ crates.
It's no longer necessary now that `-Wunreachable_pub` is being passed.
2025-03-11 13:14:21 +11:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
063ef18fdc Revert "Use workspace lints for crates in compiler/ #138084"
Revert <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138084> to buy time to
consider options that avoids breaking downstream usages of cargo on
distributed `rustc-src` artifacts, where such cargo invocations fail due
to inability to inherit `lints` from workspace root manifest's
`workspace.lints` (this is only valid for the source rust-lang/rust
workspace, but not really the distributed `rustc-src` artifacts).

This breakage was reported in
<https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138304>.

This reverts commit 48caf81484, reversing
changes made to c6662879b2.
2025-03-10 18:12:47 +08:00
Matthias Krüger
48caf81484
Rollup merge of #138084 - nnethercote:workspace-lints, r=jieyouxu
Use workspace lints for crates in `compiler/`

This is nicer and hopefully less error prone than specifying lints via bootstrap.

r? ``@jieyouxu``
2025-03-09 10:34:50 +01:00
bors
dea1661cdb Auto merge of #137502 - compiler-errors:global-asm-aint-mir-body, r=oli-obk
Don't include global asm in `mir_keys`, fix error body synthesis

r? oli-obk

Fixes #137470
Fixes #137471
Fixes #137472
Fixes #137473

try-job: test-various
try-job: x86_64-apple-2
2025-03-08 22:23:45 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
8a3e03392e Remove #![warn(unreachable_pub)] from all compiler/ crates.
(Except for `rustc_codegen_cranelift`.)

It's no longer necessary now that `unreachable_pub` is in the workspace
lints.
2025-03-08 08:41:43 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
beba32cebb Specify rust lints for compiler/ crates via Cargo.
By naming them in `[workspace.lints.rust]` in the top-level
`Cargo.toml`, and then making all `compiler/` crates inherit them with
`[lints] workspace = true`. (I omitted `rustc_codegen_{cranelift,gcc}`,
because they're a bit different.)

The advantages of this over the current approach:
- It uses a standard Cargo feature, rather than special handling in
  bootstrap. So, easier to understand, and less likely to get
  accidentally broken in the future.
- It works for proc macro crates.

It's a shame it doesn't work for rustc-specific lints, as the comments
explain.
2025-03-08 08:41:09 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
0defc4f27f
Rollup merge of #137977 - nnethercote:less-kw-Empty-1, r=spastorino
Reduce `kw::Empty` usage, part 1

This PR fixes some confusing `kw::Empty` usage, fixing a crash test along the way.

r? ```@spastorino```
2025-03-07 19:15:34 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f5a143f796
Rollup merge of #134797 - spastorino:ergonomic-ref-counting-1, r=nikomatsakis
Ergonomic ref counting

This is an experimental first version of ergonomic ref counting.

This first version implements most of the RFC but doesn't implement any of the optimizations. This was left for following iterations.

RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3680
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132290
Project goal: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-project-goals/issues/107

r? ```@nikomatsakis```
2025-03-07 19:15:33 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7943932384 Pass Option<Symbol> to def_path_data/create_def methods.
It's clearer than using `kw::Empty` to mean `None`.
2025-03-07 20:53:00 +11:00
Santiago Pastorino
57cb498989
Generate the right MIR for by use closures 2025-03-06 17:58:32 -03:00
Tomasz Miąsko
02d7fc167f Factor out check whether an unwind action generates invoke 2025-03-06 20:00:25 +01:00
Tomasz Miąsko
5c1733e4f4 Break critical edges in inline asm before code generation
An inline asm terminator defines outputs along its target edges -- a
fallthrough target and labeled targets. Code generation implements this
by inserting code directly into the target blocks. This approach works
only if the target blocks don't have other predecessors.

Establish required invariant by extending existing code that breaks
critical edges before code generation.
2025-03-06 20:00:24 +01:00
Michael Goulet
ef031c854d Exclude global_asm from mir_keys 2025-03-06 17:34:17 +00:00
Tomasz Miąsko
c5b7a9c4b5 Factor out edge breaking code 2025-03-06 15:13:56 +01:00
bors
30f168ef81 Auto merge of #137907 - compiler-errors:inline-fnonce, r=saethlin
Inline `FnOnce`/`FnMut`/`Fn` shims once again

This PR fixes the argument checking for `extern "rust-call"` ABI functions with a spread arg, which do no expect their arguments to be exploded from a tuple like closures do.

Secondly, it removes the hack that prevented them from being inlined. This results in more work done by the compiler, but it does end up allowing us to inline functions we didn't before.

Fixes #137901
2025-03-05 18:39:17 +00:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
fe4c0850fe
Rollup merge of #138028 - workingjubilee:is-rustic-abi, r=compiler-errors
compiler: add `ExternAbi::is_rustic_abi`

Various parts of the compiler were hand-rolling this extremely simple check that is nonetheless easy to get wrong as the compiler evolves over time. Discourage them from being so "original" again by replacing it with a single implementation on the type that represents these ABIs. This simplifies a surprising amount of code as a result.

Also fixes #132981, an ICE that emerged due to other checks being made stricter.
2025-03-05 21:46:46 +08:00
许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)
5df9a9f45c
Rollup merge of #137298 - compiler-errors:mir-wf, r=lcnr
Check signature WF when lowering MIR body

Alternative to #137233.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/137233#issuecomment-2667879143

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137186

We do this check in `mir_drops_elaborated_and_const_checked` and not during `mir_promoted` because that may result in borrowck cycles if WF requires looking into an opaque hidden type. This causes some TAIT tests to fail unnecessarily.

r? lcnr

try-job: test-various
2025-03-05 21:46:39 +08:00
Jubilee Young
08b578330e compiler: use is_rustic_abi in mir_transform
no functional changes.
2025-03-04 18:21:56 -08:00
Tomasz Miąsko
84dd2a7776 Remove obsolete comment from DeduceReadOnly
The situation described in the comment does arise in practice now and
described panic is long gone.
2025-03-04 12:26:01 +01:00
Michael Goulet
d33946c3ab Inline FnOnce once again 2025-03-03 23:30:18 +00:00
Michael Goulet
e081b7b77e Better reasons for inline failure 2025-03-03 23:22:37 +00:00
Michael Goulet
9d3d5a7fbb Check signature WF when lowering MIR body 2025-03-03 23:09:42 +00:00
Ralf Jung
aac65f562b rename BackendRepr::Vector → SimdVector 2025-02-28 17:17:45 +01:00
Michael Goulet
864cca80b0 Print out destructor 2025-02-26 19:03:29 +00:00
bors
7d8c6e781d Auto merge of #135726 - jdonszelmann:attr-parsing, r=oli-obk
New attribute parsing infrastructure

Another step in the plan outlined in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/131229

introduces infrastructure for structured parsers for attributes, as well as converting a couple of complex attributes to have such structured parsers.

This PR may prove too large to review. I left some of my own comments to guide it a little. Some general notes:

- The first commit is basically standalone. It just preps some mostly unrelated sources for the rest of the PR to work. It might not have enormous merit on its own, but not negative merit either. Could be merged alone, but also doesn't make the review a whole lot easier. (but it's only +274 -209)
- The second commit is the one that introduces new infrastructure. It's the important one to review.
- The 3rd commit uses the new infrastructure showing how some of the more complex attributes can be parsed using it. Theoretically can be split up, though the parsers in this commit are the ones that really test the new infrastructure and show that it all works.
- The 4th commit fixes up rustdoc and clippy. In the previous 2 they didn't compile yet while the compiler does. Separated them out to separate concerns and make the rest more palatable.
- The 5th commit blesses some test outputs. Sometimes that's just because a diagnostic happens slightly earlier than before, which I'd say is acceptable. Sometimes a diagnostic is now only emitted once where it would've been twice before (yay! fixed some bugs). One test I actually moved from crashes to fixed, because it simply doesn't crash anymore. That's why this PR  Closes #132391. I think most choices I made here are generally reasonable, but let me know if you disagree anywhere.
- The 6th commit adds a derive to pretty print attributes
- The 7th removes smir apis for attributes, for the time being. The api will at some point be replaced by one based on `rustc_ast_data_structures::AttributeKind`

In general, a lot of the additions here are comments. I've found it very important to document new things in the 2nd commit well so other people can start using it.

Closes #132391
Closes #136717
2025-02-24 23:07:24 +00:00
Jana Dönszelmann
115b3b03b0
Change span field accesses to method calls 2025-02-24 14:22:31 +01:00
Jacob Pratt
6aa015ae9d
Rollup merge of #136610 - Jarcho:range_idx, r=Noratrieb
Allow `IndexSlice` to be indexed by ranges.

This comes with some annoyances as the index type can no longer inferred from indexing expressions. The biggest offender for this is `IndexVec::from_fn_n(|idx| ..., n)` where the index type won't be inferred from the call site or any index expressions inside the closure.

My main use case for this is mapping a `Place` to `Range<Idx>` for value tracking where the range represents all the values the place contains.
2025-02-24 02:11:32 -05:00
Trevor Gross
781203dd87
Rollup merge of #137451 - compiler-errors:synm, r=Noratrieb
FIx `sym` -> `syn` typo in tail-expr-drop-order type opt-out

The #131326 PR attempts to reduce some false positives for the `tail_expr_drop_order` lint by hard-coding some common ecosystem crate names. Specifically, I believe it attempts to opt out the drop impls from `syn` which only exist as optimizations.

However, this was typo'd like "sym", which is a crate that has been [yanked](https://crates.io/crates/sym) (lol). This PR fixes that.

cc `@dingxiangfei2009` `@nikomatsakis` -- did I mistake this? Was this meant to be a different crate?

`@bors` rollup
2025-02-23 14:30:27 -05:00
Michael Goulet
506532aad2 The sym crate is not a thing 2025-02-23 03:02:46 +00:00
Michael Goulet
12e3911d81 Greatly simplify lifetime captures in edition 2024 2025-02-22 22:24:52 +00:00
Michael Goulet
3d5438accd Fix binding mode problems 2025-02-22 00:13:19 +00:00
Michael Goulet
76d341fa09 Upgrade the compiler to edition 2024 2025-02-22 00:01:48 +00:00
Jason Newcomb
162fb713ac Allow SliceIndex to be indexed by ranges. 2025-02-21 16:10:31 -05:00
Jason Newcomb
a74f3fb5fc Iterate directly on block indices in rustc_mir_transform 2025-02-21 16:10:31 -05:00
Matthias Krüger
1f6c75e682
Rollup merge of #137305 - nnethercote:rustc_middle-2, r=lcnr
Tweaks in and around `rustc_middle`

A bunch of tiny improvements I found while working on bigger things.

r? ```@lcnr```
2025-02-21 12:45:25 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5d2d11fd5d Rename ClearCrossCrate::assert_crate_local.
As `unwrap_crate_local`, because it follows exactly the standard form of
an `unwrap` function.
2025-02-21 07:12:13 +11:00
Zachary S
7ba3d7b54e Remove BackendRepr::Uninhabited, replaced with an uninhabited: bool field in LayoutData.
Also update comments that refered to BackendRepr::Uninhabited.
2025-02-20 13:27:32 -06:00
Matthias Krüger
3fc6dfd5ed
Rollup merge of #137251 - Zalathar:holes-visitor, r=jieyouxu
coverage: Get hole spans from nested items without fully visiting them

This is a small simplification to the code that collects the spans of nested items within a function, so that those spans can be treated as “holes” to be avoided by the current function's coverage mappings.

The old code was using `nested_filter::All` to ensure that the visitor would see nested items. But we don't need the actual items themselves; we just need their spans, which we can obtain via a custom implementation of `visit_nested_item`.

This avoids the more expansive queries required by `nested_filter::All`.
2025-02-19 18:52:10 +01:00
bors
ed49386d3a Auto merge of #136539 - matthewjasper:late-normalize-errors, r=compiler-errors
Emit dropck normalization errors in borrowck

Borrowck generally assumes that any queries it runs for type checking will succeed, thinking that HIR typeck will have errored first if there was a problem. However as of #98641, dropck isn't run on HIR, so there's no direct guarantee that it doesn't error. While a type being well-formed might be expected to ensure that its fields are well-formed, this is not the case for types containing a type projection:

```rust
pub trait AuthUser {
    type Id;
}

pub trait AuthnBackend {
    type User: AuthUser;
}

pub struct AuthSession<Backend: AuthnBackend> {
    data: Option<<<Backend as AuthnBackend>::User as AuthUser>::Id>,
}

pub trait Authz: Sized {
    type AuthnBackend: AuthnBackend<User = Self>;
}

pub fn run_query<User: Authz>(auth: AuthSession<User::AuthnBackend>) {}
// ^ No User: AuthUser bound is required or inferred.
```

While improvements to trait solving might fix this in the future, for now we go for a pragmatic solution of emitting an error from borrowck (by rerunning dropck outside of a query) and making drop elaboration check if an error has been emitted previously before panicking for a failed normalization.

Closes #103899
Closes #135039

r? `@compiler-errors` (feel free to re-assign)
2025-02-19 07:49:08 +00:00
Zalathar
d38f6880c0 coverage: Make HolesVisitor::visit_hole_span a regular method 2025-02-19 14:02:29 +11:00
Zalathar
51f704f0ff coverage: Get hole spans from nested items without fully visiting them
It turns out that this visitor doesn't actually need `nested_filter::All` to
handle nested items; it just needs to override `visit_nested_item` and look up
the item's span.
2025-02-19 14:01:46 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
34535b6078
Rollup merge of #137213 - nnethercote:rm-rustc_middle-mir-tcx, r=compiler-errors
Remove `rustc_middle::mir::tcx` module.

This is a really weird module. For example, what does `tcx` in `rustc_middle::mir::tcx::PlaceTy` mean? The answer is "not much".

The top-level module comment says:

> Methods for the various MIR types. These are intended for use after
> building is complete.

Awfully broad for a module that has a handful of impl blocks for some MIR types, none of which really relates to `TyCtxt`. `git blame` indicates the comment is ancient, from 2015, and made sense then.

This module is now vestigial. This commit removes it and moves all the code within into `rustc_middle::mir::statement`. Some specifics:

- `Place`, `PlaceRef`, `Rvalue`, `Operand`, `BorrowKind`: they all have `impl` blocks in both the `tcx` and `statement` modules. The commit merges the former into the latter.

- `BinOp`, `UnOp`: they only have `impl` blocks in `tcx`. The commit moves these into `statement`.

- `PlaceTy`, `RvalueInitializationState`: they are defined in `tcx`. This commit moves them into `statement` *and* makes them available in `mir::*`, like many other MIR types.

r? `@tmandry`
2025-02-19 01:30:13 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
5d1551b9c6 Remove rustc_middle::mir::tcx module.
This is a really weird module. For example, what does `tcx` in
`rustc_middle::mir::tcx::PlaceTy` mean? The answer is "not much".

The top-level module comment says:

> Methods for the various MIR types. These are intended for use after
> building is complete.

Awfully broad for a module that has a handful of impl blocks for some
MIR types, none of which really relates to `TyCtxt`. `git blame`
indicates the comment is ancient, from 2015, and made sense then.

This module is now vestigial. This commit removes it and moves all the
code within into `rustc_middle::mir::statement`. Some specifics:

- `Place`, `PlaceRef`, `Rvalue`, `Operand`, `BorrowKind`: they all have `impl`
  blocks in both the `tcx` and `statement` modules. The commit merges
  the former into the latter.

- `BinOp`, `UnOp`: they only have `impl` blocks in `tcx`. The commit
  moves these into `statement`.

- `PlaceTy`, `RvalueInitializationState`: they are defined in `tcx`.
  This commit moves them into `statement` *and* makes them available in
  `mir::*`, like many other MIR types.
2025-02-19 10:26:05 +11:00
Matthias Krüger
10dd016a80
Rollup merge of #137203 - nnethercote:improve-MIR-modification, r=compiler-errors
Improve MIR modification

A few commits that simplify code that manipulates MIR bodies.

r? `@tmiasko`
2025-02-18 18:40:54 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
04eeda47ab Inline and replace Statement::replace_nop.
It has a single call site, and doesn't seem worth having as an API
function.
2025-02-18 13:43:43 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
69f5e342bf Inline and remove BasicBlockData::retain_statements.
It has a single call site, and the code is clearer this way.
2025-02-18 13:31:08 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
e3316ae453 Improve MirPatch documentation and naming.
It's currently lacking comments. This commit adds some, which is useful
because there are some methods with non-obvious behaviour.

The commit also renames two things:
- `patch_map` becomes `term_patch_map`, because it's only about
  terminators.
- `is_patched` becomes `is_term_patched`, for the same reason.

(I would guess that originally `MirPatch` only handled terminators, and
then over time it expanded to allow other modifications, but these names
weren't updated.)
2025-02-18 13:12:50 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a1daa34ad0 Use MirPatch in EnumSizeOpt.
Instead of `expand_statements`. This makes the code shorter and
consistent with other MIR transform passes.

The tests require updating because there is a slight change in
MIR output:
- the old code replaced the original statement with twelve new
  statements.
- the new code inserts converts the original statement to a `nop` and
  then insert twelve new statements in front of it.

I.e. we now end up with an extra `nop`, which doesn't matter at all.
2025-02-18 12:52:56 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
fd7b4bf4e1 Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 2.
Continuing the work started in #136466.

Every method gains a `hir_` prefix, though for the ones that already
have a `par_` or `try_par_` prefix I added the `hir_` after that.
2025-02-18 10:17:44 +11:00
Matthew Jasper
cde8c6f52b Handle normalization failures in drop elaboration
Drop elaboration looks at fields of a type, which may error when we try
to normalize them. Borrowck will have detected this if HIR typeck
didn't, but we don't delete the MIR body for errors in borrowck so
still have to handle this happening in drop elaboration by checking
whether an error has been emitted.
2025-02-17 11:33:07 +00:00