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48 lines
1.5 KiB
Rust
48 lines
1.5 KiB
Rust
// rust-lang/rust#45696: This test checks the compiler won't infinite loop when
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// you declare a variable of type `struct A(Box<A>, ...);` (which is impossible
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// to construct but *is* possible to declare; see also issues #4287, #44933,
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// and #52852).
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// run-pass
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// This test has structs and functions that are by definition unusable
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// all over the place, so just go ahead and allow dead_code
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#![allow(dead_code)]
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// direct regular recursion with indirect ownership via box
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struct C { field: Box<C> }
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// direct non-regular recursion with indirect ownership via box
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struct D { field: Box<(D, D)> }
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// indirect regular recursion with indirect ownership via box.
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struct E { field: F }
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struct F { field: Box<E> }
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// indirect non-regular recursion with indirect ownership via box.
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struct G { field: (H, H) }
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struct H { field: Box<G> }
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// These enums are cases that are not currently hit by the
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// `visit_terminator_drop` recursion down a type's structural
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// definition.
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//
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// But it seems prudent to include them in this test as variants on
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// the above, in that they are similarly non-constructable data types
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// with destructors that would diverge.
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enum I { One(Box<I>) }
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enum J { One(Box<J>), Two(Box<J>) }
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fn impossible_to_call_c(_c: C) { }
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fn impossible_to_call_d(_d: D) { }
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fn impossible_to_call_e(_e: E) { }
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fn impossible_to_call_f(_f: F) { }
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fn impossible_to_call_g(_g: G) { }
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fn impossible_to_call_h(_h: H) { }
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fn impossible_to_call_i(_i: I) { }
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fn impossible_to_call_j(_j: J) { }
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fn main() {
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}
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