![]() Implement `~const Destruct` effect goal in the new solver This also fixed a subtle bug/limitation of the `NeedsConstDrop` check. Specifically, the "`Qualif`" API basically treats const drops as totally structural, even though dropping something that has an explicit `Drop` implementation cannot be structurally decomposed. For example: ```rust #![feature(const_trait_impl)] #[const_trait] trait Foo { fn foo(); } struct Conditional<T: Foo>(T); impl Foo for () { fn foo() { println!("uh oh"); } } impl<T> const Drop for Conditional<T> where T: ~const Foo { fn drop(&mut self) { T::foo(); } } const FOO: () = { let _ = Conditional(()); //~^ This should error. }; fn main() {} ``` In this example, when checking if the `Conditional(())` rvalue is const-drop, since `Conditional` has a const destructor, we would previously recurse into the `()` value and determine it has nothing to drop, which means that it is considered to *not* need a const drop -- even though dropping `Conditional(())` would mean evaluating the destructor which relies on that `T: const Foo` bound to hold! This could be fixed alternatively by banning any const conditions on `const Drop` impls, but that really sucks -- that means that basically no *interesting* const drop impls could be written. We have the capability to totally and intuitively support the right behavior, which I've implemented here. |
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This is the main source code repository for Rust. It contains the compiler, standard library, and documentation.
Why Rust?
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