Uplift Reveal to rustc_type_ir
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@ -32,54 +32,7 @@ use std::hash::{Hash, Hasher};
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pub use self::select::{EvaluationCache, EvaluationResult, OverflowError, SelectionCache};
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// FIXME: Remove this import and import via `solve::`
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pub use rustc_type_ir::solve::BuiltinImplSource;
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/// Depending on the stage of compilation, we want projection to be
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/// more or less conservative.
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#[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, HashStable, Encodable, Decodable)]
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pub enum Reveal {
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/// At type-checking time, we refuse to project any associated
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/// type that is marked `default`. Non-`default` ("final") types
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/// are always projected. This is necessary in general for
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/// soundness of specialization. However, we *could* allow
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/// projections in fully-monomorphic cases. We choose not to,
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/// because we prefer for `default type` to force the type
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/// definition to be treated abstractly by any consumers of the
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/// impl. Concretely, that means that the following example will
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/// fail to compile:
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///
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/// ```compile_fail,E0308
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/// #![feature(specialization)]
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/// trait Assoc {
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/// type Output;
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/// }
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///
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/// impl<T> Assoc for T {
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/// default type Output = bool;
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/// }
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///
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/// fn main() {
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/// let x: <() as Assoc>::Output = true;
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/// }
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/// ```
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///
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/// We also do not reveal the hidden type of opaque types during
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/// type-checking.
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UserFacing,
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/// At codegen time, all monomorphic projections will succeed.
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/// Also, `impl Trait` is normalized to the concrete type,
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/// which has to be already collected by type-checking.
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///
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/// NOTE: as `impl Trait`'s concrete type should *never*
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/// be observable directly by the user, `Reveal::All`
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/// should not be used by checks which may expose
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/// type equality or type contents to the user.
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/// There are some exceptions, e.g., around auto traits and
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/// transmute-checking, which expose some details, but
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/// not the whole concrete type of the `impl Trait`.
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All,
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}
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pub use rustc_type_ir::solve::{BuiltinImplSource, Reveal};
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/// The reason why we incurred this obligation; used for error reporting.
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///
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@ -9,6 +9,54 @@ use rustc_type_ir_macros::{Lift_Generic, TypeFoldable_Generic, TypeVisitable_Gen
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use crate::{Canonical, CanonicalVarValues, Interner, Upcast};
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/// Depending on the stage of compilation, we want projection to be
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/// more or less conservative.
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#[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
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#[cfg_attr(feature = "nightly", derive(TyDecodable, TyEncodable, HashStable_NoContext))]
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pub enum Reveal {
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/// At type-checking time, we refuse to project any associated
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/// type that is marked `default`. Non-`default` ("final") types
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/// are always projected. This is necessary in general for
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/// soundness of specialization. However, we *could* allow
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/// projections in fully-monomorphic cases. We choose not to,
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/// because we prefer for `default type` to force the type
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/// definition to be treated abstractly by any consumers of the
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/// impl. Concretely, that means that the following example will
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/// fail to compile:
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///
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/// ```compile_fail,E0308
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/// #![feature(specialization)]
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/// trait Assoc {
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/// type Output;
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/// }
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///
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/// impl<T> Assoc for T {
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/// default type Output = bool;
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/// }
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///
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/// fn main() {
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/// let x: <() as Assoc>::Output = true;
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/// }
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/// ```
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///
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/// We also do not reveal the hidden type of opaque types during
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/// type-checking.
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UserFacing,
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/// At codegen time, all monomorphic projections will succeed.
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/// Also, `impl Trait` is normalized to the concrete type,
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/// which has to be already collected by type-checking.
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///
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/// NOTE: as `impl Trait`'s concrete type should *never*
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/// be observable directly by the user, `Reveal::All`
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/// should not be used by checks which may expose
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/// type equality or type contents to the user.
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/// There are some exceptions, e.g., around auto traits and
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/// transmute-checking, which expose some details, but
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/// not the whole concrete type of the `impl Trait`.
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All,
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}
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pub type CanonicalInput<I, T = <I as Interner>::Predicate> = Canonical<I, QueryInput<I, T>>;
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pub type CanonicalResponse<I> = Canonical<I, Response<I>>;
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/// The result of evaluating a canonical query.
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