Rollup merge of #89532 - ecstatic-morse:maybe-live-locals-enum, r=oli-obk,tmiasko
Document behavior of `MaybeLiveLocals` regarding enums and field-senstivity This arose from a [discussion on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/189540-t-compiler.2Fwg-mir-opt/topic/MaybeLiveLocals.20and.20Discriminants) where a new contributor attempted to implement a dead-store elimination pass using this analysis. They ran into a nasty hack around `SetDiscriminant` the effect of which is to lets handle assignments of literals to enum-typed locals (e.g. `x = Some(4)`) correctly. This took me a while to figure out. Document this oddity, so the next person will have an easier time, and add a test to enshrine the current behavior. r? ``@tmiasko``
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@ -11,6 +11,37 @@ use crate::{AnalysisDomain, Backward, GenKill, GenKillAnalysis};
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/// exist. See [this `mir-dataflow` test][flow-test] for an example. You almost never want to use
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/// this analysis without also looking at the results of [`MaybeBorrowedLocals`].
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///
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/// ## Field-(in)sensitivity
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///
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/// As the name suggests, this analysis is field insensitive. If a projection of a variable `x` is
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/// assigned to (e.g. `x.0 = 42`), it does not "define" `x` as far as liveness is concerned. In fact,
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/// such an assignment is currently marked as a "use" of `x` in an attempt to be maximally
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/// conservative.
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///
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/// ## Enums and `SetDiscriminant`
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///
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/// Assigning a literal value to an `enum` (e.g. `Option<i32>`), does not result in a simple
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/// assignment of the form `_1 = /*...*/` in the MIR. For example, the following assignment to `x`:
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///
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/// ```
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/// x = Some(4);
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/// ```
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///
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/// compiles to this MIR
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///
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/// ```
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/// ((_1 as Some).0: i32) = const 4_i32;
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/// discriminant(_1) = 1;
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/// ```
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///
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/// However, `MaybeLiveLocals` **does** mark `x` (`_1`) as "killed" after a statement like this.
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/// That's because it treats the `SetDiscriminant` operation as a definition of `x`, even though
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/// the writes that actually initialized the locals happened earlier.
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///
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/// This makes `MaybeLiveLocals` unsuitable for certain classes of optimization normally associated
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/// with a live variables analysis, notably dead-store elimination. It's a dirty hack, but it works
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/// okay for the generator state transform (currently the main consumuer of this analysis).
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///
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/// [`MaybeBorrowedLocals`]: super::MaybeBorrowedLocals
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/// [flow-test]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/a08c47310c7d49cbdc5d7afb38408ba519967ecd/src/test/ui/mir-dataflow/liveness-ptr.rs
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/// [liveness]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_variable_analysis
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src/test/ui/mir-dataflow/liveness-enum.rs
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src/test/ui/mir-dataflow/liveness-enum.rs
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@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
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#![feature(core_intrinsics, rustc_attrs)]
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use std::intrinsics::rustc_peek;
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#[rustc_mir(rustc_peek_liveness, stop_after_dataflow)]
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fn foo() -> Option<i32> {
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let mut x = None;
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// `x` is live here since it is used in the next statement...
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rustc_peek(x);
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dbg!(x);
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// But not here, since it is overwritten below
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rustc_peek(x); //~ ERROR rustc_peek: bit not set
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x = Some(4);
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x
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}
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fn main() {}
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src/test/ui/mir-dataflow/liveness-enum.stderr
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src/test/ui/mir-dataflow/liveness-enum.stderr
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@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
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error: rustc_peek: bit not set
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--> $DIR/liveness-enum.rs:15:5
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LL | rustc_peek(x);
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| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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error: stop_after_dataflow ended compilation
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error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
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