Make an assert debug-only in `find_constraint_paths_between_regions`.
This reduces instruction counts for NLL builds of `wg-grammar` by over
20%.
r? @nikomatsakis
Do not ICE in codegen when using a extern_type static
The layout of a extern_type static is unsized, but may pass the
Well-Formed check in typeck (See #55257). As a result, we
cannot assume that a static is sized when generating the `Place`
for an r-value.
Fixes: #57876
r? @oli-obk
Improve error message and docs for non-UTF-8 bytes in stdio on Windows
This should make debugging problems like abonander/multipart#106 significantly more straightforward in the future.
cc #23344, @retep998 @alexcrichton
Not sure who do r? so I'll let rust-highfive pick one.
Allow #[repr(align(x))] on enums (#57996)
Tracking issue: #57996
Implements an extension of [RFC 1358](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/1358-repr-align.md) behind a feature flag (`repr_align_enum`). Originally introduced here for structs: #39999.
It seems like only HIR-level changes are required, since enums are already aware of their alignment (due to alignment of their limbs).
cc @bitshifter
This is especially confusing since the name `Foreign`
and the name `extern type` are so different. I deduced
that they're the same by consulting git-blame.
Add a forever unstable opt-out of const qualification checks
r? @eddyb
cc @RalfJung @Centril
basically a forever unstable way to screw with const things in horribly unsafe, unsound and incoherent ways.
Note that this does *not* affect miri except by maybe violating assumptions that miri makes. But there's no change in how miri evaluates things.
Overhaul `syntax::fold::Folder`.
This PR changes `syntax::fold::Folder` from a functional style
(where most methods take a `T` and produce a new `T`) to a more
imperative style (where most methods take and modify a `&mut T`), and
renames it `syntax::mut_visit::MutVisitor`.
This makes the code faster and more concise.
rustdoc: don't try to get a DefId for a Def that doesn't have one
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/58054
The compiler allows you to write a `use` statement for a built-in non-macro attribute, since `use proc_macro` can apply to both the `proc_macro` crate and the `#[proc_macro]` attribute. However, if you write a use statement for something that *doesn't* have this crossover, rustdoc will try to use it the same way as anything else... which resulted in an ICE because it tried to pull a DefId for something that didn't have one. This PR makes rustdoc skip those lookups when it encounters them, allowing it to properly process and render these imports.
Update cargo
7 commits in 245818076052dd7178f5bb7585f5aec5b6c1e03e..4e74e2fc0908524d17735c768067117d3e84ee9c
2019-01-27 15:17:26 +0000 to 2019-02-02 17:48:44 +0000
- Fix overlapping progress with stdout. (rust-lang/cargo#6618)
- Improve progress bar flickering. (rust-lang/cargo#6615)
- Add detail to multiple rename deps (rust-lang/cargo#6603)
- Fix race condition in local registry crate unpacking (rust-lang/cargo#6591)
- Revert "Make incremental compilation the default for all profiles." (rust-lang/cargo#6610)
- Fixup the docs on crate-type (rust-lang/cargo#6606)
- Document that owner --add now just invites (rust-lang/cargo#6604)
This commit changes `syntax::fold::Folder` from a functional style
(where most methods take a `T` and produce a new `T`) to a more
imperative style (where most methods take and modify a `&mut T`), and
renames it `syntax::mut_visit::MutVisitor`.
The first benefit is speed. The functional style does not require any
reallocations, due to the use of `P::map` and
`MoveMap::move_{,flat_}map`. However, every field in the AST must be
overwritten; even those fields that are unchanged are overwritten with
the same value. This causes a lot of unnecessary memory writes. The
imperative style reduces instruction counts by 1--3% across a wide range
of workloads, particularly incremental workloads.
The second benefit is conciseness; the imperative style is usually more
concise. E.g. compare the old functional style:
```
fn fold_abc(&mut self, abc: ABC) {
ABC {
a: fold_a(abc.a),
b: fold_b(abc.b),
c: abc.c,
}
}
```
with the imperative style:
```
fn visit_abc(&mut self, ABC { a, b, c: _ }: &mut ABC) {
visit_a(a);
visit_b(b);
}
```
(The reductions get larger in more complex examples.)
Overall, the patch removes over 200 lines of code -- even though the new
code has more comments -- and a lot of the remaining lines have fewer
characters.
Some notes:
- The old style used methods called `fold_*`. The new style mostly uses
methods called `visit_*`, but there are a few methods that map a `T`
to something other than a `T`, which are called `flat_map_*` (`T` maps
to multiple `T`s) or `filter_map_*` (`T` maps to 0 or 1 `T`s).
- `move_map.rs`/`MoveMap`/`move_map`/`move_flat_map` are renamed
`map_in_place.rs`/`MapInPlace`/`map_in_place`/`flat_map_in_place` to
reflect their slightly changed signatures.
- Although this commit renames the `fold` module as `mut_visit`, it
keeps it in the `fold.rs` file, so as not to confuse git. The next
commit will rename the file.
The layout of a extern_type static is unsized, but may pass the
Well-Formed check in typeck. As a result, we cannot assume that
a static is sized when generating the `Place` for an r-value.