We relied previously on the caller (e.g. `Q::in_operand`) to ignore
`Local`s that were indirectly mutable (and thus assumed to be
qualified). However, it's much clearer (and more efficient) to do this
in the resolver itself.
This does not yet remove the masking done in `Q::in_operand` and others
for safety's sake, although I believe that should now be possible.
Also adds an unstable flag to disable the ICE
(`-Zsuppress-const-validation-back-compat-ice`) so that nightly users do
not have to revert to a previous nightly if their code causes
disagreement between the validators.
This adds a dataflow analysis that determines if a reference to a given
`Local` or part of a `Local` that would allow mutation exists before a
point in the CFG. If no such reference exists, we know for sure that
that `Local` cannot have been mutated via an indirect assignment or
function call.
Rollup of 14 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #64703 (Docs: slice elements are equidistant)
- #64745 (Include message on tests that should panic but do not)
- #64781 (Remove stray references to the old global tcx)
- #64794 (Remove unused DepTrackingMap)
- #64802 (Account for tail expressions when pointing at return type)
- #64809 (hir: Disallow `target_feature` on constants)
- #64815 (Fix div_duration() marked as stable by mistake)
- #64818 (update rtpSpawn's parameters type(It's prototype has been updated in libc))
- #64830 (Thou shallt not `.abort_if_errors()`)
- #64836 (Stabilize map_get_key_value feature)
- #64845 (pin.rs: fix links to primitives in documentation)
- #64847 (Upgrade env_logger to 0.7)
- #64851 (Add mailmap entry for Dustin Bensing by request)
- #64859 (check_match: improve diagnostics for `let A = 2;` with `const A: i32 = 3`)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost
check_match: improve diagnostics for `let A = 2;` with `const A: i32 = 3`
For example:
```
error[E0005]: refutable pattern in local binding: `std::i32::MIN..=1i32` and `3i32..=std::i32::MAX` not covered
--> $DIR/const-pat-non-exaustive-let-new-var.rs:2:9
|
LL | let A = 3;
| ^
| |
| interpreted as a constant pattern, not a new variable
| help: introduce a variable instead: `a_var`
...
LL | const A: i32 = 2;
| ----------------- constant defined here
```
r? @estebank
cc @matthiaskrgr @rpjohnst
Add mailmap entry for Dustin Bensing by request
This should deduplicate entries from @pythoneer between the stdarch submodule and this repo itself on thanks.rust-lang.org.
hir: Disallow `target_feature` on constants
Fixes#64768.
This PR fixes an ICE when `#[target_feature]` is applied to constants by disallowing this with the same error as when `#[target_feature]` is applied to other places it shouldn't be.
I couldn't see anything in the [RFC](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2045-target-feature.md) that suggested that `#[target_feature]` should be applicable to constants or any tests that suggested it should, though I might have missed something - if this is desirable in future, it remains possible to remove this error (but for the time being, I think this error is better than an ICE).
I also added some extra cases to the test for other places where `#[target_feature]` should not be permitted.
cc @gnzlbg
Account for tail expressions when pointing at return type
When there's a type mismatch we make an effort to check if it was
caused by a function's return type. This logic now makes sure to
only point at the return type if the error happens in a tail
expression.
Turn `walk_parent_nodes` method into an iterator.
CC #39968, CC #40799.
Remove unused DepTrackingMap
Deletes some related code (MemoizationMap trait, etc.)
I believe this became unused with red/green incremental introduction, but am uncertain.
Include message on tests that should panic but do not
As per issue #60790 includes a message for tests marked `#[should_panic]` that do not panic as expected.
Fixes#60790.
Docs: slice elements are equidistant
Recently, someone asked why `[char]` and `str` are not interchangeable, and I explained that in a slice, the elements must be laid out equidistantly, whereas the chars in a `str` are stored compactly regardless their size. However I couldn't find this documented anywhere, so here's a small addition of this fact.