When the return type is `!Sized` we look for all the returned
expressions in the body to fetch their types and provide a reasonable
suggestion. The tail expression of the body is normally evaluated after
checking whether the return type is `Sized`. Changing the order of the
evaluation produces undesirable knock down effects, so we detect the
specific case that newcomers are likely to encounter ,returning a single
bare trait object, and only in that case we evaluate the tail
expression's type so that the suggestion will be accurate.
During development, a function could have a return type set that is a
bare trait object by accident. We already suggest using either a boxed
trait object or `impl Trait` if the return paths will allow it. We now
do so too when there are *no* return paths or they all resolve to `!`.
We still don't handle cases where the trait object is *not* the entirety
of the return type gracefully.
Update pattern docs.
A few changes to help clarify string pattern usage:
* Add some examples and stability information in the `pattern` module.
* Fixes the links at https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/str/pattern/ because intra-doc-links don't work with re-exported modules (#65983 I think?).
* Consistently use the same phrasing for `str` methods taking a pattern.
* Also mention that array of `char` is also accepted.
When `Pattern` is stabilized, the phrasing in the `str` methods can be updated to be more general to reflect the exact behavior. I'm reluctant to do this now because the stability story for `Pattern` is uncertain. It may perhaps look something like:
> The pattern can be any type that implements the [`Pattern`] trait. Notable examples are `&str`, [`char`], arrays of [`char`], or functions or closures that determines if a character matches. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.
This is complicated because methods like `trim_matches` have bounds, which for example don't support `str`, so those methods may need more elaboration.
Replace big JS dict with JSON parsing
Part of #56545.
@ollie27 suggested that using JSON instead of a JS dict might be faster, so I decided to test it. And the results far exceeded whatever expectations I had...
I used https://github.com/adamgreig/stm32ral for my tests. If you want to build it locally:
```bash
$ cargo doc --features doc --open
```
But I strongly recommend to do it with this PR. Some numbers:
* Loading a page with the JSON search-index: less than 1 second
* Loading a page with the JS search-index: crashed after 30 seconds
I think the results are clear enough...
r? @ollie27
cc @rust-lang/rustdoc
* Add new error code E0752
* Add span to hir::IsAsync::Yes
* Emit an error if main or the start function is marked as async
* Add two regression tests
Fix formatting errors and bless test outputs
* move tests to ui/async-await
fix test error text
remove span from IsAsync
ty/print: pretty-print constant aggregates (arrays, tuples and ADTs).
Oddly enough, we don't have any UI tests showing this off in types, only `mir-opt` tests.
However, the pretty form should show up in the test output diff of #71018, if this PR is merged first.
<hr/>
Examples of before/after:
|`Option<bool>`|
|:-:|
|`{transmute(0x01): std::option::Option<bool>}`|
| ✨ ↓↓↓ ✨ |
|`std::option::Option::<bool>::Some(true)`|
| `RawVec<u32>` |
|:-:|
| `ByRef { alloc: Allocation { bytes: [4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0], relocations: Relocations(SortedMap { data: [] }), undef_mask: UndefMask { blocks: [65535], len: Size { raw: 16 } }, size: Size { raw: 16 }, align: Align { pow2: 3 }, mutability: Not, extra: () }, offset: Size { raw: 0 } }: alloc::raw_vec::RawVec::<u32>`|
| ✨ ↓↓↓ ✨ |
|`alloc::raw_vec::RawVec::<u32> { ptr: std::ptr::Unique::<u32> { pointer: {0x4 as *const u32}, _marker: std::marker::PhantomData::<u32> }, cap: 0usize, alloc: std::alloc::Global }`|
<hr/>
This PR is a prerequisite for #61486, *sort of*, in that we need to be able to pretty-print values in order to even consider how we might mangle them.
We still don't have pretty-printing for constants of reference types, @oli-obk has the necessary support logic in a PR but I didn't want to interfere with that.
<hr/>
Each commit should be reviewed separately, as I've fixed a couple deficiencies along the way.
r? @oli-obk cc @rust-lang/wg-mir-opt @varkor @yodaldevoid
Deprecate the asm! macro in favor of llvm_asm!
Since we will be changing the syntax of `asm!` soon, deprecate it and encourage people to use `llvm_asm!` instead (which preserves the old syntax). This will avoid breakage when `asm!` is changed.
RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2843
Make the necessary changes to support concurrency in Miri.
This pull request makes the necessary changes to the Rust compiler to allow Miri to support concurrency:
1. Move stack from the interpretation context (`InterpCx`) to machine, so that the machine can switch the stacks when it changes the thread being executed.
2. Add the callbacks that allow the machine to generate fresh allocation ids for each thread local allocation and to translate them back to original allocations when needed. This allows the machine to ensure the property that allocation ids are unique, which allows using a simpler representation of the memory.
r? @oli-obk
cc @RalfJung
Rollup of 4 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #71026 (Fix false "never constructed" warnings for `Self::` variant paths)
- #71310 (Do not show DefId in diagnostics)
- #71317 (miri-unleash test for llvm_asm)
- #71324 (Fix some tests failing in `--pass check` mode)
Failed merges:
r? @ghost