Encode implied predicates for traits
In #112629, we decided to make associated type bounds in the "supertrait" AST position *implied* even though they're not supertraits themselves.
This means that the `super_predicates` and `implied_predicates` queries now differ for regular traits. The assumption that they didn't differ was hard-coded in #107614, so in cross-crate positions this means that we forget the implied predicates from associated type bounds.
This isn't unsound, just kind of annoying. This should be backported since associated type bounds are slated to stabilize for 1.78 -- either that, or associated type bounds can be reverted on beta and re-shipped in 1.79 with this patch.
Fixes#122859
CFI: Strip auto traits off Virtual calls
We already use `Instance` at declaration sites when available to glean additional information about possible abstractions of the type in use. This does the same when possible at callsites as well.
The primary purpose of this change is to allow CFI to alter how it generates type information for indirect calls through `Virtual` instances.
This is needed for the "separate machinery" version of my approach to the vtable issues (#122573), because we need to respond differently to a `Virtual` call to the same type as a non-virtual call, specifically [stripping auto traits off the receiver's `Self`](54b15b0c36) because there isn't a separate vtable for `Foo` vs `Foo + Send`.
This would also make a more general underlying mechanism that could be used by rcvalle's [proposed drop detection / encoding](edcd1e20a1) if we end up using his approach, as we could condition out on the `def_id` in the CFI code rather than requiring the generating code to explicitly note whether it was calling drop.
CFI: Support self_cell-like recursion
Current `transform_ty` attempts to avoid cycles when normalizing `#[repr(transparent)]` types to their interior, but runs afoul of this pattern used in `self_cell`:
```
struct X<T> {
x: u8,
p: PhantomData<T>,
}
#[repr(transparent)]
struct Y(X<Y>);
```
When attempting to normalize Y, it will still cycle indefinitely. By using a types-visited list, this will instead get expanded exactly one layer deep to X<Y>, and then stop, not attempting to normalize `Y` any further.
This PR was split off from #121962 as part of fixing the larger vtable compatibility issues.
r? ``````@workingjubilee``````
Fix compile of wasm64-unknown-unknown target
This target is a Tier 3 target so it's not tested on CI, and it's broken since last used so this commit fixes a small unwind-related issue that cropped up in the meantime.
Mention Register Size in `#[warn(asm_sub_register)]`
Fixes#121593
Displays the register size information obtained from `suggest_modifier()` and `default_modifier()`.
Rollup of 9 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #121281 (regression test for #103626)
- #122168 (Fix validation on substituted callee bodies in MIR inliner)
- #122217 (Handle str literals written with `'` lexed as lifetime)
- #122379 (transmute: caution against int2ptr transmutation)
- #122840 (`rustdoc --test`: Prevent reaching the maximum size of command-line by using files for arguments if there are too many)
- #122907 (Uniquify `ReError` on input mode in canonicalizer)
- #122942 (Add test in higher ranked subtype)
- #122943 (add a couple more ice tests)
- #122963 (core/panicking: fix outdated comment)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add test in higher ranked subtype
I'm a beginner in this repository, and there are some things I'm not sure about:
- Is it okay that there is a warning:
```
rustc_infer::infer::relate::generalize may incompletely handle alias type: AliasTy { args: [?1t, '^0.Named(DefId(0:15 ~ structually_relate_aliases[de75]::{impl#1}::'a), "'a")], def_id: DefId(0:5 ~ structually_relate_aliases[de75]::ToUnit::Unit) }
```
- Is it okay that there are two duplicate errors in the same line?
- Did I put the test in the right place?
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Fixes#121649
`rustdoc --test`: Prevent reaching the maximum size of command-line by using files for arguments if there are too many
Fixes#122722.
Thanks to this I discovered that rust was using ``@`` to add arguments from a file, quite convenient.
If there are too many `cfg` arguments given to `rustdoc --test`, it'll now put them into a temporary file and passing it as argument to the rustc command.
I added a test with 100_000 `cfg` arguments to ensure it'll not break again.
r? `@notrid`
transmute: caution against int2ptr transmutation
This came up in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/121282.
Cc ```@saethlin``` ```@scottmcm```
Eventually we'll add a proper description of provenance that we can reference, but that's a bunch of work and it's unclear who will have the time to do that when. Meanwhile, let's at least do what we can without mentioning provenance explicitly.
Handle str literals written with `'` lexed as lifetime
Given `'hello world'` and `'1 str', provide a structured suggestion for a valid string literal:
```
error[E0762]: unterminated character literal
--> $DIR/lex-bad-str-literal-as-char-3.rs:2:26
|
LL | println!('hello world');
| ^^^^
|
help: if you meant to write a `str` literal, use double quotes
|
LL | println!("hello world");
| ~ ~
```
```
error[E0762]: unterminated character literal
--> $DIR/lex-bad-str-literal-as-char-1.rs:2:20
|
LL | println!('1 + 1');
| ^^^^
|
help: if you meant to write a `str` literal, use double quotes
|
LL | println!("1 + 1");
| ~ ~
```
Fix#119685.
Fix validation on substituted callee bodies in MIR inliner
When inlining a coroutine, we will substitute the MIR body with the args of the call. There is code in the MIR validator that attempts to prevent query cycles, and will use the coroutine body directly when it detects that's the body that's being validated. That means that when inlining a coroutine body that has been substituted, it may no longer be parameterized over the original args of the coroutine, which will lead to substitution ICEs.
Fixes#119064
refactor check_{lang,library}_ub: use a single intrinsic
This enacts the plan I laid out [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122282#issuecomment-1996917998): use a single intrinsic, called `ub_checks` (in aniticpation of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/725), that just exposes the value of `debug_assertions` (consistently implemented in both codegen and the interpreter). Put the language vs library UB logic into the library.
This makes it easier to do something like https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122282 in the future: that just slightly alters the semantics of `ub_checks` (making it more approximating when crates built with different flags are mixed), but it no longer affects whether these checks can happen in Miri or compile-time.
The first commit just moves things around; I don't think these macros and functions belong into `intrinsics.rs` as they are not intrinsics.
r? `@saethlin`
Additional trait bounds beyond the principal trait and its implications
are not possible in the vtable. This means that if a receiver is
`&dyn Foo + Send`, the function will only be expecting `&dyn Foo`.
This strips those auto traits off before CFI encoding.
We already use `Instance` at declaration sites when available to glean
additional information about possible abstractions of the type in use.
This does the same when possible at callsites as well.
The primary purpose of this change is to allow CFI to alter how it
generates type information for indirect calls through `Virtual`
instances.
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #120577 (Stabilize slice_split_at_unchecked)
- #122698 (Cancel `cargo update` job if there's no updates)
- #122780 (Rename `hir::Local` into `hir::LetStmt`)
- #122915 (Delay a bug if no RPITITs were found)
- #122916 (docs(sync): normalize dot in fn summaries)
- #122921 (Enable more mir-opt tests in debug builds)
- #122922 (-Zprint-type-sizes: print the types of awaitees and unnamed coroutine locals.)
- #122927 (Change an ICE regression test to use the original reproducer)
- #122930 (add panic location to 'panicked while processing panic')
- #122931 (Fix some typos in the pin.rs)
- #122933 (tag_for_variant follow-ups)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Report retags as distinct from real memory accesses for data races
This changes the error reporting for data races such that reference invariants are no longer reported as real read and writes.
Before:
```
Data race detected between (1) non-atomic write on thread `unnamed-6` and (2) non-atomic read on thread `unnamed-5` at alloc1034971+0x10c. (2) just happened here
```
After:
```
Data race detected between (1) non-atomic write on thread `unnamed-8` and (2) shared reference invariant on thread `unnamed-6` at alloc1018329+0x190. (2) just happened here
```
Non-atomic read accesses from the *other* thread don't have this information tracked so those are called `some potential non-atomic read access` here.
Change an ICE regression test to use the original reproducer
The ICE was fixed in PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122370, but the test used a different reproducer than the one originally reported. This PR changes it to the original one, giving us more confidence that the fix works.
Fixes#122199
-Zprint-type-sizes: print the types of awaitees and unnamed coroutine locals.
This should assist comprehending the size of coroutines. In particular, whenever a future is suspended while awaiting another future, the latter is given the special name `__awaitee`, and now the type of the awaited future will be printed, allowing identifying caller/callee — er, I mean, poller/pollee — relationships.
It would be possible to include the type name in more cases, but I thought that that might be overly verbose (`print-type-sizes` is already a lot of text) and ordinary named fields or variables are easier for readers to discover the types of.
This change will also synergize with my other PR #122923 which changes type printing to print the path of the `async fn` instead of the span.
Implementation note: I'm not sure if `Symbol::intern` is appropriate for this application, but it was the obvious way to not have to remove the `Copy` implementation from `FieldInfo`, or add a `'tcx` lifetime, while avoiding keeping a lot of possibly redundant strings in memory. I don't know what the proper tradeoff to make here is (though presumably it is not too important for a `-Z` debugging option).
Rename `hir::Local` into `hir::LetStmt`
Follow-up of #122776.
As discussed on [zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Improve.20naming.20of.20.60ExprKind.3A.3ALet.60.3F).
I made this change into a separate PR because I'm less sure about this change as is. For example, we have `visit_local` and `LocalSource` items. Is it fine to keep these two as is (I supposed it is but I prefer to ask) or not? Having `Node::Local(LetStmt)` makes things more explicit but is it going too far?
r? ```@oli-obk```
Cancel `cargo update` job if there's no updates
Previously there were always updates so we didn't hit this. Since #122489, this job runs on a more frequent schedule and causes errors if there have been no changes in that timespan.
This led to a weird error on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/122646#issuecomment-2004339093 - because of this I've replaced the `exit 1`s here with `gh run cancel` so we don't have false 'failed' jobs in the logs.
Stabilize slice_split_at_unchecked
Greetings!
I took the opportunity, and I tried to stabilize the `slice_split_at_unchecked` feature. I followed the guidelines, and I hope everything was done correctly 🤞 .
Closes#76014
Let codegen decide when to `mem::swap` with immediates
Making `libcore` decide this is silly; the backend has so much better information about when it's a good idea.
Thus this PR introduces a new `typed_swap` intrinsic with a fallback body, and replaces that fallback implementation when swapping immediates or scalar pairs.
r? oli-obk
Replaces #111744, and means we'll never need more libs PRs like #111803 or #107140