Generalize small dominators optimization
* Use small dominators optimization from 640ede7b0a more generally.
* Merge `DefLocation` and `LocationExtended` since they serve the same purpose.
remove Key impls for types that involve an AllocId
I don't understand how but somehow that leads to issues like https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83085? Anyway removing unused impls doesn't seem like a bad idea. The concerning part is that of course nothing will stop us from having such impls again in the future, alongside re-introducing bugs like #83085.
r? `@oli-obk`
Bring back generic parameters for indices in rustc_abi and make it compile on stable
This effectively reverses https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107163, allowing rust-analyzer to depend on this crate again,
It also moves some glob imports / expands them in the first commit because they made it more difficult for me to reason about things.
The word "active" is currently used in two different and confusing ways:
- `ACTIVE_FEATURES` actually means "available unstable features"
- `Features::active_features` actually means "features declared in the
crate's code", which can include feature within `ACTIVE_FEATURES` but
also others.
(This is also distinct from "enabled" features which includes declared
features but also some edition-specific features automatically enabled
depending on the edition in use.)
This commit changes the `Features::active_features` to
`Features::declared_features` which actually matches its meaning.
Likewise, `Features::active` becomes `Features::declared`.
Remove the `TypedArena::alloc_from_iter` specialization.
It was added in #78569. It's complicated and doesn't actually help
performance.
r? `@cjgillot`
coverage: Allow each coverage statement to have multiple code regions
The original implementation of coverage instrumentation was built around the assumption that a coverage counter/expression would be associated with *up to one* code region. When it was discovered that *multiple* regions would sometimes need to share a counter, a workaround was found: for the remaining regions, the instrumentor would create a fresh expression that adds zero to the existing counter/expression.
That got the job done, but resulted in some awkward code, and produces unnecessarily complicated coverage maps in the final binary.
---
This PR removes that tension by changing `StatementKind::Coverage`'s code region field from `Option<CodeRegion>` to `Vec<CodeRegion>`.
The changes on the codegen side are fairly straightforward. As long as each `CoverageKind::Counter` only injects one `llvm.instrprof.increment`, the rest of coverage codegen is happy to handle multiple regions mapped to the same counter/expression, with only minor option-to-vec adjustments.
On the instrumentor/mir-transform side, we can get rid of the code that creates extra (x + 0) expressions. Instead we gather all of the code regions associated with a single BCB, and inject them all into one coverage statement.
---
There are several patches here but they can be divided in to three phases:
- Preparatory work
- Actually switching over to multiple regions per coverage statement
- Cleaning up
So viewing the patches individually may be easier.
a small wf and clause cleanup
- remove `Clause::from_projection_clause`, instead use `ToPredicate`
- change `predicate_obligations` to directly take a `Clause`
- remove some unnecessary `&`
- use clause in `min_specialization` checks where easily applicable
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #115863 (Add check_unused_messages in tidy)
- #116210 (Ensure that `~const` trait bounds on associated functions are in const traits or impls)
- #116358 (Rename both of the `Match` relations)
- #116371 (Remove unused features from `rustc_llvm`.)
- #116374 (Print normalized ty)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
When these methods were originally written, I wasn't aware that
`newtype_index!` already supports addition with ordinary numbers, without
needing to unwrap and re-wrap.
Cleanup number handling in match exhaustiveness
Doing a little bit of cleanup; handling number constants was somewhat messy. In particular, this:
- evals float consts once instead of repetitively
- reduces `Constructor` from 88 bytes to 56 (`mir::Const` is big!)
The `fast_try_eval_bits` function was mostly constructed from inlining existing code but I don't fully understand it; I don't follow how consts work and are evaluated very well.
Assorted improvements for `rustc_middle::mir::traversal`
r? `@cjgillot`
I'm not _entirely_ sure about all changes, although I do like all of them. If you'd like I can drop some commits. Best reviewed on a commit-by-commit basis, I think, since they are fairly isolated.