Fast reject for NeedsNonConstDrop
Hopefully fixes the regression in #88558.
I've always wanted to help with the performance of rustc, but it doesn't feel the same when you are fixing a regression caused by your own PR...
r? `@oli-obk`
If any block on a goto chain has more than one predecessor, then the new
start block would have basic block predecessors.
Skip the transformation for the start block altogether, to avoid
violating the new invariant that the start block does not have any basic
block predecessors.
inline(always) on check_recursion_limit
r? `@oli-obk`
#88558 caused a regression, this PR adds `#[inline(always)]` to `check_recursion_limit`, a possible suspect of that regression.
Extend the `DepthFirstSearch` iterator so that it can be re-used and
extended with add'l start nodes. Then replace the FxHashSets of nodes
we were using in the fallback analysis with a single iterator. This
way we won't re-walk portions of the graph that are reached more than
once, and we also do less allocation etc.
Instead, we now record those type variables that are the target of a
`NeverToAny` adjustment and consider those to be the "diverging" type
variables. This allows us to remove the special case logic that
creates a type variable for `!` in coercion.
The comment seems incorrect. Testing revealed that the examples in
question still work (as well as some variants) even without the
special casing here.
We now fallback type variables using the following rules:
* Construct a coercion graph `A -> B` where `A` and `B` are unresolved
type variables or the `!` type.
* Let D be those variables that are reachable from `!`.
* Let N be those variables that are reachable from a variable not in
D.
* All variables in (D \ N) fallback to `!`.
* All variables in (D & N) fallback to `()`.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #86422 (Emit clearer diagnostics for parens around `for` loop heads)
- #87460 (Point to closure when emitting 'cannot move out' for captured variable)
- #87566 (Recover invalid assoc type bounds using `==`)
- #88666 (Improve build command for compiler docs)
- #88899 (Do not issue E0071 if a type error has already been reported)
- #88949 (Fix handling of `hir::GenericArg::Infer` in `wrong_number_of_generic_args.rs`)
- #88953 (Add chown functions to std::os::unix::fs to change the owner and group of files)
- #88954 (Allow `panic!("{}", computed_str)` in const fn.)
- #88964 (Add rustdoc version into the help popup)
- #89012 (Suggest removing `#![feature]` for library features that have been stabilized)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Suggest removing `#![feature]` for library features that have been stabilized
Issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88802
Delayed the check if #![feature] has been used to enable lib features in a non-nightly build to occur after TyCtxt has been constructed.
Add rustdoc version into the help popup
After a discussion with a rustdoc user about a specific behaviour, we realized we were not talking about the same version. To add on top of it, it was actually not that simple to find out the version since it was hosted documentation.
So to simplify things, I added the version into the help popup:
![Screenshot from 2021-09-16 10-45-52](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/3050060/133581128-b93b460a-e1cb-4a31-9f2f-97c7a916cfcc.png)
Does the version format looks or would you prefer that I add more information? We can also add the commit hash, commit date, host and release.
cc `@rust-lang/rustdoc`
r? `@jyn514`
Allow `panic!("{}", computed_str)` in const fn.
Special-case `panic!("{}", arg)` and translate it to `panic_display(&arg)`. `panic_display` will behave like `panic_any` in cosnt eval and behave like `panic!(format_args!("{}", arg))` in runtime.
This should bring Rust 2015 and 2021 to feature parity in terms of `const_panic`; and hopefully would unblock the stabilisation of #51999.
`@rustbot` modify labels: +T-compiler +T-libs +A-const-eval +A-const-fn
r? `@oli-obk`
Add chown functions to std::os::unix::fs to change the owner and group of files
This is a straightforward wrapper that uses the existing helpers for C
string handling and errno handling.
Having this available is convenient for UNIX utility programs written in
Rust, and avoids having to call unsafe functions like `libc::chown`
directly and handle errors manually, in a program that may otherwise be
entirely safe code.
In addition, these functions provide a more Rustic interface by
accepting appropriate traits and using `None` rather than `-1`.
Fix handling of `hir::GenericArg::Infer` in `wrong_number_of_generic_args.rs`
Fixes#87563. More precisely, I have fixed the "index out of bounds" error, which is what #87563 is about. The example given there still ICEs due to running into this `todo!()`, but I'd say that this is a separate issue:
c3c0f80d60/compiler/rustc_typeck/src/astconv/mod.rs (L460-L463)
Do not issue E0071 if a type error has already been reported
Fixes#88844. A suggested fix is already included in the error message for E0412, so with my changes, E0071 is simply not emitted anymore if the type in question is a "type error". This makes sense, I think, because we cannot confidently state that something is "not a struct" if we couldn't resolve it properly; and it's unnecessary to pollute the output with this additional error message, as it is a direct consequence of the former error.
I have also addressed the issue mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88844#issuecomment-917324856 by changing the fixed example in the documentation to more closely match the erroneous code example.
Improve build command for compiler docs
It was rather complicated to document rustc crates. With this, you can directly run:
```console
x.py doc compiler
x.py doc compiler/rustc_hir_pretty
```
The second commit adds the handling of the `--open` flag.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
Point to closure when emitting 'cannot move out' for captured variable
Attempts to fix#87456. The error message now points to the capturing closure, but I was not able to explain _why_ the closure implements `Fn` or `FnMut` (`TypeckResults::closure_kind_origins` did not contain anything for the closure in question).
cc `@Aaron1011`