Revert "Populate effective visibilities in `rustc_privacy`"
This reverts commit cff85f22f5, cc #110907. It needs to be fixed, but there are too many issues being reported that I wanted to put up a revert until a proper fix can be committed.
Fixes a ton of issues where private but still reachable impls were missing during codegen:
Fixes#111320Fixes#111321Fixes#111334Fixes#111357Fixes#111368Fixes#111373Fixes#111377Fixes#111386Fixes#111387
`@bors` p=1
r? `@petrochenkov`
This trait ref is derived from the self type and then equated to the
trait ref from the obligation.
For example, for `fn(): Fn(u32)`, `self_ty_trait_ref` is `Fn()`, which
is then equated to `Fn(u32)` (which will fail, causing the obligation to
fail).
`SelectionError` used to be 80 bytes (on 64 bit). That's quite big.
Especially because the selection cache contained `Result<_,
SelectionError>. The Ok type is only 32 bytes, so the 80 bytes
significantly inflate the size of the cache.
Most variants of the `SelectionError` seem to be hard errors, only
`Unimplemented` shows up in practice (for cranelift-codegen, it occupies
23.4% of all cache entries). We can just box away the biggest variant,
`OutputTypeParameterMismatch`, to get the size down to 16 bytes, well
within the size of the Ok type inside the cache.
Update books
## rust-lang/edition-guide
1 commits in 6038be9d37d7251c966b486154af621d1794d7af..f63e578b92ff43e8cc38fcaa257b660f45c8a8c2
2023-04-26 18:40:19 UTC to 2023-04-26 18:40:19 UTC
- Fix grammar (rust-lang/edition-guide#281)
## rust-embedded/book
2 commits in 897fcf566f16bf87bf37199bdddec1801fd00532..d9eb4c3f75435b008881062ffa77bf0d1527b37d
2023-05-08 10:06:29 UTC to 2023-05-08 07:19:03 UTC
- Update Interoperability section (rust-embedded/book#351)
- Update c-with-rust.md (rust-embedded/book#352)
## rust-lang/reference
3 commits in 1f8dc727e94ae4ef92adf70df979521a1ea1143e..28dc0f3576b55f5e57c5d6e65cd68ba3161e9fd5
2023-05-06 20:25:36 UTC to 2023-05-05 01:51:00 UTC
- Add an entry for macro_rules in the "Weak keywords" lexer block (rust-lang/reference#1356)
- Document f16c target feature (rust-lang/reference#1337)
- Fix example for non-x86 targets (rust-lang/reference#1334)
## rust-lang/rust-by-example
4 commits in 31961fe22521a779070a44a8f30a2b00a20b6212..8ee9528b72b927cff8fd32346db8bbd1198816f0
2023-05-01 21:18:34 UTC to 2023-04-25 11:19:41 UTC
- add: zero padding example (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1706)
- Update reenter_question_mark.md (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1705)
- Clarify array out-of-bounds behavior. (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1703)
- Update README.md (rust-lang/rust-by-example#1704)
## rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide
2 commits in 2a5eb92197e9cf8fe91164dcbf4f9b88c0d7e73d..28dbeaf5c44bc7f5111ad412e99f2d7c5cec6c90
2023-05-02 02:20:21 UTC to 2023-04-26 19:09:10 UTC
- Add unset-exec-env compiletest header. (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1682)
- extend the sixth trait system requirement (rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide#1671)
Min specialization improvements
- Don't allow specialization impls with no items, such implementations are probably not correct and only occur as mistakes in the compiler and standard library
- Fix a missing normalization call
- Adds spans for lifetime errors from overly general specializations
Closes#79457Closes#109815
Implement builtin # syntax and use it for offset_of!(...)
Add `builtin #` syntax to the parser, as well as a generic infrastructure to support both item and expression position builtin syntaxes. The PR also uses this infrastructure for the implementation of the `offset_of!` macro, added by #106934.
cc `@petrochenkov` `@DrMeepster`
cc #110680 `builtin #` tracking issue
cc #106655 `offset_of!` tracking issue
tweak "make mut" spans when assigning to locals
Work towards fixing #106857
This PR just cleans up a lot of spans which is helpful before properly fixing the issues. Best reviewed commit-by-commit.
r? `@estebank`
Tweak borrow suggestion span
Avoids a `span_to_snippet` call when we don't need to surround the expression in parentheses. The fact that the suggestion was using the whole span of the expression rather than just appending a `&` was prevented me from using `// run-rustfix` in another PR (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110432#discussion_r1170500484).
Also some drive-by renames of functions that have been annoying me for a bit.
Add GNU Property Note
Fix#103001
Generates the missing property note:
```
Displaying notes found in: .note.gnu.property
Owner Data size Description
GNU 0x00000010 NT_GNU_PROPERTY_TYPE_0 Properties: x86 feature: IBT
```
Start using `windows sys` for Windows FFI bindings in std
Switch to using windows-sys for FFI. In order to avoid some currently contentious issues, this uses windows-bindgen to generate a smaller set of bindings instead of using the full crate.
Unlike the windows-sys crate, the generated bindings uses `*mut c_void` for handle types instead of `isize`. This to sidestep opsem concerns about mixing pointer types and integers between languages. Note that `SOCKET` remains defined as an integer but instead of being a usize, it's changed to fit the [standard library definition](a41fc00eaf/library/std/src/os/windows/raw.rs (L12-L16)):
```rust
#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "32")]
pub type SOCKET = u32;
#[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")]
pub type SOCKET = u64;
```
The generated bindings also customizes the `#[link]` imports. I hope to switch to using raw-dylib but I don't want to tie that too closely with the switch to windows-sys.
---
Changes outside of the bindings are, for the most part, fairly minimal (e.g. some differences in `*mut` vs. `*const` or a few types differ). One issue is that our own bindings sometimes mix in higher level types, like `BorrowedHandle`. This is pretty adhoc though.
Add `#[inline]` to functions that are never called
This makes libcore binary size reduce by ~300 bytes. Not much, but these functions are never called so it doesn't make sense for them to get into the binary anyway.
Always const-evaluate the GCD in `slice::align_to_offsets`
Use an inline `const`-block to force the compiler to calculate the GCD at compile time, even in debug mode. This shouldn't affect the behavior of the program at all, but it drastically cuts down on the number of instructions emitted with optimizations disabled.
With the current implementation, a single `slice::align_to` instantiation (specifically `<[u8]>::align_to::<u128>()`) generates 676 instructions (on x86-64). Forcing the GCD computation to be const cuts it down to 327 instructions, so just over 50% less. This is obviously not representative of actual runtime gains, but I still see it as a significant win as long as it doesn't degrade compile times.
Not having to worry about LLVM const-evaluating the GCD function also allows it to use the textbook recursive euclidean algorithm instead of a much more complicated iterative implementation with multiple `unsafe`-blocks.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #104070 (Prevent aborting guard from aborting the process in a forced unwind)
- #109410 (Introduce `AliasKind::Inherent` for inherent associated types)
- #111004 (Migrate `mir_transform` to translatable diagnostics)
- #111118 (Suggest struct when we get colon in fileds in enum)
- #111170 (Diagnostic args are still args if they're documented)
- #111354 (Fix miscompilation when calling default methods on `Future`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Disable nrvo mir opt
See #111005 and #110902 . The ICE can definitely be hit on stable, the miscompilation I'm not sure about. The pass makes some pretty sketchy assumptions though, and we should not have it on while that's the case.
I'm not going to work on actually fixing this, it's probably not excessively difficult though.
r? rust-lang/mir-opt