Tiny tweak to Iterator::unzip() doc comment example.
It's easier to figure out what it's doing and which output elements map to which input ones if the matrix we are dealing with is rectangular 2x3 rather than square 2x2.
Add test for issue #84957 - `str.as_bytes()` in a `const` expression
Hi, this PR adds a test for issue #84957 . I'm quite new to rustc so let me know if there's anything else that needs doing 😄Closes#84957
Do not promote values with const drop that need to be dropped
Changes from #88558 allowed using `~const Drop` in constants by
introducing a new `NeedsNonConstDrop` qualif.
The new qualif was also used for promotion purposes, and allowed
promotion to happen for values that needs to be dropped but which
do have a const drop impl.
Since for promoted the drop implementation is never executed,
this lead to observable change in behaviour. For example:
```rust
struct Panic();
impl const Drop for Panic {
fn drop(&mut self) {
panic!();
}
}
fn main() {
let _ = &Panic();
}
```
Restore the use of `NeedsDrop` qualif during promotion to avoid the issue.
Suggest a case insensitive match name regardless of levenshtein distance
Fixes#86170
Currently, `find_best_match_for_name` only returns a case insensitive match name depending on a Levenshtein distance. It's a bit unfortunate that that hides some suggestions for typos like `Bar` -> `BAR`. That idea is from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46347#discussion_r153701834, but I think it still makes some sense to show a candidate when we find a case insensitive match name as it's more like a typo.
Skipped the `candidate != lookup` check because the current (i.e, `levenshtein_match`) returns the exact same `Symbol` anyway but it doesn't seem to confuse anything on UI tests.
r? ``@estebank``
removing TLS support in x86_64-unknown-none-hermitkernel
HermitCore's kernel itself doesn't support TLS. Consequently, the entries in x86_64-unknown-none-hermitkernel should be removed. This commit should help to finalize #89062.
Fix macro_rules! duplication when reexported in the same module
This can append if within the same module a `#[macro_export] macro_rules!`
is declared but also a reexport of itself producing two export of the same
macro in the same module. In that case we only want to document it once.
Before:
```
Module {
is_crate: true,
items: [
Id("0:4"), // pub use crate::repro as repro2;
Id("0:3"), // macro_rules! repro
Id("0:3"), // duplicate, same as above
],
}
```
After:
```
Module {
is_crate: true,
items: [
Id("0:4"), // pub use crate::repro as repro2;
Id("0:3"), // macro_rules! repro
],
}
```
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89852
RustWrapper: adapt for an LLVM API change
No functional changes intended.
The LLVM commit
89b57061f7
moved TargetRegistry.(h|cpp) from Support to MC.
This adapts RustWrapper accordingly.
Headings in the top-doc docblock still get a border-bottom due to a rule
that covers all h2, h3, and h4. Method docblocks are generally h5, and
so don't get a border-bottom anymore.
This fixes a problem where a sub-sub-heading within a method would have
a line that went all the way across the page, creating a division that
made that sub-sub-heading look much more important than it really is.
This is a follow up to 5f4811ed7b
The matches! macro expresses the condition more succinctly and avoids
the extra level of indentation introduced with the match arm body.
Revert "Auto merge of #89709 - clemenswasser:apply_clippy_suggestions…
…_2, r=petrochenkov"
The PR had some unforseen perf regressions that are not as easy to find.
Revert the PR for now.
This reverts commit 6ae8912a3e, reversing
changes made to 86d6d2b738.
I'm working on some LLVM patches in concert with a Rust patch, and it's
helping me quite a bit to have this as an option. It doesn't seem that
hard, so I figured I'd formalize it in x.py and send it upstream.
It's easier to figure out what it's doing and which output
elements map to which input ones if the matrix we are dealing
with is rectangular 2x3 rather than square 2x2.
The const qualification was so far performed before the promotion and
the implementation assumed that it will never encounter a promoted.
With `const_precise_live_drops` feature, checking for live drops is
delayed until after drop elaboration, which in turn runs after
promotion. so the assumption is no longer true. When evaluating
`NeedsNonConstDrop` it is now possible to encounter promoteds.
Use type base qualification for the promoted. It is a sound
approximation in general, and in the specific case of promoteds and
`NeedsNonConstDrop` it is precise.
Debug logging during incremental compilation had been broken for some
time, until #89343 fixed it (among other things). Add a test so this is
less likely to break without being noticed. This test is nearly a copy
of the `src/test/ui/rustc-rust-log.rs` test, but tests debug logging in
the incremental compliation code paths.
Remove redundant member-constraint check
impl trait will, for each lifetime in the hidden type, register a "member constraint" that says the lifetime must be equal or outlive one of the lifetimes of the impl trait. These member constraints will be solved by borrowck
But, as you can see in the big red block of removed code, there was an ad-hoc check for member constraints happening at the site where they get registered. This check had some minor effects on diagnostics, but will fall down on its feet with my big type alias impl trait refactor. So we removed it and I pulled the removal out into a (hopefully) reviewable PR that works on master directly.
Changes from #88558 allowed using `~const Drop` in constants by
introducing a new `NeedsNonConstDrop` qualif.
The new qualif was also used for promotion purposes, and allowed
promotion to happen for values that needs to be dropped but which
do have a const drop impl.
Since for promoted the drop implementation is never executed,
this lead to observable change in behaviour. For example:
```rust
struct Panic();
impl const Drop for Panic {
fn drop(&mut self) {
panic!();
}
}
fn main() {
let _ = &Panic();
}
```
Restore the use of `NeedsDrop` qualif during promotion to avoid the issue.
Index and hash HIR as part of lowering
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88186
~Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88880 (see merge commit).~
Once HIR is lowered, it is later indexed by the `index_hir` query and hashed for `crate_hash`. This PR moves those post-processing steps to lowering itself. As a side objective, the HIR crate data structure is refactored as an `IndexVec<LocalDefId, Option<OwnerInfo<'hir>>>` where `OwnerInfo` stores all the relevant information for an HIR owner.
r? `@michaelwoerister`
cc `@petrochenkov`
The affected crates have had plenty of time to update.
By keeping these as lints rather than making them hard errors,
we ensure that downstream crates will still be able to compile,
even if they transitive depend on broken versions of the affected
crates.
This should hopefully discourage anyone from writing any
new code which relies on the backwards-compatibility behavior.
This reduces the size of `GenericParamDef` a bit, but some of the size
savings are hidden because of the `ty` field of the `Const` variant.
I will box that in the next commit.