Remove `Session.trait_methods_not_found`
Instead, avoid registering the problematic well-formed obligation
to begin with. This removes global untracked mutable state,
and avoids potential issues with incremental compilation.
Refactor `named_asm_labels` to a HIR lint
As discussed on #88169, the `named_asm_labels` lint could be moved to a HIR lint. That allows future lints or custom plugins or clippy lints to more easily access the `asm!` macro's data and create better error messages with the lints.
bootstrap.py: recognize riscv64 when auto-detect
The architecture auto-detect table has no entry for riscv64 (which rustc
uses riscv64gc for the first part of triplet, assuming it's a generic
Linux distro).
Add it to the table to allow riscv64 systems to bootstrap Rust.
Signed-off-by: Icenowy Zheng <icenowy@aosc.io>
Adjust / fix documentation of `Arc::make_mut`
Related discussion in the users forum:
[Whatʼs this alleged difference between Arc::make_mut and Rc::make_mut? – The Rust Programming Language Forum](https://users.rust-lang.org/t/what-s-this-alleged-difference-between-arc-make-mut-and-rc-make-mut/63747?u=steffahn)
Also includes a small formatting improvement in the documentation of `Rc::make_mut`.
This PR makes the two documentations in question complete analogs. The previously claimed point in which one “differs from the behavior of” the other turns out to be incorrect, AFAIK.
One remaining inaccuracy: `Weak` pointers aren’t disassociated from the allocation but only from the contained value, i.e. in case of outstanding `Weak` pointers there still is a new allocation created, just the call to `.clone()` is avoided, instead the value is moved from one allocation to the other.
`@rustbot` label T-libs-api, A-docs
add Cell::as_array_of_cells, similar to Cell::as_slice_of_cells
I'd like to propose adding `Cell::as_array_of_cells`, as a natural analog to `Cell::as_slice_of_cells`. I don't have a specific use case in mind, other than that supporting slices but not arrays feels like a gap. Do other folks agree with that intuition? Would this addition be substantial enough to need an RFC?
---
Previously, converting `&mut [T; N]` to `&[Cell<T>; N]` looks like this:
```rust
let array = &mut [1, 2, 3];
let cells: &[Cell<i32>; 3] = Cell::from_mut(&mut array[..])
.as_slice_of_cells()
.try_into()
.unwrap();
```
With this new helper method, it looks like this:
```rust
let array = &mut [1, 2, 3];
let cells = Cell::from_mut(array).as_array_of_cells();
```
Don't mark `if_let_guard` as an incomplete feature
I don't think there is any reason for `if_let_guard` to be an incomplete feature, and I think the reason they were marked in the first place was simply because they weren't implemented at all.
r? `@pnkfelix`
cc tracking issue #51114
Correctly handle remapping from path containing the current directory with trailing paths
If we have a `auxiliary/lib.rs`, and we generate the metadata with `--remap-path-prefix $PWD/auxiliary=xyz`, the path to `$PWD/auxiliary/lib.rs` won't be correctly remapped in the metadata. This is because internally, path to the working directory itself and relative paths to files under the working directory are remapped separately (hence neither are affected since neither has `$PWD/auxiliary` as prefix), but the concatenation between the working directory and the relative path is not remapped. This PR fixes that.
Improve detection of generics on lang items
Adds detection for the required generics for all lang items. Many lang items require an exact or minimum amount of generic arguments and if they don't exist, the compiler will ICE. This does not add any additional validation about bounds on generics or any other lang item restrictions.
Fixes one of the ICEs in #87573
cc `@FabianWolff`
Improve liveness analysis for generators
Liveness analysis for generators assumes that execution always continues
normally after a yield point, not accounting for the fact that generator
could be dropped before completion.
If generators captures any variables by reference, those variables could
be used within a generator, or when the generator completes, but also
after each yield point in the case the generator is dropped.
Account for the case when generator is dropped after yielding, but
before running to the completion. This effectively considers all
variables captured by reference to be used after a yield point.
Fixes#84292.
Use custom wrap-around type instead of RangeInclusive
Two reasons:
1. More memory is allocated than necessary for `valid_range` in `Scalar`. The range is not used as an iterator and `exhausted` is never used.
2. `contains`, `count` etc. methods in `RangeInclusive` are doing very unhelpful(and dangerous!) things when used as a wrap-around range. - In general this PR wants to limit potentially confusing methods, that have a low probability of working.
Doing a local perf run, every metric shows improvement except for instructions.
Max-rss seem to have a very consistent improvement.
Sorry - newbie here, probably doing something wrong.
This shows up to 5% less instruction counts on multiple benchmarks, and up to
19% wins on the -j1 wall times for rustc self-compilation.
We can afford to spend the extra cycles building LLVM essentially once more for
the x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu CI build today. The builder finishes in around 50
minutes on average, and this adds just 10 more minutes. Given the sizeable
improvements in compiler performance, this is definitely worth it.
Stabilize and document `--force-warn`
This PR will stabilize and document the `--force-warn` command line option. It is currently a draft, pending an FCP.
I've taken the liberty of tidying up the lint level command line options a bit as part of this. The changes are quite minor and should only affect rustc's help output. I'm making them here because they're trivial and, in one case, necessary to unify the way `--force-warn` with the way the other options are displayed.
I also want to mention that `@rylev` has done a ton of work on moving this along and deserves most of the credit. I'm just the one who landed up writing this particular PR.
Resolves#86516.
It is useful to keep some coherent structure to this ordering. In
particular, Other and Uncategorized should be next to each other, at
the end.
Also it seems to make sense to treat UnexpectedEof and OutOfMemory
specially, since they are not like the other errors (despite
OutOfMemory also being generatable by some OS errors).
So:
* Move Other to the end, just before Uncategorized
* Move Unsupported to between Interrupted and UnexpectedEof
* Add some comments documenting where to add things
Signed-off-by: Ian Jackson <ijackson@chiark.greenend.org.uk>