normalize mir::Constant differently from ty::Const in preparation for valtrees
Valtrees are unable to represent many kind of constant values (this is on purpose). For constants that are used at runtime, we do not need a valtree representation and can thus use a different form of evaluation. In order to make this explicit and less fragile, I added a `fold_constant` method to `TypeFolder` and implemented it for normalization. Normalization can now, when it wants to eagerly evaluate a constant, normalize `mir::Constant` directly into a `mir::ConstantKind::Val` instead of relying on the `ty::Const` evaluation.
In the future we can get rid of the `ty::Const` in there entirely and add our own `Unevaluated` variant to `mir::ConstantKind`. This would allow us to remove the `promoted` field from `ty::ConstKind::Unevaluated`, as promoteds can never occur in the type system.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`
r? `@lcnr`
Fix expected/found order on impl trait projection mismatch error
fixes#68561
This PR adds a new `ObligationCauseCode` used when checking the concrete type of an impl trait satisfies its bounds, and checks for that cause code in the existing test to see if a projection's normalized type should be the "expected" or "found" type.
The second commit adds a `peel_derives` to that test, which appears to be necessary in some cases (see projection-mismatch-in-impl-where-clause.rs, which would still give expected/found in the wrong order otherwise). This caused some other changes in diagnostics not involving impl trait, but they look correct to me.
Stream the dep-graph to a file instead of storing it in-memory.
This is a reimplementation of #60035.
Instead of storing the dep-graph in-memory, the nodes are encoded as they come
into the a temporary file as they come. At the end of a successful the compilation,
this file is renamed to be the persistent dep-graph, to be decoded during the next
compilation session.
This two-files scheme avoids overwriting the dep-graph on unsuccessful or crashing compilations.
The structure of the file is modified to be the sequence of `(DepNode, Fingerprint, EdgesVec)`.
The deserialization is responsible for going to the more compressed representation.
The `node_count` and `edge_count` are stored in the last 16 bytes of the file,
in order to accurately reserve capacity for the vectors.
At the end of the compilation, the encoder is flushed and dropped.
The graph is not usable after this point: any creation of a node will ICE.
I had to retrofit the debugging options, which is not really pretty.
Found with https://github.com/est31/warnalyzer.
Dubious changes:
- Is anyone else using rustc_apfloat? I feel weird completely deleting
x87 support.
- Maybe some of the dead code in rustc_data_structures, in case someone
wants to use it in the future?
- Don't change rustc_serialize
I plan to scrap most of the json module in the near future (see
https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/418) and fixing the
tests needed more work than I expected.
TODO: check if any of the comments on the deleted code should be kept.
Add function core::iter::zip
This makes it a little easier to `zip` iterators:
```rust
for (x, y) in zip(xs, ys) {}
// vs.
for (x, y) in xs.into_iter().zip(ys) {}
```
You can `zip(&mut xs, &ys)` for the conventional `iter_mut()` and
`iter()`, respectively. This can also support arbitrary nesting, where
it's easier to see the item layout than with arbitrary `zip` chains:
```rust
for ((x, y), z) in zip(zip(xs, ys), zs) {}
for (x, (y, z)) in zip(xs, zip(ys, zs)) {}
// vs.
for ((x, y), z) in xs.into_iter().zip(ys).zip(xz) {}
for (x, (y, z)) in xs.into_iter().zip((ys.into_iter().zip(xz)) {}
```
It may also format more nicely, especially when the first iterator is a
longer chain of methods -- for example:
```rust
iter::zip(
trait_ref.substs.types().skip(1),
impl_trait_ref.substs.types().skip(1),
)
// vs.
trait_ref
.substs
.types()
.skip(1)
.zip(impl_trait_ref.substs.types().skip(1))
```
This replaces the tuple-pair `IntoIterator` in #78204.
There is prior art for the utility of this in [`itertools::zip`].
[`itertools::zip`]: https://docs.rs/itertools/0.10.0/itertools/fn.zip.html
Fixes#80691
When we evaluate a trait predicate, we convert an
`EvaluatedToOk` result to `EvaluatedToOkModuloRegions` if we erased any
regions. We cache the result under a region-erased 'freshened'
predicate, so `EvaluatedToOk` may not be correct for other predicates
that have the same cache key.
This currently creates a field which is always false on GenericParamDefKind for future use when
consts are permitted to have defaults
Update const_generics:default locations
Previously just ignored them, now actually do something about them.
Fix using type check instead of value
Add parsing
This adds all the necessary changes to lower const-generics defaults from parsing.
Change P<Expr> to AnonConst
This matches the arguments passed to instantiations of const generics, and makes it specific to
just anonymous constants.
Attempt to fix lowering bugs
const_evaluatable_checked: Stop eagerly erroring in `is_const_evaluatable`
Fixes#82279
We don't want to be emitting errors inside of is_const_evaluatable because we may call this during selection where it should be able to fail silently
There were two errors being emitted in `is_const_evaluatable`. The one causing the compile error in #82279 was inside the match arm for `FailureKind::MentionsParam` but I moved the other error being emitted too since it made things cleaner imo
The `NotConstEvaluatable` enum \*should\* have a fourth variant for when we fail to evaluate a concrete const, e.g. `0 - 1` but that cant happen until #81339
cc `@oli-obk` `@lcnr`
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Implement (but don't use) valtree and refactor in preparation of use
This PR does not cause any functional change. It refactors various things that are needed to make valtrees possible. This refactoring got big enough that I decided I'd want it reviewed as a PR instead of trying to make one huge PR with all the changes.
cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` on the following commits:
* 2027184 implement valtree
* eeecea9 fallible Scalar -> ScalarInt
* 042f663 ScalarInt convenience methods
cc `@eddyb` on ef04a6d
cc `@rust-lang/wg-mir-opt` for cf1700c (`mir::Constant` can now represent either a `ConstValue` or a `ty::Const`, and it is totally possible to have two different representations for the same value)
Change x64 size checks to not apply to x32.
Rust contains various size checks conditional on target_arch = "x86_64", but these checks were never intended to apply to x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32. Add target_pointer_width = "64" to the conditions.
Rust contains various size checks conditional on target_arch = "x86_64",
but these checks were never intended to apply to
x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32. Add target_pointer_width = "64" to the
conditions.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #80189 (Convert primitives in the standard library to intra-doc links)
- #80874 (Update intra-doc link documentation to match the implementation)
- #82376 (Add option to enable MIR inlining independently of mir-opt-level)
- #82516 (Add incomplete feature gate for inherent associate types.)
- #82579 (Fix turbofish recovery with multiple generic args)
- #82593 (Teach rustdoc how to display WASI.)
- #82597 (Get TyCtxt from self instead of passing as argument in AutoTraitFinder)
- #82627 (Erase late bound regions to avoid ICE)
- #82661 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
- #82691 (Update books)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Apparently #35870 caused a problem in this code (which originally
returned an impl trait) and `#[inline]` was added as a workaround, in
ade79d7609.
The issue is now fixed and the comment and `#[inline]` can now be
removed.
Skip Ty w/o infer ty/const in trait select
Remove some allocations & also add `skip_current_subtree` to skip subtrees with no inferred items.
r? `@eddyb` since marked in the FIXME
Make `Clean` take &mut DocContext
- Take `FnMut` in `rustc_trait_selection::find_auto_trait_generics`
- Take `&mut DocContext` in most of `clean`
- Collect the iterator in auto_trait_impls instead of iterating lazily; the lifetimes were really bad.
This combined with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82018 should hopefully help with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82014 by allowing `cx.cache.exported_traits` to be modified in `register_res`. Previously it had to use interior mutability, which required either adding a RefCell to `cache.exported_traits` on *top* of the existing `RefCell<Cache>` or mixing reads and writes between `cx.exported_traits` and `cx.cache.exported_traits`. I don't currently have that working but I expect it to be reasonably easy to add after this.
name async generators something more human friendly in type error diagnostic
fixes#81457
Some details:
1. I opted to load the generator kind from the hir in TyCategory. I also use 1 impl in the hir for the descr
2. I named both the source of the future, in addition to the general type (`future`), not sure what is preferred
3. I am not sure what is required to make sure "generator" is not referred to anywhere. A brief `rg "\"generator\"" showed me that most diagnostics correctly distinguish from generators and async generator, but the `descr` of `DefKind` is pretty general (not sure how thats used)
4. should the descr impl of AsyncGeneratorKind use its display impl instead of copying the string?