Add `implement_via_object` to `rustc_deny_explicit_impl` to control object candidate assembly
Some built-in traits are special, since they are used to prove facts about the program that are important for later phases of compilation such as codegen and CTFE. For example, the `Unsize` trait is used to assert to the compiler that we are able to unsize a type into another type. It doesn't have any methods because it doesn't actually *instruct* the compiler how to do this unsizing, but this is later used (alongside an exhaustive match of combinations of unsizeable types) during codegen to generate unsize coercion code.
Due to this, these built-in traits are incompatible with the type erasure provided by object types. For example, the existence of `dyn Unsize<T>` does not mean that the compiler is able to unsize `Box<dyn Unsize<T>>` into `Box<T>`, since `Unsize` is a *witness* to the fact that a type can be unsized, and it doesn't actually encode that unsizing operation in its vtable as mentioned above.
The old trait solver gets around this fact by having complex control flow that never considers object bounds for certain built-in traits:
2f896da247/compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/traits/select/candidate_assembly.rs (L61-L132)
However, candidate assembly in the new solver is much more lovely, and I'd hate to add this list of opt-out cases into the new solver. Instead of maintaining this complex and hard-coded control flow, instead we can make this a property of the trait via a built-in attribute. We already have such a build attribute that's applied to every single trait that we care about: `rustc_deny_explicit_impl`. This PR adds `implement_via_object` as a meta-item to that attribute that allows us to opt a trait out of object-bound candidate assembly as well.
r? `@lcnr`
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #112232 (Better error for non const `PartialEq` call generated by `match`)
- #112499 (Fix python linting errors)
- #112596 (Suggest correct signature on missing fn returning RPITIT/AFIT)
- #112606 (Alter `Display` for `Ipv6Addr` for IPv4-compatible addresses)
- #112781 (Don't consider TAIT normalizable to hidden ty if it would result in impossible item bounds)
- #112787 (Add gha problem matcher)
- #112799 (Clean up "doc(hidden)" check)
- #112803 (Format the examples directory of cg_clif)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Add gha problem matcher
These regexes capture rustfmt errors, panics and regular Rust errors in CI and automatically add messages in the diff view. This should make it simpler to quickly see what went wrong without having to scroll through CI logs.
We can fine tune the regexes or add more matchers after having a look at how it actually works in practice
The relevant documentation can be found at https://github.com/actions/toolkit/blob/main/docs/problem-matchers.md
r? `@jyn514`
Don't consider TAIT normalizable to hidden ty if it would result in impossible item bounds
See test for example where we shouldn't consider it possible to alias-relate a TAIT and hidden type.
r? `@lcnr`
Add `alloc::rc::UniqueRc`
This PR implements `UniqueRc` as described in https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/90.
I've tried to stick to the API proposed there, incorporating the feedback from the ACP review. For now I've just implemented `UniqueRc`, but we'll want `UniqueArc` as well. I wanted to get feedback on this implementation first since the `UniqueArc` version should be mostly a copy/paste/rename job.
This is an `Rc` that is guaranteed to only have one strong reference.
Because it is uniquely owned, it can safely implement `DerefMut`, which
allows programs to have an initialization phase where structures inside
the `Rc` can be mutated.
The `UniqueRc` can then be converted to a regular `Rc`, allowing sharing
and but read-only access.
During the "initialization phase," weak references can be created, but
attempting to upgrade these will fail until the `UniqueRc` has been
converted to a regular `Rc`. This feature can be useful to create
cyclic data structures.
This API is an implementation based on the feedback provided to the ACP
at https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/90.
Don't ICE on bound var in `reject_fn_ptr_impls`
We may try to use an impl like `impl<T: FnPtr> PartialEq {}` to satisfy a predicate like `for<T> T: PartialEq` -- don't ICE in that case.
Fixes#112735
Treat TAIT equation as always ambiguous in coherence
Not sure why we weren't treating all TAIT equality as ambiguous -- this behavior combined with `DefineOpaqueTypes::No` leads to coherence overlap failures, since we incorrectly consider impls as not overlapping because the obligation `T: From<Foo>` doesn't hold.
Fixes#112765
Continue folding in query normalizer on weak aliases
Fixes#112752Fixes#112731 (same root cause, so didn't make a test for it)
fixes#112776
r? ```@oli-obk```
Rewrite various resolve/diagnostics errors as translatable diagnostics
additional question:
For trivial strings is it ever accepted to use `fluent_generated::foo` in a `label` for example? Or is an empty struct `Diagnostic` preferred?
Use BorrowFlag instead of explicit isize
The integer type tracking borrow count has a typedef called `BorrowFlag`. This type should be used instead of explicit `isize`.
[doc] `poll_fn`: explain how to `pin` captured state safely
Usage of `Pin::new_unchecked(&mut …)` is dangerous with `poll_fn`, even though the `!Unpin`-infectiousness has made things smoother. Nonetheless, there are easy ways to avoid the need for any `unsafe` altogether, be it through `Box::pin`ning, or the `pin!` macro. Since the latter only works within an `async` context, showing an example artificially introducing one ought to help people navigate this subtlety with safety and confidence.
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```@rustbot``` label +A-docs