This is still roughly 45ns slower than the old state, because it now works with
an MPlaceTy and uses the appropriate abstractions, instead of working with a
ptr-align pair directly.
* Value gets renamed to Operand, so that now interpret::{Place, Operand} are the
"dynamic" versions of mir::{Place, Operand}.
* Operand and Place share the data for their "stuff is in memory"-base in a new
type, MemPlace. This also makes it possible to give some more precise types
in other areas. Both Operand and MemPlace have methods available to project
into fields (and other kinds of projections) without causing further
allocations.
* The type for "a Scalar or a ScalarPair" is called Value, and again used to
give some more precise types.
* All of these have versions with an attached layout, so that we can more often
drag the layout along instead of recomputing it. This lets us get rid of
`PlaceExtra::Downcast`. MPlaceTy and PlaceTy can only be constructed
in place.rs, making sure the layout is handled properly.
(The same should eventually be done for ValTy and OpTy.)
* All the high-level functions to write typed memory take a Place, and live in
place.rs. All the high-level typed functions to read typed memory take an
Operand, and live in operands.rs.
Exhaustive integer matching
This adds a new feature flag `exhaustive_integer_patterns` that enables exhaustive matching of integer types by their values. For example, the following is now accepted:
```rust
#![feature(exhaustive_integer_patterns)]
#![feature(exclusive_range_pattern)]
fn matcher(x: u8) {
match x { // ok
0 .. 32 => { /* foo */ }
32 => { /* bar */ }
33 ..= 255 => { /* baz */ }
}
}
```
This matching is permitted on all integer (signed/unsigned and char) types. Sensible error messages are also provided. For example:
```rust
fn matcher(x: u8) {
match x { //~ ERROR
0 .. 32 => { /* foo */ }
}
}
```
results in:
```
error[E0004]: non-exhaustive patterns: `32u8...255u8` not covered
--> matches.rs:3:9
|
6 | match x {
| ^ pattern `32u8...255u8` not covered
```
This implements https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/1550 for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/50907. While there hasn't been a full RFC for this feature, it was suggested that this might be a feature that obviously complements the existing exhaustiveness checks (e.g. for `bool`) and so a feature gate would be sufficient for now.
optimize reassignment immutable state
This is the "simple fix" when it comes to checking for reassignment. We just shoot for compatibility with the AST-based checker. Makes no attempt to solve #21232.
I opted for this simpler fix because I didn't want to think about complications [like the ones described here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/21232#issuecomment-412219247).
Let's do some profiling measurements.
Fixes#53189
r? @pnkfelix
Implement Unsized Rvalues
This PR is the first step to implement RFC1909: unsized rvalues (#48055).
## Implemented
- `Sized` is removed for arguments and local bindings. (under `#![feature(unsized_locals)]`)
- Unsized locations are allowed in MIR
- Unsized places and operands are correctly translated at codegen
## Not implemented in this PR
- Additional `Sized` checks:
- tuple struct constructor (accidentally compiles now)
- closure arguments at closure generation (accidentally compiles now)
- upvars (ICEs now)
- Generating vtable for `fn method(self)` (ICEs now)
- VLAs: `[e; n]` where `n` isn't const
- Reduce unnecessary allocations
## Current status
- [x] Fix `__rust_probestack` (rust-lang-nursery/compiler-builtins#244)
- [x] Get the fix merged
- [x] `#![feature(unsized_locals)]`
- [x] Give it a tracking issue number
- [x] Lift sized checks in typeck and MIR-borrowck
- [ ] <del>Forbid `A(unsized-expr)`</del> will be another PR
- [x] Minimum working codegen
- [x] Add more examples and fill in unimplemented codegen paths
- [ ] <del>Loosen object-safety rules (will be another PR)</del>
- [ ] <del>Implement `Box<FnOnce>` (will be another PR)</del>
- [ ] <del>Reduce temporaries (will be another PR)</del>
[NLL] Returns are interesting for free regions
Based on #53088 - creating now to get feedback.
Closes#51175
* Make assigning to the return type interesting.
* Use "returning this value" instead of "return" in error messages.
* Prefer one of the explanations that we have a name for to a generic interesting cause in some cases.
* Treat causes that involve the destination of a call like assignments.
Speed up NLL with HybridIdxSetBuf.
It's a sparse-when-small but dense-when-large index set that is very
efficient for sets that (a) have few elements, (b) have large
universe_size values, and (c) are cleared frequently. Which makes it
perfect for the `gen_set` and `kill_set` sets used by the new borrow
checker.
This patch reduces `tuple-stress`'s NLL-check time by 40%, and up to 12%
for several other benchmarks. And it halves the max-rss for `keccak`,
and has smaller wins for `inflate` and `clap-rs`.