Commit Graph

136273 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dylan DPC
45ba015357
Rollup merge of #78901 - arora-aman:fix_closure_coerce, r=estebank
diagnostics: Note capturing closures can't be coerced to fns

Fixes #72457, fixes #71895

r? `@estebank`
2021-01-13 03:20:09 +01:00
bors
058a710165 Auto merge of #79670 - Nadrieril:uninhabited-query, r=estebank
Turn type inhabitedness into a query to fix `exhaustive_patterns` perf

We measured in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79394 that enabling the [`exhaustive_patterns` feature](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51085) causes significant perf degradation. It was conjectured that the culprit is type inhabitedness checking, and [I hypothesized](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79394#issuecomment-733861149) that turning this computation into a query would solve most of the problem.

This PR turns `tcx.is_ty_uninhabited_from` into a query, and I measured a 25% perf gain on the benchmark that stress-tests `exhaustiveness_patterns`. This more than compensates for the 30% perf hit I measured [when creating it](https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-perf/pull/801). We'll have to measure enabling the feature again, but I suspect this fixes the perf regression entirely.
I'd like a perf run on this PR obviously.
I made small atomic commits to help reviewing. The first one is just me discovering the "revisions" feature of the testing framework.

I believe there's a push to move things out of `rustc_middle` because it's huge. I guess `inhabitedness/mod.rs` could be moved out, but it's quite small. `DefIdForest` might be movable somewhere too. I don't know what the policy is for that.

Ping `@camelid` since you were interested in following along
`@rustbot` modify labels: +A-exhaustiveness-checking
2021-01-12 22:58:42 +00:00
Nadrieril
e608d8f4e5 Make DefIdForest cheaper to clone
Since `DefIdForest` contains 0 or 1 elements the large majority of the
time, by allocating only in the >1 case we avoid almost all allocations,
compared to `Arc<SmallVec<[DefId;1]>>`. This shaves off 0.2% on the
benchmark that stresses uninhabitedness checking.
2021-01-12 20:31:58 +00:00
bors
7a9b552cb1 Auto merge of #80009 - jumbatm:issue79581-overeager-clashing-extern-decl, r=alexcrichton
Use tcx.symbol_name when determining clashing extern declarations.

Fixes #79581.

r? `@alexcrichton`
2021-01-12 20:13:50 +00:00
Nadrieril
8598c9f6e5 Turn type inhabitedness into a query 2021-01-12 19:59:11 +00:00
Nadrieril
b82f149d08 Add tests for uninhabited types 2021-01-12 19:59:10 +00:00
Nadrieril
622bfdb2fd Deduplicate some tests using revisions 2021-01-12 19:59:10 +00:00
bors
704e47f78b Auto merge of #78407 - oli-obk:ub_checkable_ctfe, r=RalfJung,pnkfelix
Make CTFE able to check for UB...

... by not doing any optimizations on the `const fn` MIR used in CTFE. This means we duplicate all `const fn`'s MIR now, once for CTFE, once for runtime. This PR is for checking the perf effect, so we have some data when talking about https://github.com/rust-lang/const-eval/blob/master/rfcs/0000-const-ub.md

To do this, we now have two queries for obtaining mir: `optimized_mir` and `mir_for_ctfe`. It is now illegal to invoke `optimized_mir` to obtain the MIR of a const/static item's initializer, an array length, an inline const expression or an enum discriminant initializer. For `const fn`, both `optimized_mir` and `mir_for_ctfe` work, the former returning the MIR that LLVM should use if the function is called at runtime. Similarly it is illegal to invoke `mir_for_ctfe` on regular functions.

This is all checked via appropriate assertions and I don't think it is easy to get wrong, as there should be no `mir_for_ctfe` calls outside the const evaluator or metadata encoding. Almost all rustc devs should keep using `optimized_mir` (or `instance_mir` for that matter).
2021-01-12 17:26:56 +00:00
oli
53e3a23572 Coverage computation needs access to the MIR, too 2021-01-12 15:12:03 +00:00
bors
497c9a256b Auto merge of #80517 - wabain:issue-77880-infer-error-try-conversion-msg, r=davidtwco
Enhance type inference errors involving the `?` operator

This patch adds a special-cased note on type inference errors when the error span points to a `?` return. It also makes the primary label for such errors "cannot infer type of `?` error" in cases where before we would have only said "cannot infer type".

One beneficiary of this change is async blocks, where we can't explicitly annotate the return type and so may not generate any other help (#77880); this lets us at least print the error type we're converting from and anything we know about the type we can't fully infer. More generally, it signposts that an implicit conversion is happening that may have impeded type inference the user was expecting. We already do something similar for [mismatched type errors](2987785df3/src/test/ui/try-block/try-block-bad-type.stderr (L7)).

The check for a relevant `?` operator is built into the existing HIR traversal which looks for places that could be annotated to resolve the error. That means we could identify `?` uses anywhere in the function that output the type we can't infer, but this patch just sticks to adding the note if the primary span given for the error has the operator; if there are other expressions where the type occurs and one of them is selected for the error instead, it's more likely that the `?` operator's implicit conversion isn't the sole cause of the inference failure and that adding an additional diagnostic would just be noise. I added a ui test for one such case.

The data about the `?` conversion is passed around in a `UseDiagnostic` enum that in theory could be used to add more of this kind of note in the future. It was also just easier to pass around than something with a more specific name. There are some follow-up refactoring commits for the code that generates the error label, which was already pretty involved and made a bit more complicated by this change.
2021-01-12 14:42:37 +00:00
bors
fc9944fe84 Auto merge of #80499 - matthiaskrgr:red_clos, r=estebank
remove redundant closures (clippy::redundant_closure)
2021-01-12 11:20:47 +00:00
bors
b6b461652a Auto merge of #80939 - JohnTitor:rollup-pymns4q, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #79757 (Replace tabs earlier in diagnostics)
 - #80600 (Add `MaybeUninit` method `array_assume_init`)
 - #80880 (Move some tests to more reasonable directories)
 - #80897 (driver: Use `atty` instead of rolling our own)
 - #80898 (Add another test case for #79808)
 - #80917 (core/slice: remove doc comment about scoped borrow)
 - #80927 (Replace a simple `if let` with the `matches` macro)
 - #80930 (fix typo in trait method mutability mismatch help)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-01-12 08:38:47 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
139daf564e
Rollup merge of #80930 - euclio:trait-method-mutability-help, r=estebank
fix typo in trait method mutability mismatch help
2021-01-12 16:13:35 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
8c342da22e
Rollup merge of #80927 - LingMan:matches, r=estebank
Replace a simple `if let` with the `matches` macro

`@rustbot` modify labels +C-cleanup +T-compiler
2021-01-12 16:13:33 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
961a4386cd
Rollup merge of #80917 - epilys:patch-1, r=jyn514
core/slice: remove doc comment about scoped borrow

There's no need to scope the borrow in the doc example due to NLL.

[Playground link](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2018&code=fn%20main()%20%7B%0A%20%20%20%20let%20mut%20v%20%3D%20%5B1%2C%200%2C%203%2C%200%2C%205%2C%206%5D%3B%0A%0A%20%20%20%20let%20(left%2C%20right)%20%3D%20v.split_at_mut(2)%3B%0A%20%20%20%20assert_eq!(left%2C%20%5B1%2C%200%5D)%3B%0A%20%20%20%20assert_eq!(right%2C%20%5B3%2C%200%2C%205%2C%206%5D)%3B%0A%20%20%20%20left%5B1%5D%20%3D%202%3B%0A%20%20%20%20right%5B1%5D%20%3D%204%3B%0A%0A%20%20%20%20assert_eq!(v%2C%20%5B1%2C%202%2C%203%2C%204%2C%205%2C%206%5D)%3B%0A%7D%0A) where changed code compiles
2021-01-12 16:13:31 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
a9e3125f13
Rollup merge of #80898 - JohnTitor:vecdeque-another-case, r=lcnr
Add another test case for #79808

Taken from #80293.
Closes #80293

r? `@lcnr`
2021-01-12 16:13:29 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
d682a6834d
Rollup merge of #80897 - camelid:atty, r=jyn514
driver: Use `atty` instead of rolling our own

Fixes #80888.

Rationale:

- `atty` is widely used in the Rust ecosystem
- We already use it (in `rustc_errors` and other places)
- We shouldn't be rolling our own TTY detector when there's a
  widely-used, well-tested package that we can use
2021-01-12 16:13:28 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
7c79e5b105
Rollup merge of #80880 - c410-f3r:tests-tests-tests, r=petrochenkov
Move some tests to more reasonable directories

The idea is to move `issues`/`ui` tests in small batches

r? `@petrochenkov`
2021-01-12 16:13:26 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
babfdafb10
Rollup merge of #80600 - CoffeeBlend:maybe_uninit_array_assume_init, r=dtolnay
Add `MaybeUninit` method `array_assume_init`

When initialising an array element-by-element, the conversion to the initialised array is done through `mem::transmute`, which is both ugly and does not work with const generics (see #61956). This PR proposes the associated method `array_assume_init`, matching the style of `slice_assume_init_*`:

```rust
unsafe fn array_assume_init<T, const N: usize>(array: [MaybeUninit<T>; N]) -> [T; N];
```

Example:
```rust
let mut array: [MaybeUninit<i32>; 3] = MaybeUninit::uninit_array();
array[0].write(0);
array[1].write(1);
array[2].write(2);

// SAFETY: Now safe as we initialised all elements
let array: [i32; 3] = unsafe {
     MaybeUninit::array_assume_init(array)
};
```

Things I'm unsure about:
* Should this be a method of array instead?
* Should the function be const?
2021-01-12 16:13:24 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
86b900a3ea
Rollup merge of #79757 - jryans:long-line-tab-handling-early-expand, r=estebank
Replace tabs earlier in diagnostics

This replaces tabs earlier in the diagnostics emitting process, which allows various margin calculations to ignore the existence of tabs. It does add a string copy for the source lines that are emitted.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/78438

r? `@estebank`
2021-01-12 16:13:15 +09:00
bors
8234db5bc7 Auto merge of #80463 - tgnottingham:incr_comp_serial_mem_usage, r=oli-obk
Serialize incr comp structures to file via fixed-size buffer

Reduce a large memory spike that happens during serialization by writing
the incr comp structures to file by way of a fixed-size buffer, rather
than an unbounded vector.

Effort was made to keep the instruction count close to that of the
previous implementation. However, buffered writing to a file inherently
has more overhead than writing to a vector, because each write may
result in a handleable error. To reduce this overhead, arrangements are
made so that each LEB128-encoded integer can be written to the buffer
with only one capacity and error check. Higher-level optimizations in
which entire composite structures can be written with one capacity and
error check are possible, but would require much more work.

The performance is mostly on par with the previous implementation, with
small to moderate instruction count regressions. The memory reduction is
significant, however, so it seems like a worth-while trade-off.
2021-01-12 05:51:40 +00:00
Camelid
8c43160744 driver: Use atty instead of rolling our own
Rationale:

- `atty` is widely used in the Rust ecosystem
- We already use it (in `rustc_errors` and other places)
- We shouldn't be rolling our own TTY detector when there's a
  widely-used, well-tested package that we can use
2021-01-11 19:59:25 -08:00
bors
467f5e99a5 Auto merge of #76580 - rokob:iss76011, r=estebank
Suggest async {} for async || {}

Fixes #76011

This adds support for adding help diagnostics to the feature gating checks and
then uses it for the async_closure gate to add the extra bit of help
information as described in the issue.
2021-01-12 02:56:51 +00:00
LingMan
6bd661ef17 Replace a simple if let with the matches macro 2021-01-12 01:49:36 +01:00
CoffeeBlend
985071b08f
Fix implementation 2021-01-12 01:39:10 +01:00
Andy Russell
b6dc03b93d
fix typo in trait method mutability mismatch help 2021-01-11 19:28:25 -05:00
bors
0406441664 Auto merge of #80928 - JohnTitor:rollup-sgerm3j, r=JohnTitor
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #79997 (Emit a reactor for cdylib target on wasi)
 - #79998 (Use correct ABI for wasm32 by default)
 - #80042 (Split a func into cold/hot parts, reducing binary size)
 - #80324 (Explain method-call move errors in loops)
 - #80864 (std/core docs: fix wrong link in PartialEq)
 - #80870 (resolve: Simplify built-in macro table)
 - #80885 (rustdoc: Resolve `&str` as `str`)
 - #80904 (Fix small typo)
 - #80923 (Merge different function exits)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-01-12 00:14:46 +00:00
Yuki Okushi
4e69c5d0fa
Rollup merge of #80923 - LingMan:exits, r=varkor
Merge different function exits

`@rustbot` modify labels +C-cleanup +T-compiler
2021-01-12 07:59:18 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
f553a0fe59
Rollup merge of #80904 - camelid:fix-small-typo, r=jonas-schievink
Fix small typo

transmutting -> transmuting
2021-01-12 07:59:16 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
7e160256e4
Rollup merge of #80885 - camelid:intra-doc-str-ref, r=jyn514
rustdoc: Resolve `&str` as `str`

People almost always are referring to `&str`, not `str`, so this will
save a manual link resolve in many cases.

Note that we already accept `&` (resolves to `reference`) in intra-doc
links, so this shouldn't cause breakage.

r? `@jyn514`
2021-01-12 07:59:15 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
fd02c83bfe
Rollup merge of #80870 - petrochenkov:bmactable, r=oli-obk
resolve: Simplify built-in macro table

We don't use full `SyntaxExtension`s from the table, only `SyntaxExtensionKind`s, and `Ident` in `register_builtin_macro` always had dummy span. This PR removes unnecessary data from the table and related function signatures.

Noticed when reviewing #80850.
2021-01-12 07:59:13 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
4646eac08e
Rollup merge of #80864 - ericseppanen:master, r=jyn514
std/core docs: fix wrong link in PartialEq

PartialEq doc was attempting to link to ``[`Eq`]`` but instead we got a link to `` `eq` ``. Disambiguate with `trait@Eq`.

You can see the bad link [here](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/cmp/trait.PartialEq.html) (Second sentence, "floating point types implement PartialEq but not Eq").
2021-01-12 07:59:11 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
8e6472fe32
Rollup merge of #80324 - Aaron1011:loop-move-fn-self, r=oli-obk
Explain method-call move errors in loops

PR #73708 added a more detailed explanation of move errors that occur
due to a call to a method that takes `self`. This PR extends that logic
to work when a move error occurs due to a method call in the previous
iteration of a loop.
2021-01-12 07:59:10 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
56504a00f2
Rollup merge of #80042 - sivadeilra:cold_bits, r=oli-obk
Split a func into cold/hot parts, reducing binary size

I noticed that the Size::bits function is called in many places,
and is inlined into them. On x86_64-pc-windows-msvc, this function
is inlined 527 times, and compiled separately (non-inlined) 3 times.

Each of those inlined calls contains code that panics. This commit
moves the `panic!` call into a separate function and marks that
function with `#[cold]`.

This reduces binary size by 24 KB. Not much, but it's something.
Changes like this often reduce pressure on instruction-caches,
since it reduces the amount of code that is inlined into hot code
paths. Or more precisely, it removes cold code from hot cache lines.
2021-01-12 07:59:08 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
edcfe7b629
Rollup merge of #79998 - devsnek:wasm32-bindgen-compat, r=alexcrichton
Use correct ABI for wasm32 by default

Introduces `wasm32-unknown-bindgen` for those wishing to use the bindgen compat abi. `wasm32-*` now uses the correct abi by default.

Fixes https://github.com/rustwasm/team/issues/291
2021-01-12 07:59:06 +09:00
Yuki Okushi
1d83f9828f
Rollup merge of #79997 - coolreader18:wasm-reactor, r=alexcrichton
Emit a reactor for cdylib target on wasi

Fixes #79199, and relevant to #73432

Implements wasi reactors, as described in WebAssembly/WASI#13 and [`design/application-abi.md`](https://github.com/WebAssembly/WASI/blob/master/design/application-abi.md)

Empty `lib.rs`, `lib.crate-type = ["cdylib"]`:

```shell
$ cargo +reactor build --release --target wasm32-wasi
   Compiling wasm-reactor v0.1.0 (/home/coolreader18/wasm-reactor)
    Finished release [optimized] target(s) in 0.08s
$ wasm-dis target/wasm32-wasi/release/wasm_reactor.wasm >reactor.wat
```
`reactor.wat`:
```wat
(module
 (type $none_=>_none (func))
 (type $i32_=>_none (func (param i32)))
 (type $i32_i32_=>_i32 (func (param i32 i32) (result i32)))
 (type $i32_=>_i32 (func (param i32) (result i32)))
 (type $i32_i32_i32_=>_i32 (func (param i32 i32 i32) (result i32)))
 (import "wasi_snapshot_preview1" "fd_prestat_get" (func $__wasi_fd_prestat_get (param i32 i32) (result i32)))
 (import "wasi_snapshot_preview1" "fd_prestat_dir_name" (func $__wasi_fd_prestat_dir_name (param i32 i32 i32) (result i32)))
 (import "wasi_snapshot_preview1" "proc_exit" (func $__wasi_proc_exit (param i32)))
 (import "wasi_snapshot_preview1" "environ_sizes_get" (func $__wasi_environ_sizes_get (param i32 i32) (result i32)))
 (import "wasi_snapshot_preview1" "environ_get" (func $__wasi_environ_get (param i32 i32) (result i32)))
 (memory $0 17)
 (table $0 1 1 funcref)
 (global $global$0 (mut i32) (i32.const 1048576))
 (global $global$1 i32 (i32.const 1049096))
 (global $global$2 i32 (i32.const 1049096))
 (export "memory" (memory $0))
 (export "_initialize" (func $_initialize))
 (export "__data_end" (global $global$1))
 (export "__heap_base" (global $global$2))
 (func $__wasm_call_ctors
  (call $__wasilibc_initialize_environ_eagerly)
  (call $__wasilibc_populate_preopens)
 )
 (func $_initialize
  (call $__wasm_call_ctors)
 )
 (func $malloc (param $0 i32) (result i32)
  (call $dlmalloc
   (local.get $0)
  )
 )
 ;; lots of dlmalloc, memset/memcpy, & libpreopen code
)
```

I went with repurposing cdylib because I figured that it doesn't make much sense to have a wasi shared library that can't be initialized, and even if someone was using it adding an `_initialize` export is a very small change.
2021-01-12 07:58:59 +09:00
Caio
2055e4c2fa Move some tests to more reasonable directories 2021-01-11 19:49:51 -03:00
CoffeeBlend
5d65b7e055
Simplify array_assume_init 2021-01-11 23:32:03 +01:00
bors
fe531d5a5f Auto merge of #79012 - tgnottingham:span_data_to_lines_and_cols, r=estebank
rustc_span: add span_data_to_lines_and_cols to caching source map view
2021-01-11 21:32:50 +00:00
Gus Caplan
5ba3be1d60
squash! fix wasi 2021-01-11 15:31:52 -06:00
Gus Caplan
8f64cec022
new target 2021-01-11 14:22:41 -06:00
Gus Caplan
94bf59ea34
Use correct ABI for wasm32 by default
Introduces `RUSTC_USE_WASM32_BINDGEN_COMPAT_ABI` env var to use the
compat ABI if need.
2021-01-11 14:22:38 -06:00
Tyson Nottingham
f15fae822e rustc_serialize: fix incorrect signed LEB128 decoding
The signed LEB128 decoding function used a hardcoded constant of 64
instead of the number of bits in the type of integer being decoded,
which resulted in incorrect results for some inputs. Fix this, make the
decoding more consistent with the unsigned version, and increase the
LEB128 encoding and decoding test coverage.
2021-01-11 12:13:26 -08:00
Tyson Nottingham
52f21791fb Serialize incr comp structures to file via fixed-size buffer
Reduce a large memory spike that happens during serialization by writing
the incr comp structures to file by way of a fixed-size buffer, rather
than an unbounded vector.

Effort was made to keep the instruction count close to that of the
previous implementation. However, buffered writing to a file inherently
has more overhead than writing to a vector, because each write may
result in a handleable error. To reduce this overhead, arrangements are
made so that each LEB128-encoded integer can be written to the buffer
with only one capacity and error check. Higher-level optimizations in
which entire composite structures can be written with one capacity and
error check are possible, but would require much more work.

The performance is mostly on par with the previous implementation, with
small to moderate instruction count regressions. The memory reduction is
significant, however, so it seems like a worth-while trade-off.
2021-01-11 12:13:22 -08:00
bors
c5eae56293 Auto merge of #75490 - LukasKalbertodt:add-basic-array-methods, r=dtolnay
Add `[T; N]::each_ref` and `[T; N]::each_mut`

This PR adds the methods `each_ref` and `each_mut` to `[T; N]`. The ability to add methods to arrays was added in #75212. These two methods are particularly useful with `map` which was also added in that PR. Tracking issue: #76118

```rust
impl<T, const N: usize> [T; N] {
    pub fn each_ref(&self) -> [&T; N];
    pub fn each_mut(&mut self) -> [&mut T; N];
}
```
2021-01-11 18:50:53 +00:00
jumbatm
4b740acea2 Add FIXME note about storing &'tcx str 2021-01-12 03:31:01 +10:00
jumbatm
7a46a4f219 Remove unnecessary allocation. 2021-01-12 03:31:01 +10:00
jumbatm
15c64a181b Use tcx.symbol_name to check for clashes. 2021-01-12 03:31:00 +10:00
jumbatm
6318db1c5a Add test case for wasm non-clash. 2021-01-12 03:31:00 +10:00
oli
e90b521a15 --emit=mir now emits both mir_for_ctfe and optimized_mir for const fn 2021-01-11 17:24:41 +00:00