Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #111106 (Add known issue of let binding to format_args doc)
- #118749 (Make contributing to windows bindings easier)
- #120982 (Add APIs for fetching foreign items )
- #121022 (rustdoc: cross-crate re-exports: correctly render late-bound params in source order even if early-bound params are present)
- #121082 (Clarified docs on non-atomic oprations on owned/mut refs to atomics)
- #121084 (Make sure `tcx.create_def` also depends on the forever red node, instead of just `tcx.at(span).create_def`)
- #121098 (Remove unnecessary else block from `thread_local!` expanded code)
- #121105 (Do not report overflow errors on ConstArgHasType goals)
- #121116 (Reinstate some delayed bugs.)
- #121122 (Enforce coroutine-closure layouts are identical)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Enforce coroutine-closure layouts are identical
Enforce that for an async closure, the by-ref and by-move coroutine layouts are identical. This is just a sanity check to make sure that optimizations aren't doing anything fishy.
r? oli-obk
Reinstate some delayed bugs.
These were changed to `has_errors` assertions in #121071 because that seemed reasonable, but evidently not.
Fixes#121103.
Fixes#121108.
Do not report overflow errors on ConstArgHasType goals
This is 10% of a fix for #121090, since it at least means that we no longer mention the `ConstArgHasType` goal as the cause for the overflow. Instead, now we mention:
```
overflow evaluating the requirement `{closure@$DIR/overflow-during-mono.rs:13:41: 13:44}: Sized`
```
which is not much better, but slightly.
r? oli-obk
Make sure `tcx.create_def` also depends on the forever red node, instead of just `tcx.at(span).create_def`
oversight from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119136
Not actually an issue, because all uses of `tcx.create_def` were in the resolver, which is `eval_always`, but still good to harden against future uses of `create_def`
cc `@petrochenkov` `@WaffleLapkin`
Clarified docs on non-atomic oprations on owned/mut refs to atomics
I originally misinterpreted the documentation to mean that the compiler can/will automatically optimise away atomic operations whenever the data is owned or mutably referenced.
On re-reading I think it is not technically incorrect, but specifically mentioning _how_ the atomic operations can be avoided also prevents this misunderstanding.
Make contributing to windows bindings easier
This PR does three things:
- Automatically sorts bindings so contributors don't have to. I should have done this to begin with but was lazy.
- Renames `windows_sys.lst` to `bindings.txt`. This [matches the windows-rs repository](8e71051ea8/crates/tools/sys/bindings.txt) (and repos that copy it). I believe consistency with other projects helps get people orientated.
- Adds a `README.md` file explaining what this is about and how to add bindings. This has the benefit of being directly editable and it's rendered when viewed online. Also people are understandably jumping right into the `windows_sys.rs` file via ripgrep or github search and so missing that it's generated. A `README.md` alongside it is at least slightly more obvious in that case. There is still a small note at the top of `windows_sys` in case people do read from the beginning.
None of this has any impact on the actual code generated. It's purely to make the new contributors workflow a bit nicer.
Fix SmallCStr conversion from CStr
The conversion from CStr to SmallCStr was not including the null byte. SmallCStr requires a trailing null. This caused `as_c_str` to either panic if std is built with debug assertions, or to have some corrupt memory behavior.
Continue compilation after check_mod_type_wf errors
The ICEs fixed here were probably reachable through const eval gymnastics before, but now they are easily reachable without that, too.
The new errors are often bugfixes, where useful errors were missing, because they were reported after the early abort. In other cases sometimes they are just duplication of already emitted errors, which won't be user-visible due to deduplication.
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/120860
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #120893 (Move some tests)
- #120966 (Remove importing suggestions when there is a shadowed typo candidate)
- #121035 (Format `async` trait bounds in rustfmt)
- #121075 (Fix false positive with if let and ranges)
- #121083 (Extend documentation for `Ty::to_opt_closure_kind` method)
- #121084 (Make sure `tcx.create_def` also depends on the forever red node, instead of just `tcx.at(span).create_def`)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make sure `tcx.create_def` also depends on the forever red node, instead of just `tcx.at(span).create_def`
oversight from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119136
Not actually an issue, because all uses of `tcx.create_def` were in the resolver, which is `eval_always`, but still good to harden against future uses of `create_def`
cc `@petrochenkov` `@WaffleLapkin`
Extend documentation for `Ty::to_opt_closure_kind` method
This API was... surprising to use. With a little extra documentation, the weirdness can be reduced quite a lot. :)
r? `@compiler-errors`
Format `async` trait bounds in rustfmt
r? `@ytmimi` or `@calebcartwright`
This PR opts to do formatting in the rust-lang/rust tree because otherwise we'd have to wait until a full sync, and rustfmt is currently totally removing the `async` keyword.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/6070
Rollup of 13 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #116387 (Additional doc links and explanation of `Wake`.)
- #118738 (Netbsd10 update)
- #118890 (Clarify the lifetimes of allocations returned by the `Allocator` trait)
- #120498 (Uplift `TypeVisitableExt` into `rustc_type_ir`)
- #120530 (Be less confident when `dyn` suggestion is not checked for object safety)
- #120915 (Fix suggestion span for `?Sized` when param type has default)
- #121015 (Optimize `delayed_bug` handling.)
- #121024 (implement `Default` for `AsciiChar`)
- #121039 (Correctly compute adjustment casts in GVN)
- #121045 (Fix two UI tests with incorrect directive / invalid revision)
- #121049 (Do not point at `#[allow(_)]` as the reason for compat lint triggering)
- #121071 (Use fewer delayed bugs.)
- #121073 (Fix typos in `OneLock` doc)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Use fewer delayed bugs.
For some cases where it's clear that an error has already occurred, e.g.:
- there's a comment stating exactly that, or
- things like HIR lowering, where we are lowering an error kind
The commit also tweaks some comments around delayed bug sites.
r? `@oli-obk`
Fix two UI tests with incorrect directive / invalid revision
- `tests/ui/borrowck/copy-suggestion-region-vid.rs` had a `ui_test`-style directive on compiletest: `//`@run-rustfix`.`
- `tests/ui/asm/inline-syntax.rs` has directives for a undeclared revision `[x86_64_allowed]` which seems to have the same directives as declared revision `[x86_64]`.
implement `Default` for `AsciiChar`
This implements `Default` for `AsciiChar` in order to match `char`'s implementation.
From all the different possible ways to do this I think the clearest one is to have both `char` and `AsciiChar` impls together.
I've also updated the doc-comment of the default variant since rustdoc doesn't seem to indicate it otherwise. Probably the text could be improved, though. I couldn't find any similar examples in the codebase and suggestions are welcomed.
r? `@scottmcm`
Optimize `delayed_bug` handling.
Once we have emitted at least one error, delayed bugs won't be used. So we can (a) we can (a) discard any existing delayed bugs, and (b) stop recording any new delayed bugs.
This eliminates a longstanding `FIXME` comment. There should be no soundness issues because it's not possible to un-emit an error.
r? `@oli-obk`
Fix suggestion span for `?Sized` when param type has default
Fixes#120878
Diagnostic suggests adding `: ?Sized` in an incorrect place if a type parameter default is present
r? `@fmease`
Be less confident when `dyn` suggestion is not checked for object safety
#120275 no longer checks bare traits for object safety when making a `dyn` suggestion on Rust < 2021. In this case, qualify the suggestion with a note that the trait must be object safe, to prevent user confusion as seen in #116434
r? ```@fmease```
Uplift `TypeVisitableExt` into `rustc_type_ir`
This uplifts `TypeVisitableExt` into `rustc_type_ir` so it can be used in an interner-agnostic way. It also moves some `TypeSuperVisitable` bounds onto `Interner` since we don't expect to support libraries that have types which aren't foldable by default.
This restores a couple of asserts in the canonicalizer code we uplifted, and also makes it so that we can use type-flags-based helpers in the solver code, which I'm interested in uplifting.
r? lcnr
Clarify the lifetimes of allocations returned by the `Allocator` trait
The previous definition (accidentally) disallowed the implementation of stack-based allocators whose memory would become invalid once the lifetime of the allocator type ended.
This also ensures the validity of the following blanket implementation:
```rust
impl<A: Allocator> Allocator for &'_ A {}
```
Additional doc links and explanation of `Wake`.
This is intended to clarify:
* That `Wake` exists and can be used instead of `RawWaker`.
* How to construct a `Waker` when you are looking at `Wake` (which was previously only documented in the example).
Optimize away poison guards when std is built with panic=abort
> **Note**: To take advantage of this PR, you will have to use `-Zbuild-std` or build your own toolchain. rustup toolchains always link to a libstd that was compiled with `panic=unwind`, since it's compatible with `panic=abort` code.
When std is compiled with `panic=abort` we can remove a lot of the poison machinery from the locks. This changes the `Flag` and `Guard` types to be ZSTs. It also adds an uninhabited member to `PoisonError` so the compiler knows it can optimize away the `Result::Err` paths, and make `LockResult<T>` layout-equivalent to `T`.
### Is this a breaking change?
`PoisonError::new` now panics if invoked from a libstd built with `panic="abort"` (or any non-`unwind` strategy). It is unclear to me whether to consider this a breaking change.
In order to encounter this behavior, **both of the following must be true**:
#### Using a libstd with `panic="abort"`
This is pretty uncommon. We don't build libstd with that in rustup, except in (Tier 2-3) platforms that do not support unwinding, **most notably wasm**.
Most people who do this are using cargo's `-Z build-std` feature, which is unstable.
`panic="abort"` is not a supported option in Rust's build system. It is possible to configure it using `CARGO_TARGET_xxx_RUSTFLAGS`, but I believe this only works on **non-host** platforms.
#### Creating `PoisonError` manually
This is also unlikely. The only common use case I can think of is in tests, and you can't run tests with `panic="abort"` without the unstable `-Z panic_abort_tests` flag.
It's possible that someone is implementing their own locks using std's `PoisonError` **and** defining "thread failure" to mean something other than "panic". If this is the case then we would break their code if it was used with a `panic="abort"` libstd. The locking crates I know of don't replicate std's poison API, but I haven't done much research into this yet.
I've touched on a fair number of considerations here. Which ones do people consider relevant?