Move some codegen-y methods from `rustc_hir_analysis::collect` -> `rustc_codegen_ssa`
Unclear if they should live here, but they seem codegen-y enough, and `rustc_hir_analysis::collect` is extremely long, so it should probably lose some methods.
Allow unsafe through inline const
Handle similar to closures.
Address https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104087#issuecomment-1324173328
Note that this PR does not fix the issue for `unsafe { [0; function_requiring_unsafe()] }`. This is fundamentally unfixable for MIR unsafeck IMO.
This PR also does not fix unsafety checking for inline const in pattern position. It actually breaks it, allowing unsafe functions to be used in inline const in pattern position without unsafe blocks. Inline const in pattern position is not visible in MIR so ignored by MIR unsafety checking (currently it is also not checked by borrow checker, which is the reason why it's considered an incomplete feature).
`@rustbot` label: +T-lang +F-inline_const
use ty::Binder in rustdoc instead of `skip_binder`
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
this is a preliminary cleanup required to be able to normalize correctly/conveniently in rustdoc
Inline and remove `place_contents_drop_state_cannot_differ`.
It has a single call site and is hot enough to be worth inlining. And make sure `is_terminal_path` is inlined, too.
r? `@ghost`
Point out the type of associated types in every method call of iterator chains
Partially address #105184 by pointing out the type of associated types in every method call of iterator chains:
```
note: the expression is of type `Map<std::slice::Iter<'_, {integer}>, [closure@src/test/ui/iterators/invalid-iterator-chain.rs:12:18: 12:21]>`
--> src/test/ui/iterators/invalid-iterator-chain.rs:12:14
|
10 | vec![0, 1]
| ---------- this expression has type `Vec<{integer}>`
11 | .iter()
| ------ associated type `std::iter::Iterator::Item` is `&{integer}` here
12 | .map(|x| { x; })
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ associated type `std::iter::Iterator::Item` is `()` here
```
We also reduce the number of impls we mention when any of the candidates is an "exact match". This benefits the output of cases with numerics greatly.
Outstanding work would be to provide a structured suggestion for appropriate changes, like in this case detecting the spurious `;` in the closure.
Use struct types during codegen in less places
This makes it easier to use cg_ssa from a backend like Cranelift that doesn't have any struct types at all. After this PR struct types are still used for function arguments and return values. Removing those usages is harder but should still be doable.
Remove `token::Lit` from `ast::MetaItemLit`.
Currently `ast::MetaItemLit` represents the literal kind twice. This PR removes that redundancy. Best reviewed one commit at a time.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Fix lint perf regressions
#104863 caused small but widespread regressions in lint performance. I tried to improve things in #105291 and #105416 with minimal success, before fully understanding what caused the regression. This PR effectively reverts all of #105291 and part of #104863 to fix the perf regression.
r? `@cjgillot`
Make encode_info_for_trait_item use queries instead of accessing the HIR
This change avoids accessing the HIR on `encode_info_for_trait_item` and uses queries. We will need to execute this function for elements that have no HIR and by using queries we will be able to feed for definitions that have no HIR.
r? ``@oli-obk``
This commit partly undoes #104863, which combined the builtin lints pass
with other lints. This caused a slowdown, because often there are no
other lints, and it's faster to do a pass with a single lint directly
than it is to do a combined pass with a `passes` vector containing a
single lint.
I removed these in #105291, and subsequently learned they are necessary
for performance.
This commit reinstates them with the new and more descriptive names
`RuntimeCombined{Early,Late}LintPass`, similar to the existing passes
like `BuiltinCombinedEarlyLintPass`. It also adds some comments,
particularly emphasising how we have ways to combine passes at both
compile-time and runtime. And it moves some comments around.