This implements RFC 1624, tracking issue #37339.
- `FnCtxt` (in typeck) gets a stack of `LoopCtxt`s, which store the
currently deduced type of that loop, the desired type, and a list of
break expressions currently seen. `loop` loops get a fresh type
variable as their initial type (this logic is stolen from that for
arrays). `while` loops get `()`.
- `break {expr}` looks up the broken loop, and unifies the type of
`expr` with the type of the loop.
- `break` with no expr unifies the loop's type with `()`.
- When building MIR, `loop` loops no longer construct a `()` value at
termination of the loop; rather, the `break` expression assigns the
result of the loop. `while` loops are unchanged.
- `break` respects contexts in which expressions may not end with braced
blocks. That is, `while break { break-value } { while-body }` is
illegal; this preserves backwards compatibility.
- The RFC did not make it clear, but I chose to make `break ()` inside
of a `while` loop illegal, just in case we wanted to do anything with
that design space in the future.
This is my first time dealing with this part of rustc so I'm sure
there's plenty of problems to pick on here ^_^
This allows you to enable *all* nested visits in a future-compatible
sort of way. Moreover, if you choose to override the `visit_nested`
methods yourself, you can "future-proof" against omissions by overriding
`nested_visit_map` to panic.
This is a spiritual succesor to #34268/8531d581, in which we replaced a
number of matches of None to the unit value with `if let` conditionals
where it was judged that this made for clearer/simpler code (as would be
recommended by Manishearth/rust-clippy's `single_match` lint). The same
rationale applies to matches of None to the empty block.
This indicates whether this `BoundRegion` will change from late to early
bound when issue 32330 is fixed. It also indicates the function on
which the lifetime is declared.
This makes the "shadowing labels" warning *not* print the entire loop
as a span, but only the lifetime.
Also makes #31719 go away, but does not fix its root cause (the span
of the expanded loop is still wonky, but not used anymore).
This should fix#31754 and follow-up #25343. Before the latter, the
closure was visited twice in the context of the enclosing fn, which
made even a single closure with a loop label emit a warning.
With this change, the closure is still visited within the context
of the main fn (which is intended, since it is not a separate item)
but resets the found loop labels while being visited.
Fixes: #31754
Automated conversion using the untry tool [1] and the following command:
```
$ find -name '*.rs' -type f | xargs untry
```
at the root of the Rust repo.
[1]: https://github.com/japaric/untry
Ensure borrows of fn/closure params do not outlive invocations.
Does this by adding a new CallSiteScope to the region (or rather code extent) hierarchy, which outlives even the ParameterScope (which in turn outlives the DestructionScope of a fn/closure's body).
Fix#29793
r? @nikomatsakis
resolve_lifetime.rs: Switch from BlockScope to FnScope in ScopeChain
construction. Lifetimes introduced by a fn signature are scoped to the
call-site for that fn. (Note `add_scope_and_walk_fn` must only add
FnScope for the walk of body, *not* of the fn signature.)
region.rs: Introduce new CodeExtentData::CallSiteScope variant. Use
CodeExtentData as the cx.parent, rather than just a NodeId. Change
DestructionScopeData to CallSiteScopeData.
regionck.rs: Thread call_site_scope via Rcx; constrain fn return
values.
(update; incorporated review feedback from niko.)