Fix "Mis-calculated spans" errors from `-Z save-analysis` + refactoring
Removed the path span extraction methods from `SpanUtils`:
* spans_with_brackets
* spans_for_path_segments
* spans_for_ty_params
Use the `span` fields in `PathSegment` and `TyParam` instead.
(Note that since it processes `ast::Path` not a qualified path (`hir::QPath` / `ast::QSelf`), UFCS path will be flattened: `<Foo as a:🅱️:c::Trait>::D::E::F::g` will be seen as `a:🅱️:c::Trait::D::E::F::g`.)
Fix#43796. Close#41478.
r? @nrc
Use hir::ItemLocalId as keys in TypeckTables.
This PR makes `TypeckTables` use `ItemLocalId` instead of `NodeId` as key. This is needed for incremental compilation -- for stable hashing and for being able to persist and reload these tables. The PR implements the most important part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/40303.
Some notes on the implementation:
* The PR adds the `HirId` to HIR nodes where needed (`Expr`, `Local`, `Block`, `Pat`) which obviates the need to store a `NodeId -> HirId` mapping in crate metadata. Thanks @eddyb for the suggestion! In the future the `HirId` should completely replace the `NodeId` in HIR nodes.
* Before something is read or stored in one of the various `TypeckTables` subtables, the entry's key is validated via the new `TypeckTables::validate_hir_id()` method. This makes sure that we are not mixing information from different items in a single table.
That last part could be made a bit nicer by either (a) new-typing the table-key and making `validate_hir_id()` the only way to convert a `HirId` to the new-typed key, or (b) just encapsulate sub-table access a little better. This PR, however, contents itself with not making things significantly worse.
Also, there's quite a bit of switching around between `NodeId`, `HirId`, and `DefIndex`. These conversions are cheap except for `HirId -> NodeId`, so if the valued reviewer finds such an instance in a performance critical place, please let me know.
Ideally we convert more and more code from `NodeId` to `HirId` in the future so that there are no more `NodeId`s after HIR lowering anywhere. Then the amount of switching should be minimal again.
r? @eddyb, maybe?
The defaulted unit bit is only relevant for the surrounding inference
context, and can cause trouble, including spurious lints and ICEs,
outside of it.
Fixes#43853.
ast_validation: forbid "nonstandard" literal patterns
Since #42886, macros can create "nonstandard" PatKind::Lit patterns,
that contain path expressions instead of the usual literal expr. These
can cause trouble, including ICEs.
We *could* map these nonstandard patterns to PatKind::Path patterns
during HIR lowering, but that would be much effort for little gain, and
I think is too risky for beta. So let's just forbid them during AST
validation.
Fixes#43250.
beta-nominating because regression.
r? @eddyb
Historically many `Display` and `Debug` implementations for `OsStr`-like
abstractions have gone through `String::from_utf8_lossy`, but this was updated
in #42613 to use an internal `Utf8Lossy` abstraction instead. This had the
unfortunate side effect of causing a regression (#43765) in code which relied on
these `fmt` trait implementations respecting the various formatting flags
specified.
This commit opportunistically adds back interpretation of formatting trait flags
in the "common case" where where `OsStr`-like "thing" is all valid utf-8 and can
delegate to the formatting implementation for `str`. This doesn't entirely solve
the regression as non-utf8 paths will format differently than they did before
still (in that they will not respect formatting flags), but this should solve
the regression for all "real world" use cases of paths and such. The door's also
still open for handling these flags in the future!
Closes#43765
Cleanup for "Support compiling rustc without LLVM (try 2)"
This includes a small patch to allow running tests without llvm. Also check if you are not trying to compile a dylib.
cc #42932
r? @alexcrichton
Fix for issue #39827
*Cause of the issue*
While preparing for `trans_intrinsic_call()` invoke arguments are processed with `trans_argument()` method which excludes zero-sized types from argument list (to be more correct - all arguments for which `ArgKind` is `Ignore` are filtered out). As result `volatile_store()` intrinsic gets one argument instead of expected address and value.
*How it is fixed*
Modification of the `trans_argument()` method may cause side effects, therefore change was implemented in `volatile_store()` intrinsic building code itself. Now it checks function signature and if it was specialised with zero-sized type, then emits `C_nil()` instead of accessing non-existing second argument.
Optimize allocation paths in RawVec
Since the `Alloc` trait was introduced (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/42313) and it was integrated everywhere (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/42727) there's been some slowdowns and regressions that have slipped through. The intention of this PR is to try to tackle at least some of them, but they've been very difficult to quantify up to this point so it probably doesn't solve everything.
This PR primarily targets the `RawVec` type, specifically the `double` function. The codegen for this function is now much closer to what it was before #42313 landed as many runtime checks have been elided.
* Moves docs about stack size and thread naming from `Builder` to the
`std::thread` module
* Adds more links to the new module-level documentation
* Mentions the 2 MiB stack size default, but indicate it's subject to
change
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43805.
Since #42886, macros can create "nonstandard" PatKind::Lit patterns,
that contain path expressions instead of the usual literal expr. These
can cause trouble, including ICEs.
We *could* map these nonstandard patterns to PatKind::Path patterns
during HIR lowering, but that would be much effort for little gain, and
I think is too risky for beta. So let's just forbid them during AST
validation.
Fixes#43250.
The lint refactoring in #43522 didn't account for `#[allow(unknown_lints)]`
happening at the same node as an unknown lint itself, so this commit updates the
handling to ensure that the local set of lint configuration being built is
queried before looking at the chain of lint levels.
Closes#43809
Currently the link on doc.rust-lang.org is semi-broken; it links to a
page that links to the exact page in the first edition in the book, or
to the index of the second edition of the book. If the second editions
is the recommended one now, we should point the links at that one. It
seems that in the mean time, the links have been updated to point
directly to the first edition of the book, but that hasn't made it onto
the stable channel yet. By the time this commit makes it onto the stable
channel, the second edition of the book should be complete enough. At
least the part about deref coercions is.