When CStr moves to core with an alias in std, this can link to
`crate::ffi::CStr`. However, linking in the reverse direction (from core
to std) requires a relative path, and that path can't work from both
core::ffi and std::os::raw (different number of `../` traversals
required).
The ability to interoperate with C code via FFI is not limited to crates
using std; this allows using these types without std.
The existing types in `std::os::raw` become type aliases for the ones in
`core::ffi`. This uses type aliases rather than re-exports, to allow the
std types to remain stable while the core types are unstable.
This also moves the currently unstable `NonZero_` variants and
`c_size_t`/`c_ssize_t`/`c_ptrdiff_t` types to `core::ffi`, while leaving
them unstable.
core can't depend on external crates the way std can. Rather than revert
usage of cfg_if, add a copy of it to core. This does not export our
copy, even unstably; such a change could occur in a later commit.
This changed in upstream change https://reviews.llvm.org/D98152 (aka
a266af7211)
wherein LLVM got smarter about using intrinsics. As best I can tell the
change I've made here preserves the intent of the test on LLVM 14 and
before while also passing on LLVM 15 and later.
In `CodegenUnit::items_in_deterministic_order`, there's a comment that
only local HirIds should be taken into account, but #90408 removed the
`as_local` call that sets others to None. Restoring that check fixes the
s390x hangs seen in [RHBZ 2058803].
[RHBZ 2058803]: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=2058803
For some reason, `tar` behaves differently in such a way that it does
not create symlinks on Windows correctly, resulting in
`Cannot create symlink to 'ld.gold': No such file or directory`
errors.
autocfg 1.1.0 makes it so that rustflags from the build are correctly
passed to the compiler probes, which in turn means those probes more
accurately reflect the outer build conditions. This is particularly
important if rustflags includes _required_ `-Clink-arg=` flags without
which builds will fail, as older versions of `autocfg` will then fail
the probe and erroneously report the probed feature as unavailable.
See also
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/94007#issuecomment-1040668261
Previously we've only suggested adding `Copy` bounds when the type being
moved/copied is a type parameter (generic). With this commit we also
suggest adding bounds when a type
- Can be copy
- All predicates that need to be satisfied for that are based on type
params
i.e. we will suggest `T: Copy` for `Option<T>`, but won't suggest
anything for `Option<String>`.
Future work: it would be nice to also suggest adding `.clone()` calls
Rollup of 3 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #94359 (Fix inconsistent symbol mangling of integers constants with -Zverbose)
- #94465 (6 - Make more use of `let_chains`)
- #94470 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix inconsistent symbol mangling of integers constants with -Zverbose
The `PrettyPrinter` changes formatting of array size and integer
constants based on `-Zverbose`, so its implementation cannot be used in
legacy symbol mangling.
Example symbol demangling before changes:
```console
$ cat a.rs
pub struct A<T>(T);
impl A<[u8; 128]> { pub fn f() {} }
$ rustc --crate-type=lib a.rs -Zverbose=n && nm -C ./liba.rlib
00000000 T a::A<[u8; 128]>::f
$ rustc --crate-type=lib a.rs -Zverbose=y && nm -C ./liba.rlib
00000000 T a::A<[u8; Const { ty. usize, val. Value(Scalar(0x0000000000000080)) }]>::f
```
Add `rustc_middle::ty::suggest_constraining_type_params` that suggests
adding multiple constraints.
`suggest_constraining_type_param` now just forwards params to this new
function.
Check method input expressions once
If the user mistakenly forgets to wrap their method args in a tuple, then the compiler tries to check that types within the tuple match the expression args. This means we call `check_expr` once within this diagnostic code, so when we check the expr once again in `demand_compatible`, we attempt to apply expr adjustments twice, leading to ICEs.
This PR attempts to fix this by skipping the expression type check in `demand_compatible` if we have detected an method arg mismatch at all.
This does lead to a single UI test regressing slightly, due to a diagnostic disappearing, though I don't know if it is generally meaningful to even raise an type error after noting that the argument count is incorrect in a function call, since the user might be providing (in-context) meaningless expressions to the wrong method.
I can adjust this to be a bit more targeted (to just skip checking exprs in `demand_compatible` in the tuple case) if this UI test regression is a problem.
fixes#94334
cc #94291
Also drive-by fixup of `.node_type(expr.hir_id)` to `.expr_ty(expr)`, since that method exists.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #91545 (Generalize "remove `&`" and "add `*`" suggestions to more than one deref)
- #93385 (Rustdoc ty consistency fixes)
- #93926 (Lint against more useless `#[must_use]` attributes)
- #94094 (use BOOL for TCP_NODELAY setsockopt value on Windows)
- #94384 (Add Atomic*::from_mut_slice)
- #94448 (5 - Make more use of `let_chains`)
- #94452 (Sync portable-simd for bitmasks &c.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Sync portable-simd for bitmasks &c.
In the ideal case, where everything works easily and nothing has to be rearranged, it is as simple as:
- `git subtree pull -P library/portable-simd https://github.com/rust-lang/portable-simd - ${branch}`
- write the commit message
- `python x.py test --stage 1` to make sure it runs
- `git push` to your PR-to-rustc branch
If anything borks up this flow, you can fix it with sufficient git wizardry but you are usually better off going back to the source, fixing it, and starting over, before you open the PR.
r? `@calebzulawski`
Add Atomic*::from_mut_slice
Tracking issue #76314 for `from_mut` has a question about the possibility of `from_mut_slice`, and I found a real case for it. A user in the forum had a parallelism problem that could be solved by open-indexing updates to a vector of atomics, but they didn't want to affect the other code using that vector. Using `from_mut_slice`, they could borrow that data as atomics just long enough for their parallel loop.
ref: https://users.rust-lang.org/t/sharing-vector-with-rayon-par-iter-correctly/72022
use BOOL for TCP_NODELAY setsockopt value on Windows
This issue was found by the Wine project and mitigated there [^1].
Windows' setsockopt expects a BOOL (a typedef for int) for TCP_NODELAY
[^2]. Windows itself is forgiving and will accept any positive optlen and
interpret the first byte of *optval as the value, so this bug does not
affect Windows itself, but does affect systems implementing Windows'
interface more strictly, such as Wine. Wine was previously passing this
through to the host's setsockopt, where, e.g., Linux requires that
optlen be correct for the chosen option, and TCP_NODELAY expects an int.
[^1]: d6ea38f32d
[^2]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winsock/nf-winsock-setsockopt
Lint against more useless `#[must_use]` attributes
This expands the existing `#[must_use]` check in `unused_attributes` to lint against pretty much everything `#[must_use]` doesn't support.
Fixes#93906.
Generalize "remove `&`" and "add `*`" suggestions to more than one deref
Suggest removing more than one `&` and `&mut`, along with suggesting adding more than one `*` (or a combination of the two).
r? `@estebank`
(since you're experienced with these types of suggestions, feel free to reassign)
If they are trying to use features rustc doesn't yet know about,
request a feature request.
Additionally, also warn against using feature names without leading `+`
or `-` signs.
Caching the stable hash of Ty within itself
Instead of computing stable hashes on types as needed, we compute it during interning.
This way we can, when a hash is requested, just hash that hash, which is significantly faster than traversing the type itself.
We only do this for incremental for now, as incremental is the only frequent user of stable hashing.
As a next step we can try out
* moving the hash and TypeFlags to Interner, so projections and regions get the same benefit (tho regions are not nested, so maybe that's not a good idea? Would be nice for dedup tho)
* start comparing types via their stable hash instead of their address?
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #92399 (fix typo in btree/vec doc: Self -> self)
- #92823 (Tweak diagnostics)
- #94248 (Fix ICE when passing block to while-loop condition)
- #94414 (Fix ICE when using Box<T, A> with large A)
- #94445 (4 - Make more use of `let_chains`)
- #94449 (Add long explanation for E0726)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
The `PrettyPrinter` changes formatting of array size and integer
constants based on `-Zverbose`, so its implementation cannot be used in
legacy symbol mangling.