Remove DeclareMethods
Most of the `DeclareMethods` API was only used internally by rustc_codegen_llvm. As such, it makes no sense to require other backends to implement them.
(`get_declared_value` and `declare_cfn` were used, in one place, specific to the `main` symbol, which I've replaced with a more specialized function to allow more flexibility in implementation - the intent is that `declare_c_main` can go away once we do something more clever, e.g. @eddyb has ideas around having a MIR shim or somesuch we can explore in a follow-up PR)
Let user see the full type of type-length limit error
Seeing the full type of the error is sometimes essential to diagnosing the problem, but the type itself is too long to be displayed in the terminal in a useful fashion. This change solves this dilemma by writing the full offending type name to a file, and displays this filename as a note.
> note: the full type name been written to '$TEST_BUILD_DIR/issues/issue-22638/issue-22638.long-type.txt'
Closes#76777
Remove MMX from Rust
Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/stdarch/pull/890
This removes most of MMX from Rust (tests pass with small changes), keeping stable `is_x86_feature_detected!("mmx")` working.
New MIR optimization pass to reduce branches on match of tuples of enums
Fixes#68867 by adding a new pass that turns something like
```rust
let x: Option<()>;
let y: Option<()>;
match (x,y) {
(Some(_), Some(_)) => {0},
_ => {1}
}
```
into something like
```rust
let x: Option<()>;
let y: Option<()>;
let discriminant_x = // get discriminant of x
let discriminant_y = // get discriminant of x
if discriminant_x != discriminant_y {1} else {0}
```
The opt-diffs still have the old basic blocks like
```
bb3: {
_8 = discriminant((*(_4.1: &ViewportPercentageLength))); // scope 0 at $DIR/early-otherwise-branch-68867.rs:21:21: 21:30
switchInt(move _8) -> [1_isize: bb7, otherwise: bb2]; // scope 0 at $DIR/early-otherwise-branch-68867.rs:21:21: 21:30
}
bb4: {
_9 = discriminant((*(_4.1: &ViewportPercentageLength))); // scope 0 at $DIR/early-otherwise-branch-68867.rs:22:23: 22:34
switchInt(move _9) -> [2_isize: bb8, otherwise: bb2]; // scope 0 at $DIR/early-otherwise-branch-68867.rs:22:23: 22:34
}
bb5: {
_10 = discriminant((*(_4.1: &ViewportPercentageLength))); // scope 0 at $DIR/early-otherwise-branch-68867.rs:23:23: 23:34
switchInt(move _10) -> [3_isize: bb9, otherwise: bb2]; // scope 0 at $DIR/early-otherwise-branch-68867.rs:23:23: 23:34
}
```
These do get removed on later passes. I'm not sure if I should include those passes in the test to make it clear?
Don't allow implementing trait directly on type-alias-impl-trait
This is specifically disallowed by the RFC, but we never added a check
for it.
Fixes#76202
transmute: use diagnostic item
closes#66075, we now have no remaining uses of `match_def_path` in the compiler while some uses still remain in `clippy`.
cc @RalfJung
Rollup of 15 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #76722 (Test and fix Send and Sync traits of BTreeMap artefacts)
- #76766 (Extract some intrinsics out of rustc_codegen_llvm)
- #76800 (Don't generate bootstrap usage unless it's needed)
- #76809 (simplfy condition in ItemLowerer::with_trait_impl_ref())
- #76815 (Fix wording in mir doc)
- #76818 (Don't compile regex at every function call.)
- #76821 (Remove redundant nightly features)
- #76823 (black_box: silence unused_mut warning when building with cfg(miri))
- #76825 (use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler)
- #76827 (fix array_windows docs)
- #76828 (use strip_prefix over starts_with and manual slicing based on pattern length (clippy::manual_strip))
- #76840 (Move to intra doc links in core/src/future)
- #76845 (Use intra docs links in core::{ascii, option, str, pattern, hash::map})
- #76853 (Use intra-doc links in library/core/src/task/wake.rs)
- #76871 (support panic=abort in Miri)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
use `array_windows` instead of `windows` in the compiler
I do think these changes are beautiful, but do have to admit that using type inference for the window length
can easily be confusing. This seems like a general issue with const generics, where inferring constants adds an additional
complexity which users have to learn and keep in mind.
Remove redundant nightly features
Removes a bunch of redundant/outdated nightly features. The first commit removes a `core_intrinsics` use for which a stable wrapper has been provided since. The second commit replaces the `const_generics` feature with `min_const_generics` which might get stabilized this year. The third commit is the result of a trial/error run of removing every single feature and then adding it back if compile failed. A bunch of unused features are the result that the third commit removes.
Don't compile regex at every function call.
Use `SyncOnceCell` to only compile it once.
I believe this still adds some kind of locking mechanism?
Related issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/76817
Extract some intrinsics out of rustc_codegen_llvm
A significant amount of intrinsics do not actually need backend-specific behaviors to be implemented, instead relying on methods already in rustc_codegen_ssa. So, extract those methods out to rustc_codegen_ssa, so that each backend doesn't need to reimplement the same code.
Almost everything should be a pretty direct translation. A notable not-direct-translation is `add_with_overflow` and friends being changed to `bx.checked_binop`, but it's pretty simple.
I could have been a lot more aggressive here and pulled out way more methods, and add a few new methods in the rustc_codegen_ssa "API". However, because this is my second rustc PR, I thought that moving those to a follow-up PR and doing more incremental changes here would be better (and I guess ask if this work is even desired in the first place). I'm hoping to eventually remove the mess of intrinsic handling in the backend entirely, which would be hecking fantastic ✨
Validate constants during `const_eval_raw`
This PR implements the groundwork for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72396
* constants are now validated during `const_eval_raw`
* to prevent cycle errors, we do not validate references to statics anymore beyond the fact that they are not dangling
* the `const_eval` query ICEs if used on `static` items
* as a side effect promoteds are now evaluated to `ConstValue::Scalar` again (since they are just a reference to the actual promoted allocation in most cases).
Some promotion cleanup
Based on top of both https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75502 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75585, this does some cleanup of the promotion code. The last 2 commits are new.
* Remove the remaining cases where `const fn` is treated different from `fn`. This means no longer promoting ptr-to-int casts, raw ptr operations, and union field accesses in `const fn` -- or anywhere, for that matter. These are all unstable in const-context so this should not break any stable code. Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75586.
* ~~Promote references to statics even outside statics (i.e., in functions) for consistency.~~
* Promote `&mut []` everywhere, not just in non-`const` functions, for consistency.
* Explain why we do not promote deref's of statics outside statics. ~~(This is the only remaining direct user of `const_kind`.)~~
This can only land once the other two PRs land; I am mostly putting this up already because I couldn't wait ;) and to get some feedback from `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` .
shim: monomorphic `FnPtrShim`s during construction
Fixes#69925.
This PR adjusts MIR shim construction so that substitutions are applied to function pointer shims during construction, rather than during codegen (as determined by `substs_for_mir_body`).
r? `@eddyb`