Don't normalize xform_ret_ty during method candidate assembly
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85671
Normalizing the return type of a method candidate together with the expected receiver type of the method can lead to valid method candidates being rejected during probing. Specifically in the example of the fixed issue we have a `self_ty` of the form `&A<&[Coef]>` whereas the `impl_ty` of the method would be `&A<_>`, if we normalize the projection in the return type we unify the inference variable with `Cont`, which will lead us to reject the candidate in the sup type check in `consider_probe`. Since we don't actually need the normalized return type during candidate assembly, we postpone the normalization until we consider candidates in `consider_probe`.
Prevent error reporting from outputting a recursion error if it finds an ambiguous trait impl during suggestions
Closes#89275
This fixes the compiler reporting a recursion error during another already in progress error by trying to make a conversion method suggestion and encounters ambiguous trait implementations that can convert a the original type into a type that can then be recursively converted into itself via another method in the trait.
Updated OverflowError struct to be an enum so I could differentiate between passes - it's no longer a ZST but I don't think that should be a problem as they only generate when there's an error in compiling code anyway
Implement `#[link_ordinal(n)]`
Allows the use of `#[link_ordinal(n)]` with `#[link(kind = "raw-dylib")]`, allowing Rust to link against DLLs that export symbols by ordinal rather than by name. As long as the ordinal matches, the name of the function in Rust is not required to match the name of the corresponding function in the exporting DLL.
Part of #58713.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #89298 (Issue 89193 - Fix ICE when using `usize` and `isize` with SIMD gathers )
- #89461 (Add `deref_into_dyn_supertrait` lint.)
- #89477 (Move items related to computing diffs to a separate file)
- #89559 (RustWrapper: adapt for LLVM API change)
- #89585 (Emit item no type error even if type inference fails)
- #89596 (Make cfg imply doc(cfg))
- #89615 (Add InferCtxt::with_opaque_type_inference to get_body_with_borrowck_facts)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Introduce `tcx.get_diagnostic_name`
Introduces a "reverse lookup" for diagnostic items. This is mainly intended for `@rust-lang/clippy` which often does a long series of `is_diagnostic_item` calls for the same `DefId`.
r? `@oli-obk`
Consider unfulfilled obligations in binop errors
When encountering a binop where the types would have been accepted, if
all the predicates had been fulfilled, include information about the
predicates and suggest appropriate `#[derive]`s if possible.
Fix#84515.
When encountering a binop where the types would have been accepted, if
all the predicates had been fulfilled, include information about the
predicates and suggest appropriate `#[derive]`s if possible.
Point at trait(s) that needs to be `impl`emented.
Normalize associated type projections when checking return type of main
This fixes#88609.
Previously, the return type of `fn main()` would not have any associated type projections within normalized before checking if it implements the standard library trait `std::process::Termination`. This commit appears to fix it.
This feels vaguely symptomatic of a problem in the underlying trait solving engine, but I am not sure how I would solve that. I am unsure why the example in #88609 with `assert_impl_termination` and `fn foo()` work, but simply `fn main()` doesn't. The way that I solved this is also probably not the best way to do this, so please let me know if there is a better way to do this.
I have added a build-pass regression test for this issue.
Fix ICE caused by non_exaustive_omitted_patterns struct lint
fixes#89382
Add check that a list of `Pat`s is non empty to prevent ICE in `FnCtxt::lint_non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns`.
Is related to #89374 and #89105
Correctly handle supertraits for min_specialization
Supertraits of specialization markers could circumvent checks for
min_specialization. Elaborating predicates prevents this.
r? ````@nikomatsakis````
Consistently use 'supertrait'.
A subset of places referred to 'super-trait', so this changes them
to all use 'supertrait'. This matches 'supertype' and some other
usages. An exception is 'auto-trait' which is consistently used
in that manner.
Fix an ICE caused by type mismatch errors being ignored
This PR fixes#87771. It turns out that the check on `compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/demand.rs:148` leads to the ICE. I removed it because the early return in [`check_expr_assign`](dec7fc3ced/compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/expr.rs (L928)) already prevents unnecessary error messages from the call to `check_expr_coercable_to_type`.
Add expansion to while desugar spans
In the same vein as #88163, this reverts a change in Clippy behavior as a result of #80357 (and reverts some `#[allow]`s): This changes `clippy::blocks_in_if_conditions` to not fire on `while` loops. Though we might actually want Clippy to lint those cases, we should introduce the change purposefully, with tests, and possibly under a different lint name.
The actual change here is to add a desugaring expansion to the spans when lowering a `while` loop.
r? `@Manishearth`
Fix clippy lints
I'm currently working on allowing clippy to run on librustdoc after a discussion I had with `@Mark-Simulacrum.` So in the meantime, I fixed a few lints on the compiler crates.
A subset of places referred to 'super-trait', so this changes them
to all use 'supertrait'. This matches 'supertype' and some other
usages. An exception is 'auto-trait' which is consistently used
in that manner.
Rework HIR API to make invocations of the hir_crate query harder.
`hir_crate` forces the recomputation of queries that depend on it.
This PR aims at avoiding useless invocations of `hir_crate` by making dependent code go through `tcx.hir()`.
2229: Consume IfLet expr
When using the IfLet guard feature, we can ICE when attempting to resolve PlaceBuilders.
For pattern matching, we currently don't consume the IfLet expression when "visiting" the arms leading us to not "read" all variables and hence not being able to resolve them.
r? `@nikomatsakis`
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/88118
Don't anonymize bound region names during typeck
Once this anonymization has performed, we have no
way of recovering the original names during NLL
borrow checking. Keeping the original names allows
error messages in full NLL mode to contain the original
bound region names.
As a result, the typeck results may contain types that
differ only in the names used for their bound regions. However,
anonimization of bound regions does not guarantee that
all distinct types are unqual (e.g. not subtypes of each other).
For example, `for<'a> fn(&'a u32, &'a u32)` and
`for<'b, 'c> fn(&'b u32, &'c u32)` are subtypes of each other,
as explained here:
63cc2bb3d0/compiler/rustc_infer/src/infer/nll_relate/mod.rs (L682-L690)
Therefore, any code handling types with higher-ranked regions already
needs to handle the case where two distinct `Ty`s are 'actually'
equal.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #87260 (Libgccjit codegen)
- #89212 (x.py: run `rustup toolchain link` in setup)
- #89233 (Hide `<...> defined here` note if the source is not available)
- #89235 (make junit output more consistent with default format)
- #89255 (Fix incorrect disambiguation suggestion for associated items)
- #89276 (Fix the population of the `union.impls` field)
- #89283 (Add regression test for issue #83564)
- #89318 (rustc_session: Remove lint store from `Session`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
As shown in the two test requirements that got updated, if there's other problems,
then those other problems are probably the root cause of the incorrect generics count.
Fix incorrect disambiguation suggestion for associated items
Fixes#88806. I have not added a new test case, because the erroneous behavior is already present in existing test cases.