Before, if `register_res` were called on an associated item or enum
variant, it would return the parent's `DefId`. Now, it returns the
actual `DefId`.
This change is a step toward removing `Type::ResolvedPath.did` and
potentially removing `kind_side_channel` in rustdoc. It also just
simplifies rustdoc's behavior.
Optimize live point computation
This refactors the live-point computation to lower per-MIR-instruction costs by operating on a largely per-block level. This doesn't fundamentally change the number of operations necessary, but it greatly improves the practical performance by aggregating bit manipulation into ranges rather than single-bit; this scales much better with larger blocks.
On the benchmark provided in #90445, with 100,000 array elements, walltime for a check build is improved from 143 seconds to 15.
I consider the tiny losses here acceptable given the many small wins on real world benchmarks and large wins on stress tests. The new code scales much better, but on some subset of inputs the slightly higher constant overheads decrease performance somewhat. Overall though, this is expected to be a big win for pathological cases (as illustrated by the test case motivating this work) and largely not material for non-pathological cases. I consider the new code somewhat easier to follow, too.
Fix toggle-click-deadspace rustdoc-gui test
In #91103 I introduced a rustdoc-gui test for clicks on toggles. I introduced some documentation on a method in lib2/struct.Foo.html so there would be something to toggle, but accidentally left the test checking test_docs/struct.Foo.html. That caused the test to reliably fail.
I'm not sure how that test got past GitHub Actions and bors, but it's manifesting in test failures at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91062#issuecomment-977589705 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/91170#issuecomment-977636159.
This fixes by pointing at the right file.
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
fix(doctest): detect extern crate items in statement doctests
This partially reverts #91026, because rustdoc needs to detect the extern statements, even when they appear inside implicit `main()`. It does not entirely revert it, so the old bug is still fixed, by duplicating some of the logic from `parse_mod` instead of trying to use it directly.
Fixes#91134
By default, AST visitors visit expressions that appear in key-value attributes.
Those expressions should not be lowered to HIR, as they do not correspond to actually compiled code.
Since an attribute cannot produce meaningful HIR, just skip them altogether.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #90856 (Suggestion to wrap inner types using 'allocator_api' in tuple)
- #91103 (Inhibit clicks on summary's children)
- #91137 (Give people a single link they can click in the contributing guide)
- #91140 (Split inline const to two feature gates and mark expression position inline const complete)
- #91148 (Use `derive_default_enum` in the compiler)
- #91153 (kernel_copy: avoid panic on unexpected OS error)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
kernel_copy: avoid panic on unexpected OS error
According to documentation, the listed errnos should only occur
if the `copy_file_range` call cannot be made at all, so the
assert be correct. However, since in practice file system
drivers (incl. FUSE etc.) can return any errno they want, we
should not panic here.
Fixes#91152
Split inline const to two feature gates and mark expression position inline const complete
This PR splits inline const in pattern position into its own `#![feature(inline_const_pat)]` feature gate, and make the usage in expression position complete.
I think I have resolved most outstanding issues related to `inline_const` with #89561 and other PRs. The only thing left that I am aware of is #90150 and the lack of lifetime checks when inline const is used in pattern position (FIXME in #89561). Implementation-wise when used in pattern position it has to be lowered during MIR building while in expression position it's evaluated only when monomorphizing (just like normal consts), so it makes some sense to separate it into two feature gates so one can progress without being blocked by another.
``@rustbot`` label: T-compiler F-inline_const
Give people a single link they can click in the contributing guide
Doc Jones mentioned that one of the things making it hard to get started
is that the amount of information is overwhelming, between the
dev-guide, contributing guide, and discussion platforms. This gives
people a single link they can click to ask for help.
cc ``@doc-jones`` - is this what you had in mind?