Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #96642 (Avoid zero-sized allocs in ThinBox if T and H are both ZSTs.)
- #97647 (Lazily allocate and initialize pthread locks.)
- #97715 (Support the `#[expect]` attribute on fn parameters (RFC-2383))
- #97716 (Fix reachability analysis for const methods)
- #97722 (Tighten spans for bad fields in struct deriving `Copy`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Xous is a microkernel operating system designed to run on small systems.
The kernel contains a wide range of userspace processes that provide
common services such as console output, networking, and time access.
The kernel and its services are completely written in Rust using a
custom build of libstd. This adds support for this target to upstream
Rust so that we can drop support for our out-of-tree `target.json` file.
Add a Tier 3 target for Xous running on RISC-V.
Signed-off-by: Sean Cross <sean@xobs.io>
Fix reachability analysis for const methods
Use `method_might_be_inlined` directly for `ImplItemKind::Fn` instead of duplicating the logic in `def_id_represents_local_inlined_item`.
This is parallel to how we use `item_might_be_inlined` for `ItemKind::Fn` in that same body.
Fixes#97708
Lazily allocate and initialize pthread locks.
Lazily allocate and initialize pthread locks.
This allows {Mutex, Condvar, RwLock}::new() to be const, while still using the platform's native locks for features like priority inheritance and debug tooling. E.g. on macOS, we cannot directly use the (private) APIs that pthread's locks are implemented with, making it impossible for us to use anything other than pthread while still preserving priority inheritance, etc.
This PR doesn't yet make the public APIs const. That's for a separate PR with an FCP.
Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/93740
Avoid zero-sized allocs in ThinBox if T and H are both ZSTs.
This was surprisingly tricky, and took longer to get right than expected. `ThinBox` is a surprisingly subtle piece of code. That said, in the end, a lot of this was due to overthinking[^overthink] -- ultimately the fix ended up fairly clean and simple.
[^overthink]: Honestly, for a while I was convinced this couldn't be done without allocations or runtime branches in these cases, but that's obviously untrue.
Anyway, as a result of spending all that time debugging, I've extended the tests quite a bit, and also added more debug assertions. Many of these helped for subtle bugs I made in the middle (for example, the alloc/drop tracking is because I ended up double-dropping the value in the case where both were ZSTs), they're arguably a bit of overkill at this point, although I imagine they could help in the future too.
Anyway, these tests cover a wide range of size/align cases, nd fully pass under miri[^1]. They also do some smoke-check asserting that the value has the correct alignment, although in practice it's totally within the compiler's rights to delete these assertions since we'd have already done UB if they get hit. They have more boilerplate than they really need, but it's not *too* bad on a per-test basis.
A notable absence from testing is atypical header types, but at the moment it's impossible to manually implement `Pointee`. It would be really nice to have testing here, since it's not 100% obvious to me that the aligned read/write we use for `H` are correct in the face of arbitrary combinations of `size_of::<H>()`, `align_of::<H>()`, and `align_of::<T>()`. (That said, I spent a while thinking through it and am *pretty* sure it's fine -- I'd just feel... better if we could test some cases for non-ZST headers which have unequal and align).
[^1]: Or at least, they pass under miri if I copy the code and tests into a new crate and run miri on it (after making it less stdlibified).
Fixes#96485.
I'd request review ``@yaahc,`` but I believe you're taking some time away from reviews, so I'll request from the previous PR's reviewer (I think that the context helps, even if the actual change didn't end up being bad here).
r? ``@joshtriplett``
Make hir().get_generics and generics_of consistent.
Fetching generics from a HIR node is currently implemented differently in 4 different places.
This PR makes the 4 implementations call the single `hir::Node::generics`, which implements the more general version from `generics_of` query.
add [`as_underscore`] lint
closes#8847
detect usage of `as _` and enforce the usage of explicit type like
```rust
fn foo(n: usize) {}
let n: u16 = 256;
foo(n as _);
```
will suggest to change to
```rust
fn foo(n: usize) {}
let n: u16 = 256;
foo(n as usize);
```
changelog: add [`as_underscore`] lint
Remove all json handling from rustc_serialize
Json is now handled using serde_json. Where appropriate I have replaced json usage with binary serialization (rmeta files) or manual string formatting (emcc linker arg generation).
This allowed for removing and simplifying a lot of code, which hopefully results in faster serialization/deserialization and faster compiles of rustc itself.
Where sensible we now use serde. Metadata and incr cache serialization keeps using a heavily modified (compared to crates.io) rustc-serialize version that in the future could probably be extended with zero-copy deserialization or other perf tricks that serde can't support due to supporting more than one serialization format.
Note that I had to remove `-Zast-json` and `-Zast-json-noexpand` as the relevant AST types don't implement `serde::Serialize`.
Fixes#40177
See also https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/418