Make `get_return_block()` return `Some` only for HIR nodes in body
Fixes#114918
The issue occurred while compiling the following input:
```rust
fn uwu() -> [(); { () }] {
loop {}
}
```
It was caused by the code below trying to suggest a missing return type which resulted in a const eval cycle: 1bd043098e/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/fn_ctxt/suggestions.rs (L68-L75)
The root cause was `get_return_block()` returning an `Fn` node for a node in the return type (i.e. the second `()` in the return type `[(); { () }]` of the input) although it is supposed to do so only for nodes that lie in the body of the function and return `None` otherwise (at least as per my understanding).
The PR fixes the issue by fixing this behaviour of `get_return_block()`.
Indexing is similar to method calls in having an arbitrary
left-hand-side and then something on the right, which is the main part
of the expression. Method calls already have a span for that right part,
but indexing does not. This means that long method chains that use
indexing have really bad spans, especially when the indexing panics and
that span in coverted into a panic location.
This does the same thing as method calls for the AST and HIR, storing an
extra span which is then put into the `fn_span` field in THIR.
Fix suggestion spans for expr from macro expansions
### Issue #112007: rustc shows expanded `writeln!` macro in code suggestion
#### Before This PR
```
help: consider using a semicolon here
|
6 | };
| +
help: you might have meant to return this value
--> C:\Users\hayle\.rustup\toolchains\nightly-x86_64-pc-windows-msvc\lib/rustlib/src/rust\library\core\src\macros\mod.rs:557:9
|
55| return $dst.write_fmt($crate::format_args_nl!($($arg)*));
| ++++++ +
```
#### After This PR
```
help: consider using a semicolon here
|
LL | };
| +
help: you might have meant to return this value
|
LL | return writeln!(w, "but not here");
| ++++++ +
```
### Issue #110017: `format!` `.into()` suggestion deletes the `format` macro
#### Before This PR
```
help: call `Into::into` on this expression to convert `String` into `Box<dyn std::error::Error>`
--> /Users/eric/.rustup/toolchains/nightly-aarch64-apple-darwin/lib/rustlib/src/rust/library/alloc/src/macros.rs:121:12
|
12| res.into()
| +++++++
```
#### After This PR
```
help: call `Into::into` on this expression to convert `String` into `Box<dyn std::error::Error>`
|
LL | Err(format!("error: {x}").into())
| +++++++
```
---
Fixes#112007.
Fixes#110017.
Don't say that a type is uncallable if its fn signature has errors in it
This is fallout from #106309, where we don't consider param-env candidates that reference errors because they unify with everything. This means, however, that we don't consider an APIT like `impl Fn(MissingType)` isn't considered to implement `Fn`, for example.
We can double-check that with a weaker heuristic [`extract_callable_info`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_hir_typeck/fn_ctxt/struct.FnCtxt.html#method.extract_callable_info), and suppress the knock-down error using that.
Fixes#113566
Tweak spans for self arg, fix borrow suggestion for signature mismatch
1. Adjust a suggestion message that was annoying me
2. Fix#112503 by recording the right spans for the `self` part of the `&self` 0th argument
3. Remove the suggestion for adjusting a trait signature on type mismatch, bc that's gonna probably break all the other impls of the trait even if it fixes its one usage 😅
Don't call `query_normalize` when reporting similar impls
Firstly, It's sketchy to be using `query_normalize` at all during HIR typeck -- it's asking for an ICE 😅. Secondly, we're normalizing an impl trait ref that potentially has parameter types in `ty::ParamEnv::empty()`, which is kinda sketchy as well.
The only UI test change from removing this normalization is that we don't evaluate anonymous constants in impls, which end up giving us really ugly suggestions:
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `[X; 35]: Default` is not satisfied
--> /home/gh-compiler-errors/test.rs:4:5
|
4 | <[X; 35] as Default>::default();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `Default` is not implemented for `[X; 35]`
|
= help: the following other types implement trait `Default`:
&[T]
&mut [T]
[T; 32]
[T; core::::array::{impl#30}::{constant#0}]
[T; core::::array::{impl#31}::{constant#0}]
[T; core::::array::{impl#32}::{constant#0}]
[T; core::::array::{impl#33}::{constant#0}]
[T; core::::array::{impl#34}::{constant#0}]
and 27 others
```
So just fold the impls with a `BottomUpFolder` that calls `ty::Const::eval`. This doesn't work totally correctly with generic-const-exprs, but it's fine for stable code, and this is error reporting after all.
Don't record adjustments twice in `note_source_of_type_mismatch_constraint`
We call `lookup_method` a few times in `note_source_of_type_mismatch_constraint`, but that function has side-effects to the typeck results. Replace it with a less side-effect-y variant of the function for use in diagnostics.
Specifically the ICE in #112532 happens because we're recording deref adjustments twice for a call receiver, which causes `ExprUseVisitor` to be angry.
Fixes#112532
Properly check associated consts for infer placeholders
We only reported an error if it was in a "suggestable" position (according to `is_suggestable_infer_ty`) -- this isn't correct for infer tys that can show up in other places in the constant's type, like behind a dyn trait.
fixes#112491
Suggest using `ptr::null_mut` when user provided `ptr::null` to a function expecting `ptr::null_mut`
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/ptr-null-mutability-suggestions.rs:9:24
|
LL | expecting_null_mut(ptr::null());
| ------------------ ^^^^^^^^^^^
| | |
| | types differ in mutability
| | help: consider using `core::ptr::null_mut` instead: `core::ptr::null_mut()`
| arguments to this function are incorrect
|
= note: expected raw pointer `*mut u8`
found raw pointer `*const _`
note: function defined here
--> $DIR/ptr-null-mutability-suggestions.rs:6:4
|
LL | fn expecting_null_mut(_: *mut u8) {}
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ----------
```
Closes#85184.
only suppress coercion error if type is definitely unsized
we previously suppressed coercion errors when the return type was `dyn Trait` because we expect a far more descriptive `Sized` trait error to be emitted instead, however the code that does this suppression does not consider where-clause predicates since it just looked at the HIR. let's do that instead by creating an obligation and checking if it may hold.
fixes#110683fixes#112208
Don't use `can_eq` in `derive(..)` suggestion for missing method
Unsatisfied predicates returned from method probe may reference inference vars from that probe, so drop this extra check I added in #110877 for more accurate derive suggestions...
Fixes#111500
Only make the use-dot-operator-to-call-method suggestion, but do not
double down and use the recovered type to perform method call
typechecking as it will produce confusing diagnostics on the "fixed"
code.