coverage: Remove debug code from the instrumentor
The coverage instrumentor has an entire module full of complex code that is only used for debugging.
And as I continue to work on coverage, I keep finding that this debug code is constantly causing more trouble than it's worth. It's deeply entangled with current implementation details, such that making any non-trivial change to the instrumentor usually requires major changes to the debug code. And so far I have personally not found any of this debug code to be *useful*.
In light of that situation, I'd like to try just ripping all of it out. If I spend any more time dealing with coverage debug code, I want it to be because I'm writing new and useful tools, not dutifully maintaining a boat-anchor that quite plausibly isn't being used by anyone at all.
---
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` label +A-code-coverage
---
[Zulip thread](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Removing.20debug.20code.20from.20the.20coverage.20instrumentor)
Correctly deny late-bound lifetimes from parent in anon consts and TAITs
Reuse the `AnonConstBoundary` scope (introduced in #108553, renamed in this PR to `LateBoundary`) to deny late-bound vars of *all* kinds (ty/const/lifetime) in anon consts and TAITs.
Side-note, but I would like to consolidate this with the error reporting for RPITs (E0657):
c4f25777a0/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis/src/collect/resolve_bound_vars.rs (L733-L754) but the semantics about what we're allowed to capture there are slightly different, so I'm leaving that untouched.
Fixes#115474
Custom code classes in docs warning
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115938.
This PR does two things:
1. Unless the `custom_code_classes_in_docs` feature is enabled, it will use the old codeblock tag parser.
2. If there is a codeblock tag that starts with a `.`, it will emit a behaviour change warning.
Hopefully this is the last missing part for this feature until stabilization.
Follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110800.
r? `@notriddle`
Detect cycle errors hidden by opaques during monomorphization
Opaque types may reveal to projections, which themselves normalize to opaques. We don't currently normalize when checking that opaques are cyclical, and we may also not know that the opaque is cyclical until monomorphization (see `tests/ui/type-alias-impl-trait/mututally-recursive-overflow.rs`).
Detect cycle errors in `normalize_projection_ty` and report a fatal overflow (in the old solver). Luckily, this is already detected as a fatal overflow in the new solver.
Fixes#112047
rustc_target/riscv: Fix passing of transparent unions with only one non-ZST member
This ensures that `MaybeUninit<T>` has the same ABI as `T` when passed through an `extern "C"` function.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115481.
r? `@RalfJung`
Don't modify libstd to dump rustc ICEs
Do a much simpler thing and just dump a `std::backtrace::Backtrace` to file.
r? `@estebank` `@oli-obk`
Fixes#115610
move things out of mir/mod.rs
This moves a bunch of things out of `mir/mod.rs`:
- all const-related stuff to a new file consts.rs
- all statement/place/operand-related stuff to a new file statement.rs
- all pretty-printing related stuff to pretty.rs
`mod.rs` started out with 3100 lines and ends up with 1600. :)
Also there was some pretty-printing stuff in terminator.rs, that also got moved to pretty.rs, and I reordered things in pretty.rs so that it can be grouped by functionality.
Only the commit "use pretty_print_const_value from MIR constant 'extra' printing" has any behavior changes; it resolves the issue of having a fancy and a very crude pretty-printer for `ConstValue`.
r? `@oli-obk`
Don't complain on a single non-exhaustive 1-ZST
r? RalfJung, though you mentioned being busy, so feel free to reassign.
This doesn't actually attempt to make the diagnostic better, so when we have two non-exhaustive 1-ZSTs in a struct, we still just point to one. 🤷Fixes#115922
Explain HRTB + infer limitations of old solver
Add a helpful message when we hit the limitation of the old trait solver where we don't properly normalize GATs with infer vars + bound vars, leading to too-eagerly reporting trait errors that would be later satisfied due to inference.
Don't resolve generic impls that may be shadowed by dyn built-in impls
**NOTE:** This is a hack. This is not trying to be a general fix for the issue that we've allowed overlapping built-in trait object impls and user-written impls for quite a long time, and traits like `Any` rely on this (#57893) -- this PR specifically aims to mitigate a new unsoundness that is uncovered by the MIR inliner (#114928) that interacts with this pre-existing issue.
Builtin `dyn Trait` impls may overlap with user-provided blanket impls (`impl<T: ?Sized> Trait for T`) in generic contexts. This leads to bugs when instances are resolved in polymorphic contexts, since we typically prefer object candidates over impl candidates.
This PR implements a (hacky) heuristic to `resolve_associated_item` to account for that unfortunate hole in the type system -- we now bail with ambiguity if we try to resolve a non-rigid instance whose self type is not known to be sized. This makes sure we can still inline instances like `impl<T: Sized> Trait for T`, which can never overlap with `dyn Trait`'s built-in impl, but we avoid inlining an impl that may be shadowed by a `dyn Trait`.
Fixes#114928
rustdoc-search: add support for type parameters
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
## Preview
* https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/advanced-search/rustdoc/read-documentation/search.html
* https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/advanced-search/std/index.html?search=option%3Coption%3CT%3E%3E%20-%3E%20option%3CT%3E
* https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/advanced-search/std/index.html?search=option%3CT%3E,%20E%20-%3E%20result%3CT,%20E%3E
* https://notriddle.com/rustdoc-html-demo-4/advanced-search/std/index.html?search=-%3E%20option%3CT%3E
## Description
When writing a type-driven search query in rustdoc, specifically one with more than one query element, non-existent types become generic parameters instead of auto-correcting (which is currently only done for single-element queries) or giving no result. You can also force a generic type parameter by writing `generic:T` (and can force it to not use a generic type parameter with something like `struct:T` or whatever, though if this happens it means the thing you're looking for doesn't exist and will give you no results).
There is no syntax provided for specifying type constraints for generic type parameters.
When you have a generic type parameter in a search query, it will only match up with generic type parameters in the actual function, not concrete types that match, not concrete types that implement a trait. It also strictly matches based on when they're the same or different, so `option<T>, option<U> -> option<U>` matches `Option::and`, but not `Option::or`. Similarly, `option<T>, option<T> -> option<T>` matches `Option::or`, but not `Option::and`.
## Motivation
This feature is motivated by the many "combinitor"-type functions found in generic libraries, such as Option, Future, Iterator, and Entry. These highly-generic functions have names that are almost completely arbitrary, and a type signature that tells you what it actually does.
This PR is a major step towards[^closure] being able to easily search for generic functions by their type signature instead of by name. Some examples of combinators that can be found using this PR (try them out in the preview):
* `option<option<T>> -> option<T>` returns Option::flatten
* `option<T> -> result<T>` returns Option::ok_or
* `option<result<T>> -> result<option<T>>` returns Option::transpose
* `entry<K, V>, FnOnce -> V` returns `Entry::or_insert_with` (and `or_insert_with_key`, since there's no way to specify the generics on FnOnce)
[^closure]:
For this feature to be as useful as it ought to be, you should be able to search for *trait-associated types* and *closures*. This PR does not implement either of these: they are **Future possibilities**.
Trait-associated types would allow queries like `option<T> -> iterator<item=T>` to return `Option::iter`. We should also allow `option<T> -> iterator<T>` to match the associated type version.
Closures would make a good way to query for things like `Option::map`. Closure support needs associated types to be represented in the search index, since `FnOnce() -> i32` desugars to `FnOnce<Output=i32, ()>`, so associated trait types should be implemented first. Also, we'd want to expose an easy way to query closures without specifying which of the three traits you want.
coverage: Fix an unstable-sort inconsistency in coverage spans
This code was calling `sort_unstable_by`, but failed to impose a total order on the initial spans. That resulted in unpredictable handling of closure spans, producing inconsistencies in the coverage maps and in user-visible coverage reports.
This PR fixes the problem by always sorting closure spans before otherwise-identical non-closure spans, and also switches to a stable sort in case the ordering is still not total.
---
In addition to the fix itself, this PR also contains a cleanup to the comparison function that I was working on when I discovered the bug.
Make `TyKind::Adt`'s `Debug` impl be more pretty
Currently `{:?}` on `Ty` for a `TyKind::Adt` would print as `Adt(Foo, [])`. This PR changes it to be `Foo` when there are no generics or `Foo<T>`/`Foo<T, U>` when there _are_ generics. Example from debug log:
`├─0ms DEBUG rustc_hir_analysis::astconv return=Bar<T/#0, U/#1>`
I should have done this in my initial PR for a prettier TyKind: Debug impl but I thought I would need to be accessing generics_of to figure out where in the "path" the generics would have to go??? but no, adts literally only have a single place the generics can go (on the end). Feel a bit silly about this :)
r? `@oli-obk`
Avoid blessing cargo deps's source code in ui tests
Before this PR, the source code of dependencies was included in UI test error messages whenever possible. Unfortunately, "whenever possible" means in some cases the source code wouldn't be injected, resulting in a test failure.
One such case is when `$CARGO_HOME` is remapped to something that is not present on disk [^1]. As the remapped path doesn't exist on disk, the source code wouldn't be showed in `tests/ui/issues/issue-21763.rs`:
```diff
= note: required for `hashbrown::raw::RawTable<(Rc<()>, Rc<()>)>` to implement `Send`
note: required because it appears within the type `HashMap<Rc<()>, Rc<()>, RandomState>`
--> $HASHBROWN_SRC_LOCATION
- |
-LL | pub struct HashMap<K, V, S = DefaultHashBuilder, A: Allocator + Clone = Global> {
- | ^^^^^^^
note: required because it appears within the type `HashMap<Rc<()>, Rc<()>>`
--> $SRC_DIR/std/src/collections/hash/map.rs:LL:COL
note: required by a bound in `foo`
```
This PR fixes the problem by always hiding dependencies source code in the error messages generated during UI tests. This is implemented with a new internal flag, `-Z ignore-directory-in-diagnostics-source-blocks=$path`, which compiletest passes during UI tests. Once this is merged, remapping the Cargo home will be supported.
This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.
[^1]: After being puzzled for a bit, I discovered why this never impacted `rust-lang/rust`: we don't remap `$CARGO_HOME` 😅. Instead, we set `$CARGO_HOME` to `/cargo` in CI, which sort-of-but-not-really achieves the same effect.
move required_consts check to general post-mono-check function
This factors some code that is common between the interpreter and the codegen backends into shared helper functions. Also as a side-effect the interpreter now uses the same `eval` functions as everyone else to get the evaluated MIR constants.
Also this is in preparation for another post-mono check that will be needed for (the current hackfix for) https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115709: ensuring that all locals are dynamically sized.
I didn't expect this to change diagnostics, but it's just cycle errors that change.
r? `@oli-obk`
This code was calling `sort_unstable_by`, but failed to impose a total order on
the initial spans. That resulted in unpredictable handling of closure spans,
producing inconsistencies in the coverage maps and in user-visible coverage
reports.
This patch fixes the problem by always sorting closure spans before
otherwise-identical non-closure spans, and also switches to a stable sort in
case the ordering is still not total.
Turn custom code classes in docs into warning
By habit, since it was a new feature gate, I added a check which emitted an error in case the new syntax was used. However, since rustdoc tags parser was accepting *everything*, using the "new" syntax should never ever emit errors. It now emits a warning.
Follow-up of #110800.
cc `@Manishearth`
r? `@notriddle`
repr(transparent): it's fine if the one non-1-ZST field is a ZST
This code currently gets rejected:
```rust
#[repr(transparent)]
struct MyType([u16; 0])
```
That clearly seems like a bug to me: `repr(transparent)` [got defined ](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77841#issuecomment-716575747) as having any number of 1-ZST fields plus optionally one more field; `MyType` clearly satisfies that definition.
This PR changes the `repr(transparent)` logic to actually match that definition.
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #114965 (Remove Drop impl of mpsc Receiver and (Sync)Sender)
- #115434 (make `Debug` impl for `ascii::Char` match that of `char`)
- #115477 (Stabilize the `Saturating` type)
- #115611 (add diagnostic for raw identifiers in format string)
- #115654 (improve PassMode docs)
- #115862 (Migrate `compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/callee.rs` to translatable diagnostics)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Make `.rmeta` file in `dep-info` have correct name (`lib` prefix)
Since `filename_for_metadata()` and
`OutputFilenames::path(OutputType::Metadata)` had different logic for the name of the metadata file, the `.d` file contained a file name different from the actual name used. Share the logic to fix the out-of-sync name.
Without this fix, the `.d` file contained
dash-separated_something-extra.rmeta: dash-separated.rs
instead of
libdash_separated_something-extra.rmeta: dash-separated.rs
which is the name of the file that is actually written by the compiler.
Worth noting: It took me several iterations to get all tests to pass, so I am relatively confident that this PR does not break anything.
Closes#68839
add diagnostic for raw identifiers in format string
Format strings don't support raw identifiers (e.g. `format!("{r#type}")`), but they do support keywords in the format string directly (e.g. `format!("{type}")`). This PR improves the error output when attempting to use a raw identifier in a format string and adds a machine-applicable suggestion to remove the `r#`.
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115466
`#[diagnostic::on_unimplemented]` without filters
This commit adds support for a `#[diagnostic::on_unimplemented]` attribute with the following options:
* `message` to customize the primary error message
* `note` to add a customized note message to an error message
* `label` to customize the label part of the error message
The relevant behavior is specified in [RFC-3366](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3366-diagnostic-attribute-namespace.html)
impl Step for IP addresses
ACP: rust-lang/libs-team#235
Note: since this is insta-stable, it requires an FCP.
Separating out from the bit operations PR since it feels logically disjoint, and so their FCPs can be separate.