report are not *necessary* cycles, but we'll work on refactoring them
over time. This overlaps with the cycle detection that astconv already
does: I left that code in because it gives a more targeted error
message, though perhaps less helpful in that it doesn't give the full
details of the cycle.
Fixes#22525
I wasn't sure if I should reuse `write::get_llvm_opt_level` or not. It returns an `llvm::CodeGenOptLevel`, which is the Rust binding for `CodeGenOpt::Level`. `lto.rs` is passing an optlevel to LLVM's `PassManagerBuilder`, which takes an unsigned int. `PassManagerBuilder`'s optlevel uses essentially the same enumeration (i.e. 0-3 with 2 as default), but it's implicit.
Adds `<module::Type>::method` support and makes `module::Type::method` a shorthand for it.
This is most of #16293, except that chaining multiple associated types is not yet supported.
It also fixes#22563 as `impl`s are no longer treated as modules in resolve.
Unfortunately, this is still a *[breaking-change]*:
* If you used a global path to a primitive type, i.e. `::bool`, `::i32` etc. - that was a bug I had to fix.
Solution: remove the leading `::`.
* If you passed explicit `impl`-side type parameters to an inherent method, e.g.:
```rust
struct Foo<T>(T);
impl<A, B> Foo<(A, B)> {
fn pair(a: A, b: B) -> Foo<(A, B)> { Foo((a, b)) }
}
Foo::<A, B>::pair(a, b)
// Now that is sugar for:
<Foo<A, B>>::pair(a, b)
// Which isn't valid because `Foo` has only one type parameter.
// Solution: replace with:
Foo::<(A, B)>::pair(a, b)
// And, if possible, remove the explicit type param entirely:
Foo::pair(a, b)
```
* If you used the `QPath`-related `AstBuilder` methods @hugwijst added in #21943.
The methods still exist, but `QPath` was replaced by `QSelf`, with the actual path stored separately.
Solution: unpack the pair returned by `cx.qpath` to get the two arguments for `cx.expr_qpath`.
Also, to ensure we do not let the dropck get skipped, ICE if cat_expr
errors when *not* in error state.
This is not known to be a breaking change (i.e. I do not know of a
current case that causes the new ICE to be exercised).