Make fields of `Span` private
I actually tried to intern spans and benchmark the result<sup>*</sup>, and this was a prerequisite.
This kind of encapsulation will be a prerequisite for any other attempt to compress span's representation, so I decided to submit this change alone.
The issue https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43088 seems relevant, but it looks like `SpanId` won't be able to reuse this interface, unless the tables are global (like interner that I tried) and are not a part of HIR.
r? @michaelwoerister anyway
<sup>*</sup> Interning means 2-3 times more space is required for a single span, but duplicates are free. In practice it turned out that duplicates are not *that* common, so more memory was wasted by interning rather than saved.
Remove the trait selection impl in method::probe
This removes the hacky trait selection reimplementation in `method::probe`, which occasionally comes and causes problems.
There are 2 issues I've found with this approach:
1. The older implementation sometimes had a "guess" type from an impl, which allowed subtyping to work. This is why I needed to make a change in `libtest`: there's an `impl<A> Clone for fn(A)` and we're calling `<for<'a> fn(&'a T) as Clone>::clone`. The older implementation would do a subtyping between the impl type and the trait type, so it would do the check for `<fn(A) as Clone>::clone`, and confirmation would continue with the subtyping. The newer implementation directly passes `<for<'a> fn(&'a T) as Clone>::clone` to selection, which fails. I'm not sure how big of a problem that would be in reality, especially after #43690 would remove the `Clone` problem, but I still want a crater run to avoid breaking the world.
2. The older implementation "looked into" impls to display error messages. I'm not sure that's an advantage - it looked exactly 1 level deep.
r? @eddyb
rustbuild: Avoid some extraneous rustc compiles on cross builds
This tweaks a few locations here and there to avoid compiling rustc too many times on our cross-builders on CI.
Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44132
Rename the rls component to rls-preview on beta/stable
Background is that we will have automatic renaming with the next rustup release. We'll then rename rls to rls-preview. In the meantime, this ensures beta/stable users will always have rls-preview.
r? @alexcrichton
Fail ./x.py on invalid command
Make the ./x.py script fail when run with an invalid command, like:
```
./x.py nonsense
```
This helps in case of chaining multiple runs, eg.:
```
./x.py biuld && ./x.py test
```
Rewrite `std::net::ToSocketAddrs` doc examples.
in particular:
* show how to create an iterator that yields multiple socket addresses
* show more failing scenarios
done this as preliminary work while investigating https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/22569
note: i haven't run doc tests on my machine for this, so would be good to confirm CI passes before approving
include Cargo.{toml,lock} in rust-src tarball
The lock file is interesting because e.g. xargo could use it to build libstd against the same dependencies that were used for the main build. More generally speaking, just documenting in this form which exact dependencies should be used IMHO makes lots of sense.
I added the Cargo.toml mostly because having the lock without the toml feels odd. Of course, the toml contains references to paths that don't actually exist in the rust-src tarball. Not sure if that is considered a problem.
Don't highlight # which does not start an attribute in rustdoc
Currently when we highlight some macros for rustdoc (e.g. `quote!` from https://github.com/dtolnay/quote), we get really bad syntax highlighting, because we assume that every token between a `#` character and the next `]` in the source must be an attribute.
This patch improves that highlighting behavior to instead only highlight after finding the `[` token after the `#` token.
(NOTE: I've only run this patch against https://github.com/nrc/rustdoc-highlight so if it doesn't build on travis that's why - I don't have a recent rustc build on this laptop)
I'm guessing r? @steveklabnik
Fix alloc_jemalloc debug feature
At least, I think that's how it should be. 'debug' is how the feature is called in liballoc_jemalloc/Cargo.toml and libstd/Cargo.toml. I verified this by making the build script panic rather than adding `--enable-debug`, and without this PR, the panic does not occur even when I set `debug-jemalloc = true` in config.toml. With the PR, the panic occurs as expected.
However, I actually have no idea what I am doing here.
This allows caching closure signatures and kinds in the normal selection
and evaluation caches, and fixes the exponential worst-case in
@remram44's example, which is a part of #43787.
This improvement is complenentary to #43999 - they fix different cases.
feature error span on attribute for fn_must_use, SIMD/align reprs, macro reëxport
There were several feature-gated attributes for which the feature-not-available
error spans would point to the item annotated with the gated attribute, when it
would make more sense for the span to point to the attribute itself: if the
attribute is removed, the function/struct/_&c._ likely still makes sense and the
program will compile. (Note that we decline to make the analogous change for
the `main`, `start`, and `plugin_registrar` features, for in those cases it
makes sense for the span to implicate the entire function, of which there is
little hope of using without the gated attribute.)
![feature_attr_error_span](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1076988/29746531-fd700bfe-8a91-11e7-9c5b-6f5324083887.png)
std: Mark allocation functions as nounwind
This commit flags all allocation-related functions in liballoc as "this can't
unwind" which should largely resolve the size-related issues found on #42808.
The documentation on the trait was updated with such a restriction (they can't
panic) as well as some other words about the relative instability about
implementing a bullet-proof allocator.
Closes#42808
clear out projection subobligations after they are processed
After a projection was processed, its derived subobligations no longer
need any processing when encountered, and can be removed. This improves
the status of #43787.
This is actually complementary to #43938 - that PR fixes selection
caching (and @remram44's example, which "accidentally" worked because of
the buggy projection caching) while this PR fixes projection caching.
r? @nikomatsakis
Generator support
This adds experimental support for generators intended to land once https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2033 is approved.
This is not yet ready to be merged. Things to do:
- [x] Make closure arguments on generators an error
- [x] Spot FIXMEs
- [x] Pass make tidy
- [x] Write tests
- [x] Document the current syntax and semantics for generators somewhere
- [x] Use proper error message numbers
- [x] ~~Make the implicit argument type default to `()`~~
This commit flags all allocation-related functions in liballoc as "this can't
unwind" which should largely resolve the size-related issues found on #42808.
The documentation on the trait was updated with such a restriction (they can't
panic) as well as some other words about the relative instability about
implementing a bullet-proof allocator.
Closes#42808
Clarify that VecDeque::swap can panic
The previous documentation mentioned this, but ambiguously used the term "fail".
This clarifies that the function will panic if the index is out of bounds, instead of silently failing and not doing anything.
If there's anything else I can do to improve this PR, I'd be happy to do so! Just saw this when reading through the docs in passing - it was slightly unclear what "fail" meant.