Commit Graph

418 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
6c33a0a2ec Auto merge of #88978 - bjorn3:move_symbol_interner_lock, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Move the Lock into symbol::Interner

This makes it easier to make the symbol interner (near) lock free in case of concurrent accesses in the future.

With https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87867 landed this shouldn't affect performance anymore.
2021-09-18 03:30:13 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
eb62779f2d
Rollup merge of #88954 - nbdd0121:panic3, r=oli-obk
Allow `panic!("{}", computed_str)` in const fn.

Special-case `panic!("{}", arg)` and translate it to `panic_display(&arg)`. `panic_display` will behave like `panic_any` in cosnt eval and behave like `panic!(format_args!("{}", arg))` in runtime.

This should bring Rust 2015 and 2021 to feature parity in terms of `const_panic`; and hopefully would unblock the stabilisation of #51999.

`@rustbot` modify labels: +T-compiler +T-libs +A-const-eval +A-const-fn

r? `@oli-obk`
2021-09-17 17:41:19 +02:00
bors
78a46efff0 Auto merge of #88832 - pcwalton:debug-unit-variant-fast-path, r=oli-obk
Introduce a fast path that avoids the `debug_tuple` abstraction when deriving Debug for unit-like enum variants.

The intent here is to allow LLVM to remove the switch entirely in favor of an
indexed load from a table of constant strings, which is likely what the
programmer would write in C. Unfortunately, LLVM currently doesn't perform this
optimization due to a bug, but there is [a
patch](https://reviews.llvm.org/D109565) that fixes this issue. I've verified
that, with that patch applied on top of this commit, Debug for unit-like tuple
variants becomes a load, reducing the O(n) code bloat to O(1).

Note that inlining `DebugTuple::finish()` wasn't enough to allow LLVM to
optimize the code properly; I had to avoid the abstraction entirely. Not using
the abstraction is likely better for compile time anyway.

Part of #88793.

r? `@oli-obk`
2021-09-17 01:00:11 +00:00
Manish Goregaokar
b66c9c3ac1
Rollup merge of #88875 - notriddle:notriddle/cleanup-unused-trait-selection, r=Mark-Simulacrum
cleanup(rustc_trait_selection): remove vestigial code from rustc_on_unimplemented

This isn't allowed by the validator, and seems to be unused.
When it was added in ed10a3faae,
it was used on `Sized`, and that usage is gone.
2021-09-16 10:57:19 -07:00
Manish Goregaokar
fb2d7dff80
Rollup merge of #88775 - pnkfelix:revert-anon-union-parsing, r=davidtwco
Revert anon union parsing

Revert PR #84571 and #85515, which implemented anonymous union parsing in a manner that broke the context-sensitivity for the `union` keyword and thus broke stable Rust code.

Fix #88583.
2021-09-15 14:56:58 -07:00
Gary Guo
11c0e58c74 Allow panic!("{}", computed_str) in const fn. 2021-09-15 21:56:43 +01:00
bjorn3
ccba8cb4bb Make two functions private 2021-09-15 18:46:53 +02:00
bjorn3
0ad8981945 Inline with_interner 2021-09-15 18:46:53 +02:00
bjorn3
05c09cb62d Move the Lock into symbol::Interner
This makes it easier to make the symbol interner (near) lock free in
case of concurrent accesses in the future.
2021-09-15 18:46:45 +02:00
bjorn3
8c7840e8cb Use a separate interner type for UniqueTypeId
Using symbol::Interner makes it very easy to mixup UniqueTypeId symbols
with the global interner. In fact the Debug implementation of
UniqueTypeId did exactly this.

Using a separate interner type also avoids prefilling the interner with
unused symbols and allow for optimizing the symbol interner for parallel
access without negatively affecting the single threaded module codegen.
2021-09-13 14:42:06 +02:00
Michael Howell
e1873ba007 cleanup(rustc_trait_selection): remove vestigial code from rustc_on_unimplemented
This isn't allowed by the validator, and seems to be unused.
When it was added in ed10a3faae,
it was used on `Sized`, and that usage is gone.
2021-09-11 16:42:42 -07:00
bors
547d9374d2 Auto merge of #84373 - cjgillot:resolve-span, r=michaelwoerister,petrochenkov
Encode spans relative to the enclosing item

The aim of this PR is to avoid recomputing queries when code is moved without modification.

MCP at https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/443

This is achieved by :
1. storing the HIR owner LocalDefId information inside the span;
2. encoding and decoding spans relative to the enclosing item in the incremental on-disk cache;
3. marking a dependency to the `source_span(LocalDefId)` query when we translate a span from the short (`Span`) representation to its explicit (`SpanData`) representation.

Since all client code uses `Span`, step 3 ensures that all manipulations
of span byte positions actually create the dependency edge between
the caller and the `source_span(LocalDefId)`.
This query return the actual absolute span of the parent item.
As a consequence, any source code motion that changes the absolute byte position of a node will either:
- modify the distance to the parent's beginning, so change the relative span's hash;
- dirty `source_span`, and trigger the incremental recomputation of all code that
  depends on the span's absolute byte position.

With this scheme, I believe the dependency tracking to be accurate.

For the moment, the spans are marked during lowering.
I'd rather do this during def-collection,
but the AST MutVisitor is not practical enough just yet.
The only difference is that we attach macro-expanded spans
to their expansion point instead of the macro itself.
2021-09-11 23:35:28 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
c1e96085d3 don't clone types that are Copy (clippy::clone_on_copy) 2021-09-11 10:18:56 +02:00
Patrick Walton
79bc53870f Introduce a fast path that avoids the debug_tuple abstraction when deriving
Debug for unit-like enum variants.

The intent here is to allow LLVM to remove the switch entirely in favor of an
indexed load from a table of constant strings, which is likely what the
programmer would write in C. Unfortunately, LLVM currently doesn't perform this
optimization due to a bug, but there is [a
patch](https://reviews.llvm.org/D109565) that fixes this issue. I've verified
that, with that patch applied on top of this commit, Debug for unit-like tuple
variants becomes a load, reducing the O(n) code bloat to O(1).

Note that inlining `DebugTuple::finish()` wasn't enough to allow LLVM to
optimize the code properly; I had to avoid the abstraction entirely. Not using
the abstraction is likely better for compile time anyway.

Part of #88793.
2021-09-10 12:07:03 -07:00
Camille GILLOT
5e026eacb1 Remove some span tracking. 2021-09-10 20:19:07 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
940fa9251e Rename decode to data_untracked. 2021-09-10 20:18:22 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
b19ae20aad Track span dependency using a callback. 2021-09-10 20:18:18 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
e85ddeb474 Encode spans relative to their parent. 2021-09-10 20:18:11 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
00485e0c0e Keep a parent LocalDefId in SpanData. 2021-09-10 20:17:33 +02:00
Fabian Wolff
79adda930f Ignore automatically derived impls of Clone and Debug in dead code analysis 2021-09-09 19:49:07 +02:00
Felix S. Klock II
91feb76d13 Revert "Implement Anonymous{Struct, Union} in the AST"
This reverts commit 059b68dd67.

Note that this was manually adjusted to retain some of the refactoring
introduced by commit 059b68dd67, so that it could
likewise retain the correction introduced in commit
5b4bc05fa5
2021-09-09 09:14:17 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
b4e7649d6d Bump stage0 compiler to 1.56 2021-09-08 20:51:05 -04:00
bors
97f2698484 Auto merge of #88363 - michaelwoerister:remapped-diagnostics, r=estebank
Path remapping: Make behavior of diagnostics output dependent on presence of --remap-path-prefix.

This PR fixes a regression (#87745) with `--remap-path-prefix` where the flag stopped causing diagnostic messages to be remapped as well. The regression was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83813 where we erroneously assumed that remapping of diagnostic messages was not desired anymore (because #70642 partially undid that functionality with nobody objecting).

The issue is fixed by making `--remap-path-prefix` remap diagnostic messages again, including for paths that have been remapped in upstream crates (e.g. the standard library). This means that "sysroot-localization" (implemented in #70642) is also disabled if `rustc` is invoked with `--remap-path-prefix`. The assumption is that once someone starts explicitly remapping paths they also don't want paths to their local Rust installation in their build output.

In the future we might want to give more fine-grained control over this behavior via compiler flags (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3127 for a related RFC). For now this PR is intended as a regression fix.

This PR is an alternative to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88191, which makes diagnostic messages be remapped unconditionally. That approach, however, would effectively revert #70642.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87745.

cc `@cbeuw`
r? `@ghost`
2021-09-03 00:23:10 +00:00
Mara Bos
494c563f3b
Rollup merge of #88350 - programmerjake:add-ppc-cr-xer-clobbers, r=Amanieu
add support for clobbering xer, cr, and cr[0-7] for asm! on OpenPower/PowerPC

Fixes #88315
2021-09-01 09:23:26 +02:00
bors
c2a408840a Auto merge of #87688 - camsteffen:let-else, r=cjgillot
Introduce `let...else`

Tracking issue: #87335

The trickiest part for me was enforcing the diverging else block with clear diagnostics. Perhaps the obvious solution is to expand to `let _: ! = ..`, but I decided against this because, when a "mismatched type" error is found in typeck, there is no way to trace where in the HIR the expected type originated, AFAICT. In order to pass down this information, I believe we should introduce `Expectation::LetElseNever(HirId)` or maybe add `HirId` to `Expectation::HasType`, but I left that as a future enhancement. For now, I simply assert that the block is `!` with a custom `ObligationCauseCode`, and I think this is clear enough, at least to start. The downside here is that the error points at the entire block rather than the specific expression with the wrong type. I left a todo to this effect.

Overall, I believe this PR is feature-complete with regard to the RFC.
2021-09-01 01:02:42 +00:00
Mara Bos
2a06daa863 Pull Span::find_ancestor_inside loop into its own function. 2021-08-31 16:25:51 +02:00
bors
1e37e83dc0 Auto merge of #88414 - Aaron1011:guess-foreign-head-span, r=estebank
Don't use `guess_head_span` in `predicates_of` for foreign span

Previously, the result of `predicates_of` for a foreign trait
would depend on the *current* state of the corresponding source
file in the foreign crate. This could lead to ICEs during incremental
compilation, since the on-disk contents of the upstream source file
could potentially change without the upstream crate being recompiled.

Additionally, this ensure that that the metadata we produce for a crate
only depends on its *compiled* upstream dependencies (e.g an rlib or
rmeta file), *not* the current on-disk state of the upstream crate
source files.
2021-08-31 03:34:22 +00:00
Cameron Steffen
960ea093ab Add let_else feature gate 2021-08-30 20:18:39 -05:00
Cameron Steffen
ae32e88909 Lower let-else to HIR 2021-08-30 20:17:46 -05:00
bors
56ea5e0ee9 Auto merge of #88100 - HTG-YT:edition2021-compopt-stabilization, r=m-ou-se
Make Edition 2021 Stable

An item of #87959.

This is an "on-demand" pull request, which means it will be merged when it is the right time to.
2021-08-31 01:03:55 +00:00
Mara Bos
6adbbb6be7 Update LATEST_STABLE_EDITION to 2021. 2021-08-30 15:33:09 +02:00
HTG-YT
388d90ac4c make edition 2021 stable 2021-08-30 15:27:00 +02:00
lcnr
87e781799a feature(const_param_types) -> feature(adt_const_params) 2021-08-30 12:07:36 +02:00
lcnr
0c28e028b6 feature(const_generics) -> feature(const_param_types) 2021-08-30 11:00:21 +02:00
Ellen
fcc2badf9b rename const_evaluatable_checked to generic_const_exprs
2021-08-30 11:00:21 +02:00
Aaron Hill
c9157efad6
Don't use guess_head_span in predicates_of for foreign span
Previously, the result of `predicates_of` for a foreign trait
would depend on the *current* state of the corresponding source
file in the foreign crate. This could lead to ICEs during incremental
compilation, since the on-disk contents of the upstream source file
could potentially change without the upstream crate being recompiled.

Additionally, this ensure that that the metadata we produce for a crate
only depends on its *compiled* upstream dependencies (e.g an rlib or
rmeta file), *not* the current on-disk state of the upstream crate
source files.
2021-08-27 23:19:49 -05:00
Michael Woerister
af1b65cb18 Path remapping: Make behavior of diagnostics output dependent on presence of --remap-path-prefix. 2021-08-27 11:50:44 +02:00
Jacob Lifshay
5802f60355 add support for clobbering xer, cr, and cr[0-7] for asm! on OpenPower/PowerPC
Fixes #88315
2021-08-25 22:08:27 -07:00
Léo Lanteri Thauvin
fde1b76b4b Use if-let guards in the codebase 2021-08-25 20:24:35 +02:00
Frank Steffahn
2f9ddf3bc7 Fix typos “an”→“a” and a few different ones that appeared in the same search 2021-08-22 18:15:49 +02:00
Guillaume Gomez
09d56a749c
Rollup merge of #88050 - Aaron1011:filename-hash-stable, r=michaelwoerister
Remove `HashStable` impls for `FileName` and `RealFileName`

These impls were unused, and incorrectly hashed the local
(non-remapped) path for `RealFileName::Remapped` (which would
break reproducible builds if these impls were used).
2021-08-19 19:30:07 +02:00
bors
0035d9dcec Auto merge of #87050 - jyn514:no-doc-primitive, r=manishearth
Add future-incompat lint for `doc(primitive)`

## What is `doc(primitive)`?

`doc(primitive)` is an attribute recognized by rustdoc which adds documentation for the built-in primitive types, such as `usize` and `()`. It has been stable since Rust 1.0.

## Why change anything?

`doc(primitive)` is useless for anyone outside the standard library. Since rustdoc provides no way to combine the documentation on two different primitive items, you can only replace the docs, and since the standard library already provides extensive documentation there is no reason to do so.

While fixing rustdoc's handling of primitive items (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87073) I discovered that even rustdoc's existing handling of primitive items was broken if you had more than two crates using it (it would pick randomly between them). That meant both:
- Keeping rustdoc's existing treatment was nigh-impossible, because it was random.
- doc(primitive) was even more useless than it would otherwise be.

The only use-case for this outside the standard library is for no-std libraries which want to link to primitives (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/73423) which is being fixed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87073.

https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87073 makes various breaking changes to `doc(primitive)` (breaking in the sense that they change the semantics, not in that they cause code to fail to compile). It's not possible to avoid these and still fix rustdoc's issues.

## What can we do about it?

As shown by the crater run (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87050#issuecomment-886166706), no one is actually using doc(primitive), there wasn't a single true regression in the whole run. We can either:
1. Feature gate it completely, breaking anyone who crater missed. They can easily fix the breakage just by removing the attribute.
2. add it to the `INVALID_DOC_ATTRIBUTES` future-incompat lint, and at the same time make it a no-op unless you add a feature gate. That would mean rustdoc has to look at the features of dependent crates, because it needs to know where primitives are defined in order to link to them.
3. add it to `INVALID_DOC_ATTRIBUTES`, but still use it to determine where primitives come from
4. do nothing; the behavior will silently change in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87073.

My preference is for 2, but I would also be happy with 1 or 3. I don't think we should silently change the behavior.

This PR currently implements 3.
2021-08-16 15:36:44 +00:00
bors
92f3753b07 Auto merge of #84039 - jyn514:uplift-atomic-ordering, r=wesleywiser
Uplift the invalid_atomic_ordering lint from clippy to rustc

This is mostly just a rebase of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/79654; I've copy/pasted the text from that PR below.

r? `@lcnr` since you reviewed the last one, but feel free to reassign.

---

This is an implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/390.

As mentioned, in general this turns an unconditional runtime panic into a (compile time) lint failure. It has no false positives, and the only false negatives I'm aware of are if `Ordering` isn't specified directly and is comes from an argument/constant/whatever.

As a result of it having no false positives, and the alternative always being strictly wrong, it's on as deny by default. This seems right.

In the [zulip stream](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/233931-t-compiler.2Fmajor-changes/topic/Uplift.20the.20.60invalid_atomic_ordering.60.20lint.20from.20clippy/near/218483957) `@joshtriplett` suggested that lang team should FCP this before landing it. Perhaps libs team cares too?

---

Some notes on the code for reviewers / others below

## Changes from clippy

The code is changed from [the implementation in clippy](68cf94f6a6/clippy_lints/src/atomic_ordering.rs) in the following ways:

1. Uses `Symbols` and `rustc_diagnostic_item`s instead of string literals.
    - It's possible I should have just invoked Symbol::intern for some of these instead? Seems better to use symbol, but it did require adding several.
2. The functions are moved to static methods inside the lint struct, as a way to namespace them.
    - There's a lot of other code in that file — which I picked as the location for this lint because `@jyn514` told me that seemed reasonable.
3. Supports unstable AtomicU128/AtomicI128.
    - I did this because it was almost easier to support them than not — not supporting them would have (ideally) required finding a way not to give them a `rustc_diagnostic_item`, which would have complicated an already big macro.
    - These don't have tests since I wasn't sure if/how I should make tests conditional on whether or not the target has the atomic... This is to a certain extent an issue of 64bit atomics too, but 128-bit atomics are much less common. Regardless, the existing tests should be *more* than thorough enough here.
4. Minor changes like:
    - grammar tweaks ("loads cannot have `Release` **and** `AcqRel` ordering" => "loads cannot have `Release` **or** `AcqRel` ordering")
    - function renames (`match_ordering_def_path` => `matches_ordering_def_path`),
    - avoiding clippy-specific helper methods that don't exist in rustc_lint and didn't seem worth adding for this case (for example `cx.struct_span_lint` vs clippy's `span_lint_and_help` helper).

## Potential issues

(This is just about the code in this PR, not conceptual issues with the lint or anything)

1. I'm not sure if I should have used a diagnostic item for `Ordering` and its variants (I couldn't figure out how really, so if I should do this some pointers would be appreciated).
    - It seems possible that failing to do this might possibly mean there are more cases this lint would miss, but I don't really know how `match_def_path` works and if it has any pitfalls like that, so maybe not.

2. I *think* I deprecated the lint in clippy (CC `@flip1995` who asked to be notified about clippy changes in the future in [this comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/75671#issuecomment-718731659)) but I'm not sure if I need to do anything else there.
    - I'm kind of hoping CI will catch if I missed anything, since `x.py test src/tools/clippy` fails with a lot of errors with and without my changes (and is probably a nonsense command regardless). Running `cargo test` from src/tools/clippy also fails with unrelated errors that seem like refactorings that didnt update clippy? So, honestly no clue.

3. I wasn't sure if the description/example I gave good. Hopefully it is. The example is less thorough than the one from clippy here: https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#invalid_atomic_ordering. Let me know if/how I should change it if it needs changing.

4. It pulls in the `if_chain` crate. This crate was already used in clippy, and seems like it's used elsewhere in rustc, but I'm willing to rewrite it to not use this if needed (I'd prefer not to, all things being equal).
2021-08-16 06:36:13 +00:00
Joshua Nelson
03df65497e feature gate doc(primitive) 2021-08-16 05:41:16 +00:00
Thom Chiovoloni
402a9c9f5e Uplift the invalid_atomic_ordering lint from clippy to rustc
- Deprecate clippy::invalid_atomic_ordering
- Use rustc_diagnostic_item for the orderings in the invalid_atomic_ordering lint
- Reduce code duplication
- Give up on making enum variants diagnostic items and just look for
`Ordering` instead

  I ran into tons of trouble with this because apparently the change to
  store HIR attrs in a side table also gave the DefIds of the
  constructor instead of the variant itself. So I had to change
  `matches_ordering` to also check the grandparent of the defid as well.

- Rename `atomic_ordering_x` symbols to just the name of the variant
- Fix typos in checks - there were a few places that said "may not be
  Release" in the diagnostic but actually checked for SeqCst in the lint.
- Make constant items const
- Use fewer diagnostic items
- Only look at arguments after making sure the method matches

  This prevents an ICE when there aren't enough arguments.

- Ignore trait methods
- Only check Ctors instead of going through `qpath_res`

  The functions take values, so this couldn't ever be anything else.

- Add if_chain to allowed dependencies
- Fix grammar
- Remove unnecessary allow
2021-08-16 03:55:27 +00:00
Aaron Hill
d8c3a649a6
Remove HashStable impls for FileName and RealFileName
These impls were unused, and incorrectly hashed the local
(non-remapped) path for `RealFileName::Remapped` (which would
break reproducible builds if these impls were used).
2021-08-15 10:48:53 -05:00
bors
85109e257a Auto merge of #87581 - Amanieu:asm_clobber_abi, r=nagisa
Add support for clobber_abi to asm!

This PR adds the `clobber_abi` feature that was proposed in #81092.

Fixes #81092

cc `@rust-lang/wg-inline-asm`

r? `@nagisa`
2021-08-14 22:29:27 +00:00
Gary Guo
1fb1643129 Implement black_box using intrinsic
The new implementation allows some `memcpy`s to be optimized away,
so the uninit value in ui/sanitize/memory.rs is constructed directly
onto the return place. Therefore the sanitizer now says that the
value is allocated by `main` rather than `random`.
2021-08-12 16:16:57 +01:00
Amanieu d'Antras
3fd463a5ca Add support for clobber_abi to asm! 2021-08-12 12:43:11 +01:00
bors
e91405b9d5 Auto merge of #87262 - dtolnay:negative, r=Aaron1011
Support negative numbers in Literal::from_str

proc_macro::Literal has allowed negative numbers in a single literal token ever since Rust 1.29, using https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/proc_macro/struct.Literal.html#method.isize_unsuffixed and similar constructors.

```rust
let lit = proc_macro::Literal::isize_unsuffixed(-10);
```

However, the suite of constructors on Literal is not sufficient for all use cases, for example arbitrary precision floats, or custom suffixes in FFI macros.

```rust
let lit = proc_macro::Literal::f64_unsuffixed(0.101001000100001000001000000100000001); // :(
let lit = proc_macro::Literal::i???_suffixed(10ulong); // :(
```

For those, macros construct the literal using from_str instead, which preserves arbitrary precision, custom suffixes, base, and digit grouping.

```rust
let lit = "0.101001000100001000001000000100000001".parse::<Literal>().unwrap();
let lit = "10ulong".parse::<Literal>().unwrap();
let lit = "0b1000_0100_0010_0001".parse::<Literal>().unwrap();
```

However, until this PR it was not possible to construct a literal token that is **both** negative **and** preserving of arbitrary precision etc.

This PR fixes `Literal::from_str` to recognize negative integer and float literals.
2021-08-03 04:50:28 +00:00