Instead of updating global state to mark attributes as used,
we now explicitly emit a warning when an attribute is used in
an unsupported position. As a side effect, we are to emit more
detailed warning messages (instead of just a generic "unused" message).
`Session.check_name` is removed, since its only purpose was to mark
the attribute as used. All of the callers are modified to use
`Attribute.has_name`
Additionally, `AttributeType::AssumedUsed` is removed - an 'assumed
used' attribute is implemented by simply not performing any checks
in `CheckAttrVisitor` for a particular attribute.
We no longer emit unused attribute warnings for the `#[rustc_dummy]`
attribute - it's an internal attribute used for tests, so it doesn't
mark sense to treat it as 'unused'.
With this commit, a large source of global untracked state is removed.
Allow a unique name to be assigned to dataflow graphviz output
Previously, if the same analysis were invoked multiple times in a single compilation session, the graphviz output for later runs would overwrite that of previous runs. Allow callers to add a unique identifier to each run so this can be avoided.
Alternative to PR ##76776.
To change the graphviz output to use an alternative `fontname` value,
add a command line option like: `rustc --graphviz-font=monospace`.
Many developers use a dark theme with editors and IDEs, but this
typically doesn't extend to graphviz output.
When I bring up a MIR graphviz document, the white background is
strikingly bright. This new option changes the colors used for graphviz
output to work better in dark-themed UIs.
I've tried a few ways of implementing this, but each fell short.
Adding an auxiliary `_Idx` associated type to `Analysis` that defaults
to `!` but is overridden in the blanket impl of `Analysis` for `A:
GenKillAnalysis` to `A::Idx` seems promising, but the trait solver is
unable to prove equivalence between `A::Idx` and `A::_Idx` within the
overridden version of `into_engine`. Without full-featured
specialization, removing `into_engine` or splitting it into a different
trait would have a significant ergonomic penalty.
Alternatively, we could erase the index type and store a
`GenKillSet<u32>` as well as a function pointer for transmuting between
`&mut A::Domain` and `&mut BitSet<u32>` in the hopes that LLVM can
devirtualize a simple function pointer better than the boxed closure.
However, this is brittle, requires `unsafe` code, and doesn't work for
index types that aren't the same size as a `u32` (e.g. `usize`) since
`GenKillSet` stores a `HybridBitSet`, which may be a `Vec<I>`. Perhaps
safe transmute could help here?