Commit Graph

3823 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
bors
8327047b23 Auto merge of #113393 - compiler-errors:next-solver-unsize-rhs, r=lcnr
Normalize the RHS of an `Unsize` goal in the new solver

`Unsize` goals are... tricky. Not only do they structurally match on their self type, but they're also structural on their other type parameter. I'm pretty certain that it is both incomplete and also just plain undesirable to not consider normalizing the RHS of an unsize goal. More practically, I'd like for this code to work:

```rust
trait A {}
trait B: A {}

impl A for usize {}
impl B for usize {}

trait Mirror {
    type Assoc: ?Sized;
}

impl<T: ?Sized> Mirror for T {
    type Assoc = T;
}

fn main() {
    // usize: Unsize<dyn B>
    let x = Box::new(1usize) as Box<<dyn B as Mirror>::Assoc>;
    // dyn A: Unsize<dyn B>
    let y = x as Box<<dyn A as Mirror>::Assoc>;
}
```

---

In order to achieve this, we add `EvalCtxt::normalize_non_self_ty` (naming modulo bikeshedding), which *must* be used for all non-self type arguments that are structurally matched in candidate assembly. Currently this is only necessary for `Unsize`'s argument, but I could see future traits requiring this (hopefully rarely) in the future. It uses `repeat_while_none` to limit infinite looping, and normalizes the self type until it is no longer an alias.

Also, we need to fix feature gate detection for `trait_upcasting` and `unsized_tuple_coercion` when HIR typeck has unnormalized types. We can do that by checking the `ImplSource` returned by selection, which necessitates adding a new impl source for tuple upcasting.
2023-07-25 17:10:31 +00:00
Michael Goulet
24eefd08e2 Make sure to detect trait upcasting coercion even after normalization 2023-07-25 15:15:25 +00:00
Michael Goulet
7e66c0b7ed Normalize the RHS of an unsize goal 2023-07-25 15:15:25 +00:00
bors
4fc6b33474 Auto merge of #114011 - RalfJung:place-projection, r=oli-obk
interpret: Unify projections for MPlaceTy, PlaceTy, OpTy

For ~forever, we didn't really have proper shared code for handling projections into those three types. This is mostly because `PlaceTy` projections require `&mut self`: they might have to `force_allocate` to be able to represent a project part-way into a local.

This PR finally fixes that, by enhancing `Place::Local` with an `offset` so that such an optimized place can point into a part of a place without having requiring an in-memory representation. If we later write to that place, we will still do `force_allocate` -- for now we don't have an optimized path in `write_immediate` that would avoid allocation for partial overwrites of immediately stored locals. But in `write_immediate` we have `&mut self` so at least this no longer pollutes all our type signatures.

(Ironically, I seem to distantly remember that many years ago, `Place::Local` *did* have an `offset`, and I removed it to simplify things. I guess I didn't realize why it was so useful... I am also not sure if this was actually used to achieve place projection on `&self` back then.)

The `offset` had type `Option<Size>`, where `None` represent "no projection was applied". This is needed because locals *can* be unsized (when they are arguments) but `Place::Local` cannot store metadata: if the offset is `None`, this refers to the entire local, so we can use the metadata of the local itself (which must be indirect); if a projection gets applied, since the local is indirect, it will turn into a `Place::Ptr`. (Note that even for indirect locals we can have `Place::Local`: when the local appears in MIR, we always start with `Place::Local`, and only check `frame.locals` later. We could eagerly normalize to `Place::Ptr` but I don't think that would actually simplify things much.)

Having done all that, we can finally properly abstract projections: we have a new `Projectable` trait that has the basic methods required for projecting, and then all projection methods are implemented for anything that implements that trait. We can even implement it for `ImmTy`! (Not that we need that, but it seems neat.) The visitor can be greatly simplified; it doesn't need its own trait any more but it can use the `Projectable` trait. We also don't need the separate `Mut` visitor any more; that was required only to reflect that projections on `PlaceTy` needed `&mut self`.

It is possible that there are some more `&mut self` that can now become `&self`... I guess we'll notice that over time.

r? `@oli-obk`
2023-07-25 14:18:08 +00:00
Ralf Jung
4ea2bd1c8f bless more 2023-07-25 14:30:58 +02:00
Ralf Jung
a2bcafa500 interpret: refactor projection code to work on a common trait, and use that for visitors 2023-07-25 14:30:58 +02:00
bors
23405bb123 Auto merge of #113476 - fee1-dead-contrib:c-str-lit, r=petrochenkov
Reimplement C-str literals

This reverts #113334, cc `@fmease.`

While converting lexer tokens to ast Tokens in `rustc_parse`, we check the edition of the span of the token. If the edition < 2021, we split the token into two, one being the identifier and other being the str literal.
2023-07-25 12:04:34 +00:00
bors
5b1dc9de77 Auto merge of #113980 - bvanjoi:fix-113953, r=petrochenkov
fix(resolve): skip panic when resolution is dummy

Fixes #113953

Skip the panic when the binding refers to a dummy node during the finalization.

r? `@petrochenkov`
2023-07-25 05:25:11 +00:00
bors
beef07fe8f Auto merge of #113958 - lukas-code:doc-links, r=GuillaumeGomez,petrochenkov
fix intra-doc links on nested `use` and `extern crate` items

This PR fixes two rustdoc ICEs that happen if there are any intra-doc links on nested `use` or `extern crate` items, for example:
```rust
/// Re-export [`fmt`] and [`io`].
pub use std::{fmt, io}; // "nested" use = use with braces

/// Re-export [`std`].
pub extern crate std;
```

Nested use items were incorrectly considered private and therefore didn't have their intra-doc links resolved. I fixed this by always resolving intra-doc links for nested `use` items that are declared `pub`.

<details>

During AST->HIR lowering, nested `use` items are desugared like this:
```rust
pub use std::{}; // "list stem"
pub use std::fmt;
pub use std::io;
```
Each of these HIR nodes has it's own effective visibility and the list stem is always considered private.
To check the effective visibility of an AST node, the AST node is mapped to a HIR node with `Resolver::local_def_id`, which returns the (private) list stem for nested use items.

</details>

For `extern crate`, there was a hack in rustdoc that stored the `DefId` of the crate itself in the cleaned item, instead of the `DefId` of the `extern crate` item. This made rustdoc look at the resolved links of the extern crate's crate root instead of the `extern crate` item. I've removed this hack and instead translate the `DefId` in the appropriate places.

As as side effect of fixing `extern crate`, i've turned
```rust
#[doc(masked)]
extern crate self as _;
```
into a no-op instead of hiding all trait impls. Proper verification for `doc(masked)` is included as a bonus.

fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113896
2023-07-25 01:35:53 +00:00
bors
31395ec382 Auto merge of #113687 - saethlin:inline-assertion-helpers, r=cuviper
Add #[inline] to core debug assertion helpers

These functions are called a lot and not inlined by default in a dev compiler. Adding `#[inline]` should improve things in a dev workflow and be irrelevant in the distributed library.
2023-07-24 21:29:35 +00:00
bors
fd56162af0 Auto merge of #113921 - davidtwco:lint-ctypes-issue-113900, r=petrochenkov
lint/ctypes: only try normalize

Fixes #113900.

Now that this lint runs on any external-ABI fn-ptr, normalization won't always succeed, so use `try_normalize_erasing_regions` instead.
2023-07-24 19:40:01 +00:00
bohan
02f1f6a8a8 fix(resolve): skip panic when resolution is dummy 2023-07-25 01:34:03 +08:00
bors
fc8a3e357a Auto merge of #114024 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-uhdbq64, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 8 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #113969 (add dynamic for smir)
 - #113985 (Use erased self type when autoderefing for trait error suggestion)
 - #113987 (Comment stuff in the new solver)
 - #113992 (arm-none fixups)
 - #113993 (Optimize format usage)
 - #113994 (Optimize format usage)
 - #114006 (Update sparc-unknown-none-elf platform README)
 - #114021 (Add missing documentation for `Session::time`)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-07-24 17:13:24 +00:00
Lukas Markeffsky
637ea3f746 validate doc(masked) 2023-07-24 18:04:35 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
15c723433f
Rollup merge of #113985 - compiler-errors:issue-113951, r=estebank
Use erased self type when autoderefing for trait error suggestion

Let's not try to pass something from `skip_binder` into autoderef.

Fixes #113951
2023-07-24 17:47:08 +02:00
bors
cb6ab9516b Auto merge of #113956 - fmease:rustdoc-fix-x-crate-rpitits, r=GuillaumeGomez,compiler-errors
rustdoc: handle cross-crate RPITITs correctly

Filter out the internal associated types synthesized during the desugaring of RPITITs, they really shouldn't show up in the docs.

This also fixes #113929 since we're no longer invoking `is_impossible_associated_item` (renamed from `is_impossible_method`) which cannot handle them (leading to an ICE). I don't think it makes sense to try to make `is_impossible_associated_item` handle this exotic kind of associated type (CC original author `@compiler-errors).`

@ T-rustdoc reviewers, currently I'm throwing out ITIT assoc tys before cleaning assoc tys at each usage-site. I'm thinking about making `clean_middle_assoc_item` return an `Option<_>` instead and doing the check inside of it to prevent any call sites from forgetting the check for ITITs. Since I wasn't sure if you would like that approach, I didn't go through with it. Let me know what you think.

<details><summary>Explanation on why <code>is_impossible_associated_item(itit_assoc_ty)</code> leads to an ICE</summary>

Given the following code:

```rs
pub trait Trait { fn def<T>() -> impl Default {} }
impl Trait for () {}
```

The generated associated type looks something like (simplified):

```rs
type {opaque#0}<T>: Default = impl Default; // the name is actually `kw::Empty` but this is the `def_path_str` repr
```

The query `is_impossible_associated_item` goes through all predicates of the associated item – in this case `<T as Sized>` – to check if they contain any generic parameters from the (generic) associated type itself. For predicates that don't contain any *own* generics, it does further processing, part of which is instantiating the predicate with the generic arguments of the impl block (which is only correct if they truly don't contain any own generics since they wouldn't get instantiated this way leading to an ICE).

It checks if `parent_def_id(T) == assoc_ty_def_id` to get to know if `T` is owned by the assoc ty. Unfortunately this doesn't work for ITIT assoc tys. In this case, the parent of `T` is `Trait::def` (!) which is the associated function (I'm pretty sure this is very intentional) which is of course not equal to the assoc ty `Trait::{opaque#0}`.

</details>

`@rustbot` label A-cross-crate-reexports
2023-07-24 15:19:00 +00:00
Ralf Jung
a593de4fab interpret: support projecting into Place::Local without force_allocation 2023-07-24 15:35:47 +02:00
Michael Goulet
d1380a1844 Use erased self type when autoderefing for trait error suggestion 2023-07-23 14:13:52 -04:00
bors
8771282d4e Auto merge of #113976 - GuillaumeGomez:migrate-gui-test-color-23, r=notriddle
Migrate GUI colors test to original CSS color format

Follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111459.

r? `@notriddle`
2023-07-23 17:46:36 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
e06633fde6 Migrate GUI colors test to original CSS color format 2023-07-23 13:05:40 +02:00
Deadbeef
0d9c871736 add proc macro test 2023-07-23 10:09:43 +00:00
Deadbeef
df9bd80d74 reimplement C string literals 2023-07-23 06:54:07 +00:00
bors
1c44af9b79 Auto merge of #111836 - calebzulawski:target-feature-closure, r=workingjubilee
Fix #[inline(always)] on closures with target feature 1.1

Fixes #108655.  I think this is the most obvious solution that isn't overly complicated.  The comment includes more justification, but I think this is likely better than demoting the `#[inline(always)]` to `#[inline]`, since existing code is unaffected.
2023-07-23 00:16:03 +00:00
bors
1d56e3a6d9 Auto merge of #112953 - compiler-errors:interpolated-block-exprs, r=WaffleLapkin
Support interpolated block for `try` and `async`

I'm putting this up for T-lang discussion, to decide whether or not they feel like this should be supported. This was raised in #112952, which surprised me. There doesn't seem to be a *technical* reason why we don't support this.

### Precedent:

This is supported:

```rust
macro_rules! always {
  ($block:block) => {
    if true $block
  }
}

fn main() {
    always!({});
}
```

### Counterpoint:

However, for context, this is *not* supported:

```rust
macro_rules! unsafe_block {
  ($block:block) => {
    unsafe $block
  }
}

fn main() {
    unsafe_block!({});
}
```

If this support for `async` and `try` with interpolated blocks is *not* desirable, then I can convert them to instead the same diagnostic as `unsafe $block` and make this situation a lot less ambiguous.

----

I'll try to write up more before T-lang triage on Tuesday. I couldn't find anything other than #69760 for why something like `unsafe $block` is not supported, and even that PR doesn't have much information.

Fixes #112952
2023-07-22 20:37:44 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
52153432a8
Rollup merge of #113959 - GuillaumeGomez:migrate-gui-test-color-22, r=notriddle
Migrate GUI colors test to original CSS color format

Follow-up of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/111459.

r? `@notriddle`
2023-07-22 19:57:38 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
b7183bd167
Rollup merge of #113957 - Urgau:regression-test-issue-113941, r=dtolnay
Add regression test for issue #113941 - naive layout isn't refined

This PR adds a regression test for issue #113941 - `the naive layout isn't refined by the actual layout` based on the minimized repro https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113941#issuecomment-1646446769.
2023-07-22 19:57:37 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
0ed5f091a6
Rollup merge of #112508 - compiler-errors:trait-sig-lifetime-sugg-ice, r=cjgillot
Tweak spans for self arg, fix borrow suggestion for signature mismatch

1. Adjust a suggestion message that was annoying me
2. Fix #112503 by recording the right spans for the `self` part of the `&self` 0th argument
3. Remove the suggestion for adjusting a trait signature on type mismatch, bc that's gonna probably break all the other impls of the trait even if it fixes its one usage 😅
2023-07-22 19:57:35 +02:00
Ben Kimock
65e52bb26c Add #[inline] to core debug assertion helpers 2023-07-22 12:07:06 -04:00
Michael Goulet
7b962d7543 Support interpolated block for try and async 2023-07-22 15:22:12 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
d4ce83c385 Migrate GUI colors test to original CSS color format 2023-07-22 14:01:23 +02:00
Urgau
ffa4b6f422 Add regression test for issue #113941 - naive layout isn't refined 2023-07-22 13:02:59 +02:00
Lukas Markeffsky
237ed1630f add tests for broken links in unused doc strings 2023-07-22 13:02:49 +02:00
Lukas Markeffsky
bb98f3ad4d fix doc links on extern crate items 2023-07-22 12:27:25 +02:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
5924043b86
rustdoc: handle cross-crate RPITITs correctly 2023-07-22 12:20:17 +02:00
Lukas Markeffsky
9ebd8095fa fix doc links on use items 2023-07-22 12:14:26 +02:00
David Tolnay
5bbf0a8306
Revert "Auto merge of #113166 - moulins:ref-niches-initial, r=oli-obk"
This reverts commit 557359f925, reversing
changes made to 1e6c09a803.
2023-07-21 22:35:57 -07:00
Miguel Ojeda
74b8d324eb Support .comment section like GCC/Clang (!llvm.ident)
Both GCC and Clang write by default a `.comment` section with compiler
information:

```txt
$ gcc -c -xc /dev/null && readelf -p '.comment' null.o

String dump of section '.comment':
  [     1]  GCC: (GNU) 11.2.0

$ clang -c -xc /dev/null && readelf -p '.comment' null.o

String dump of section '.comment':
  [     1]  clang version 14.0.1 (https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.git c62053979489ccb002efe411c3af059addcb5d7d)
```

They also implement the `-Qn` flag to avoid doing so:

```txt
$ gcc -Qn -c -xc /dev/null && readelf -p '.comment' null.o
readelf: Warning: Section '.comment' was not dumped because it does not exist!

$ clang -Qn -c -xc /dev/null && readelf -p '.comment' null.o
readelf: Warning: Section '.comment' was not dumped because it does not exist!
```

So far, `rustc` only does it for WebAssembly targets and only
when debug info is enabled:

```txt
$ echo 'fn main(){}' | rustc --target=wasm32-unknown-unknown --emit=llvm-ir -Cdebuginfo=2 - && grep llvm.ident rust_out.ll
!llvm.ident = !{!27}
```

In the RFC part of this PR it was decided to always add
the information, which gets us closer to other popular compilers.
An opt-out flag like GCC and Clang may be added later on if deemed
necessary.

Implementation-wise, this covers both `ModuleLlvm::new()` and
`ModuleLlvm::new_metadata()` cases by moving the addition to
`context::create_module` and adds a few test cases.

ThinLTO also sees the `llvm.ident` named metadata duplicated (in
temporary outputs), so this deduplicates it like it is done for
`wasm.custom_sections`. The tests also check this duplication does
not take place.

Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
2023-07-21 22:01:50 +02:00
bors
c3c5a5c5f7 Auto merge of #113922 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-90cj2vv, r=matthiaskrgr
Rollup of 4 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #113887 (new solver: add a separate cache for coherence)
 - #113910 (Add FnPtr ty to SMIR)
 - #113913 (error/E0691: include alignment in error message)
 - #113914 (rustc_target: drop duplicate code)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2023-07-21 16:52:21 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4a90553717
Rollup merge of #113913 - dvdhrm:pr/transpalign, r=jackh726
error/E0691: include alignment in error message

Include the computed alignment of the violating field when rejecting transparent types with non-trivially aligned ZSTs.

ZST member fields in transparent types must have an alignment of 1 (to ensure it does not raise the layout requirements of the transparent field). The current error message looks like this:

```text
 LL | struct Foobar(u32, [u32; 0]);
    |                    ^^^^^^^^ has alignment larger than 1
```

This patch changes the report to include the alignment of the violating field:

```text
 LL | struct Foobar(u32, [u32; 0]);
    |                    ^^^^^^^^ has alignment of 4, which is larger than 1
```

In case of unknown alignments, it will yield:

```text
 LL | struct Foobar(u32, [u32; 0]);
    |                    ^^^^^^^^ may have alignment larger than 1
```

This allows developers to get a better grasp why a specific field is rejected. Knowing the alignment of the violating field makes it easier to judge where that alignment-requirement originates, and thus hopefully provide better hints on how to mitigate the problem.

This idea was proposed in 2022 in #98071 as part of a bigger change. This commit simply extracts this error-message change, to decouple it from the other diagnostic improvements.

(Originally proposed by `@compiler-errors` in #98071)
2023-07-21 17:17:42 +02:00
bors
557359f925 Auto merge of #113166 - moulins:ref-niches-initial, r=oli-obk
Prototype: Add unstable `-Z reference-niches` option

MCP: rust-lang/compiler-team#641
Relevant RFC: rust-lang/rfcs#3204

This prototype adds a new `-Z reference-niches` option, controlling the range of valid bit-patterns for reference types (`&T` and `&mut T`), thereby enabling new enum niching opportunities. Like `-Z randomize-layout`, this setting is crate-local; as such, references to built-in types (primitives, tuples, ...) are not affected.

The possible settings are (here, `MAX` denotes the all-1 bit-pattern):
| `-Z reference-niches=` | Valid range |
|:---:|:---:|
| `null` (the default) | `1..=MAX` |
| `size` | `1..=(MAX- size)` |
| `align` | `align..=MAX.align_down_to(align)` |
| `size,align` | `align..=(MAX-size).align_down_to(align)` |

------

This is very WIP, and I'm not sure the approach I've taken here is the best one, but stage 1 tests pass locally; I believe this is in a good enough state to unleash this upon unsuspecting 3rd-party code, and see what breaks.
2023-07-21 15:00:36 +00:00
David Wood
09434a2575
lint/ctypes: only try normalize
Now that this lint runs on any external-ABI fn-ptr, normalization won't
always succeed, so use `try_normalize_erasing_regions` instead.

Signed-off-by: David Wood <david@davidtw.co>
2023-07-21 15:42:25 +01:00
Moulins
7f109086ee Track (partial) niche information in NaiveLayout
Still more complexity, but this allows computing exact `NaiveLayout`s
for null-optimized enums, and thus allows calls like
`transmute::<Option<&T>, &U>()` to work in generic contexts.
2023-07-21 14:23:23 +02:00
David Rheinsberg
b0dadff6de error/E0691: include alignment in error message
Include the computed alignment of the violating field when rejecting
transparent types with non-trivially aligned ZSTs.

ZST member fields in transparent types must have an alignment of 1 (to
ensure it does not raise the layout requirements of the transparent
field). The current error message looks like this:

 LL | struct Foobar(u32, [u32; 0]);
    |                    ^^^^^^^^ has alignment larger than 1

This patch changes the report to include the alignment of the violating
field:

 LL | struct Foobar(u32, [u32; 0]);
    |                    ^^^^^^^^ has alignment of 4, which is larger than 1

In case of unknown alignments, it will yield:

 LL | struct Foobar<T>(u32, [T; 0]);
    |                       ^^^^^^ may have alignment larger than 1

This allows developers to get a better grasp why a specific field is
rejected. Knowing the alignment of the violating field makes it easier
to judge where that alignment-requirement originates, and thus hopefully
provide better hints on how to mitigate the problem.

This idea was proposed in 2022 in #98071 as part of a bigger change.
This commit simply extracts this error-message change, to decouple it
from the other diagnostic improvements.
2023-07-21 11:04:16 +02:00
Matthias Krüger
b1d1e99c22
Rollup merge of #113780 - dtolnay:printkindpath, r=b-naber
Support `--print KIND=PATH` command line syntax

As is already done for `--emit KIND=PATH` and `-L KIND=PATH`.

In the discussion of #110785, it was pointed out that `--print KIND=PATH` is nicer than trying to apply the single global `-o` path to `--print`'s output, because in general there can be multiple print requests within a single rustc invocation, and anyway `-o` would already be used for a different meaning in the case of `link-args` and `native-static-libs`.

I am interested in using `--print cfg=PATH` in Buck2. Currently Buck2 works around the lack of support for `--print KIND=PATH` by [indirecting through a Python wrapper script](d43cf3a51a/prelude/rust/tools/get_rustc_cfg.py) to redirect rustc's stdout into the location dictated by the build system.

From skimming Cargo's usages of `--print`, it definitely seems like it would benefit from `--print KIND=PATH` too. Currently it is working around the lack of this by inserting `--crate-name=___ --print=crate-name` so that it can look for a line containing `___` as a delimiter between the 2 other `--print` informations it actually cares about. This is commented as a "HACK" and "abuse". 31eda6f7c3/src/cargo/core/compiler/build_context/target_info.rs (L242) (FYI `@weihanglo` as you dealt with this recently in https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/pull/11633.)

Mentioning reviewers active in #110785: `@fee1-dead` `@jyn514` `@bjorn3`
2023-07-21 06:52:28 +02:00
Moulins
feb20f2fe7 Track ABI info. in NaiveLayout, and use it for PointerLike checks
THis significantly complicates `NaiveLayout` logic, but is necessary to
ensure that bounds like `NonNull<T>: PointerLike` hold in generic
contexts.

Also implement exact layout computation for structs.
2023-07-21 03:31:46 +02:00
Moulins
c30fbb95a6 Track exactness in NaiveLayout and use it for SizeSkeleton checks 2023-07-21 03:31:46 +02:00
Moulins
30ae640a3c properly handle arrays and wide pointers in naive_layout_of 2023-07-21 03:31:45 +02:00
Moulins
cb8b1d1bc9 add naive_layout_of query 2023-07-21 03:31:45 +02:00
bors
c720a9cd12 Auto merge of #113344 - scottmcm:alt-slice-zst-handing, r=the8472
Get `!nonnull` metadata on slice iterators, without `assume`s

This updates the non-ZST paths to read the end pointer through a pointer-to-`NonNull`, so that they all get `!nonnull` metadata.

That means that the last `assume(!ptr.is_null())` can be deleted, without impacting codegen -- the codegen tests confirm the LLVM-IR ends up exactly the same as before.
2023-07-21 00:11:41 +00:00
bors
e2a7ba2771 Auto merge of #113858 - cjgillot:const-prop-pairs, r=oli-obk
Always const-prop scalars and scalar pairs

This removes some complexity from the pass.

The limitation to propagate ScalarPairs only for tuple comes from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/67015, when ScalarPair constant were modeled using `Rvalue::Aggregate`. Nowadays, we use `ConstValue::ByRef`, which does not care about the underlying type.

The justification for not propagating in all cases was perf. This seems not to be a clear cut any more: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113858#issuecomment-1642396746
2023-07-20 22:22:31 +00:00