Generic arg disambiguation
Using the tactic suggested by @petrochenkov in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/60804#issuecomment-516769465 and on [zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/generic.20argument.20disambiguation), this change checks type arguments to see if they are really incorrectly-parsed const arguments.
it should be noted that `segments.len() == 1 && segments[0].arg.is_none()` was reduced to `segments.len() == 1` as suggested by @petrochenkov in [zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/generic.20argument.20disambiguation/near/177848002). This change allowed a few more existing tests to have their braces removed.
There are a couple of "problems" with these changes that I should note. First, there was a regression in the error messages found in "src/test/ui/privacy-ns1.rs" and "src/test/ui/privacy-ns1.rs". Second, some braces were unable to be removed from "src/test/ui/const-generics/fn-const-param-infer.rs". Those on line 24 caused the statement to stop equating when removed, and those on line 20 cause a statement that should not equate to produce no error when removed.
I have not looked further into any of these issues yet, though I would be willing to look into them before landing this. I simply wanted to get some other eyes on this before going further.
Fixes#60804
cc @varkor @jplatte
This allows argv[0] to be overridden on the executable's command-line. This also makes the program
executed independent of argv[0].
Does Fuchsia have the same semantics?
Addresses: #66510
Function source_name declared in file
src/librustc_driver/lib.rs
is a duplicate of a function by the same name declared in file
src/librustc/session/config.rs
resolve: Give derive helpers highest priority during resolution
So they just shadow everything else and don't create ambiguity errors.
This matches the old pre-#64694 behavior most closely.
---
The change doesn't apply to this "compatibility" case
```rust
#[trait_helper] // The helper attribute is used before it introduced.
// Sadly, compiles on stable, supported via hacks.
// I plan to make a compatibility warning for this.
#[derive(Trait)]
struct S;
```
, such attributes still create ambiguities, but #64694 didn't change anything for this case.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66508
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/66525
Add JohnTitor to rustc-guide toolstate notification list
Add JohnTitor to rustc-guide toolstate notification list
Also, update org names of some books
r? @spastorino
Fix 'type annotations needed' error with opaque types
Related: #66426
This commit adds handling for opaque types during inference variable
fallback. Type variables generated from the instantiation of opaque
types now fallback to the opaque type itself.
Normally, the type variable for an instantiated opaque type is either
unified with the concrete type, or with the opaque type itself (e.g when
a function returns an opaque type by calling another function).
However, it's possible for the type variable to be left completely
unconstrained. This can occur in code like this:
```rust
pub type Foo = impl Copy;
fn produce() -> Option<Foo> {
None
}
```
Here, we'll instantatiate the `Foo` in `Option<Foo>` to a fresh type
variable, but we will never unify it with anything due to the fact
that we return a `None`.
This results in the error message:
```
type annotations needed: cannot resolve `_: std::marker::Copy
```
pointing at `pub type Foo = impl Copy`.
This message is not only confusing, it's incorrect. When an opaque type
inference variable is completely unconstrained, we can always fall back
to using the opaque type itself. This effectively turns that particular
use of the opaque type into a non-defining use, even if it appears in a
defining scope.
Suggest calling async closure when needed
When using an async closure as a value in a place that expects a future,
suggest calling the closure.
Fix#65923.
Misc CI improvements
This PR contains some misc improvements to our CI configuration:
* The environment variables for MinGW builders were greatly simplified, with just `CUSTOM_MINGW=1` to tell the install scripts to install the vendored copy. All the others (`MINGW_URL`, `MINGW_DIR`, `MINGW_ARCHIVE` and `MSYS_BITS`) are detected either from the builder name or the environment.
* Collecting CPU stats and running the build were moved into scripts.
* Toolstate scripts validation was previously a separate step, ran just when `IMAGE=mingw-check`. This moves the validation code inside the actual image.
* Vendored copies are now fetched from https://ci-mirrors.rust-lang.org instead of directly from the bucket.
r? @alexcrichton
Suggest `#[repr(C)]` instead of `#[repr(C, packed, ...)]`
The code was previously suggesting `#[repr(C, packed, ...)]` for incorrect uses of `repr` (e.g. `#[repr = "C"]`). This change suggests the usage of `#[repr(C)]` instead.
r? @estebank
Ref: #61286.
[mir-opt] Turn on the `ConstProp` pass by default
perf.rlo shows that running the `ConstProp` pass results in
across-the-board wins regardless of debug or opt complilation mode. As a
result, we're turning it on to get the compile time benefits.
Combining CGUs can result in code that references a static variable through both
an Item and a ForeignItem with the same name. We don't care that the global was
already created by a ForeignItem reference when we see the Item reference, as
long as the LLVM types of the ForeignItem and Item match.
Fixes#66464
This adds a new option `-Zgenerate-arange-section`, enabled by default,
corresponding to LLVM's `-generate-arange-section`. This creates a
`.debug_aranges` section with DWARF address ranges, which some tools
depend on to optimize address lookups (elfutils [22288], [25173]).
This only has effect when debuginfo is enabled, and the additional data
is small compared to the other debug sections. For example, libstd.so
with full debuginfo is about 11MB, with just 61kB in aranges.
[22288]: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22288
[25173]: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=25173Closes#45246.
The error messages of the two tests effected degraded in quality. The
errors no longer suggest types in other modules as they now assume that
the arguments are const args, not type args.