Instead of finding the next free disambiguator by incrementing it until
you find a place, store the next available disambiguator in an hash-map.
This avoids O(n^2) performance when lots of items have the same
un-disambiguated `DefPathData` - e.g. all `use` items have
`DefPathData::Misc`.
We already had a cache for file contents, but we read the source-file
before testing the cache, causing obvious slowness, so this just avoids
loading the source-file when the cache already has the contents.
add docs for references as a primitive
Just like #43529 did for function pointers, here is a new primitive page for references.
This PR will pull in impls on references if it's a reference to a generic type parameter. Initially i was only able to pull in impls that were re-exported from another crate; crate-local impls got a different representation in the AST, and i had to change how types were resolved when cleaning it. (This is the change at the bottom of `librustdoc/clean/mod.rs`, in `resolve_type`.) I'm unsure the full ramifications of the change, but from what it looks like, it shouldn't impact anything major. Likewise, references to generic type parameters also get the `&'a [mut]` linked to the new page.
cc @rust-lang/docs: Is this sufficient information? The listing of trait impls kinda feels redundant (especially if we can get the automated impl listing sorted again), but i still think it's useful to point out that you can use these in a generic context.
Fixes#15654
resolve: Try to fix instability in import suggestions
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/42033
`lookup_import_candidates` walks module graph in DFS order and skips modules that were already visited (which is correct because there can be cycles).
However it means that if we visited `std::prelude::v1::Result::Ok` first, we will never visit `std::result::Result::Ok` because `Result` will be skipped as already visited (note: enums are also modules here), and otherwise, if we visited `std::result::Result::Ok` first, we will never get to `std::prelude::v1::Result::Ok`.
What child module of `std` (`prelude` or `result`) we will visit first, depends on randomized hashing, so we have instability in diagnostics.
With this patch modules' children are visited in stable order in `lookup_import_candidates`, this should fix the issue, but let's see what Travis will say.
r? @oli-obk
Three small fixes for save-analysis
First commit does some naive deduplication of macro uses. We end up with lots of duplication here because of the weird way we get this data (we extract a use for every span generated by a macro use).
Second commit is basically a typo fix.
Third commit is a bit interesting, it partially reverts a change from #40939 where temporary variables in format! (and thus println!) got a span with the primary pointing at the value stored into the temporary (e.g., `x` in `println!("...", x)`). If `format!` had a definition it should point at the temporary in the macro def, but since it is built-in, that is not possible (for now), so `DUMMY_SP` is the best we can do (using the span in the callee really breaks save-analysis because it thinks `x` is a definition as well as a reference).
There aren't a test for this stuff because: the deduplication is filtered by any of the users of save-analysis, so it is purely an efficiency change. I couldn't actually find an example for the second commit that we have any machinery to test, and the third commit is tested by the RLS, so there will be a test once I update the RLS version and and uncomment the previously failing tests).
r? @jseyfried
These need to be inlined across crates to avoid showing up as one-instruction
functions in profiles! In the benchmark from #43578 this decreased the
translation item collection step from 30s to 23s, and looks like it also allowed
vectorization elsewhere of the operations!
Commit c4710203c0 in #43492 make `LLVMRustHasFeature` "more robust"
by using `getFeatureTable()`. However, this function is specific to
Rust's own LLVM fork, not upstream LLVM-4.0, so we need to use
`#if LLVM_RUSTLLVM` to guard this call.
borrowck: skip CFG construction when there is nothing to propagate
CFG construction takes a large amount of time and memory, especially for
large constants. If such a constant contains no actions on lvalues, it
can't have borrowck problems and can be ignored by it.
This removes the 4.9GB borrowck peak from #36799. It seems that HIR had
grown by 300MB and MIR had grown by 500MB from the last massif
collection and that remains to be investigated, but this at least shaves
the borrowck peak.
r? @nikomatsakis
Removing nops can allow more basic blocks to be merged, but merging
basic blocks can't allow for more nops to be removed, so we should
remove nops first.
This doesn't matter *that* much, because normally we run SimplifyCfg
several times, but there's no reason not to do it.
I saw MIR cache invalidation somewhat hot on my profiler when per-BB
indexin was used. That shouldn't matter much, but there is no good
reason not to use an iterator.
default binding modes: add pat_binding_modes
This PR kicks off the implementation of the [default binding modes RFC][1] by
introducing the `pat_binding_modes` typeck table mentioned in the [mentoring
instructions][2].
It is a WIP because I wasn't able to avoid all uses of the binding modes as
not all call sites are close enough to the typeck tables. I added marker
comments to any line matching `BindByRef|BindByValue` so that reviewers
are aware of all of them.
I will look into changing the HIR (as suggested in [2]) to not carry a
`BindingMode` unless one was explicitly specified, but this PR is good for
a first round of comments.
The actual changes are quite small and CI will fail due to overlong lines
caused by the marker comments.
See #42640.
cc @nikomatsakis
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2005
[2]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/42640#issuecomment-313535089
CFG construction takes a large amount of time and memory, especially for
large constants. If such a constant contains no actions on lvalues, it
can't have borrowck problems and can be ignored by it.
This removes the 4.9GB borrowck peak from #36799. It seems that HIR had
grown by 300MB and MIR had grown by 500MB from the last massif
collection and that remains to be investigated, but this at least shaves
the borrowck peak.
rustbuild: Remove `--enable-llvm-clean-rebuild`
This was intended for bots back in the day where we'd persist caches of LLVM
builds across runs, but nowadays we don't do that on any of the bots so this
option is no longer necessary
save subobligations in the projection cache
The projection cache explicitly chose not to "preserve" subobligations for projections, since the fulfillment context ought to have been doing so. But for the trait evaluation scheme that causes problems. This PR reproduces subobligations. This has the potential to slow down compilation, but minimal investigation suggests it does not do so.
One hesitation about this PR: I could not find a way to make a standalone test case for #43132 (but admittedly I did not try very hard).
Fixes#43132.
r? @arielb1
a couple more error explanations for posterity
E0436, E0595, and moving E0569 to where it belongs in the file rather than being bizarrely out of numerical order
r? @GuillaumeGomez