Adding E0623 for structs
This is a fix to #43275
The error message is
```
+error[E0623]: lifetime mismatch
+ --> $DIR/ex3-both-anon-regions-both-are-structs.rs:15:12
+ |
+14 | fn foo(mut x: Vec<Ref>, y: Ref) {
+ | --- --- these structs are declared with different lifetimes...
+15 | x.push(y);
+ | ^ ...but data from `y` flows into `x` here
+
+error: aborting due to previous error
```
r? @nikomatsakis
incr.comp.: Cache Hir-DepNodeIndices in the HIR map.
In preparation for red/green. This should also be faster than before without any additional memory cost.
r? @nikomatsakis
Elaborate trait obligations when typechecking impls
When typechecking trait impl declarations, we only checked that bounds explictly written on the trait declaration hold.
We now also check that bounds which would have been implied by the trait reference do hold.
Fixes#43784.
Do not assume libunwind.a is available on musl
Fixes#40113, #44069, and clux/muslrust#16.
libunwind.a is not copied from musl_root, so it must be integrated into the unwind crate.
This commit alters the `rustc::ty::maps` implementation to ensure that all
output diagnostics from the compiler are tracked for the duration of each query.
These are then intended to be replayed back the first time a cached value is
loaded, and otherwise the cache should operate the same as it does today.
Closes#42513
Speed up APFloat division by using short division for small divisors.
Fixes#43828 (hopefully), by not doing long division bit-by-bit for small divisors.
When parsing the ~200,000 decimal float literals in the `tuple-stress` benchmark, this change brings roughly a 5x speed increase (from `0.6s` to `0.12s`), and the hottest instructions are native `div`s.
Profile queries
This PR implements the "profile queries" debugging feature described here:
https://github.com/rust-lang-nursery/rust-forge/blob/master/profile-queries.md
In particular, it implements the debugging flag `-Z profile-queries`
FYI: This PR is my second attempt at pushing these changes. My original PR required a rebase; I have now done that rebase manually, after messing up with git's "interactive" rebase support. The original (now closed/cancelled) PR is this one: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/43156
r? @nikomatsakis
L4Re Target: Add the needed Libraries and locate them
Add the libraries and objects that have to be linked to a get working L4Re Binary using pre- and post-link-args. Additionaly some ld commands had to be passed.
* L4Re libraries and objects will be located by an environment variable.
* gcc libraries and objects will be located using a gcc call.
GCC is mandatory for this target, that might need documentation somewhere. As soon as something mandatory cannot be found, the compiler will panic. This is intended, because the functions involved don't allow the usage of a Result type. libgcc_eh is now passed using `-l` and crtbeginT.o and crtend.o are now located using `gcc -print-filename`.
Implement From<&[T]> and others for Arc/Rc (RFC 1845)
* Implements `From<`{`&[T]`, `&str`, `String`, `Box<T> where T: ?Sized`, `Vec<T>`}`>` for `Arc`/`Rc`
* Removes `rustc_private`-marked methods `Rc::__from_array` and `Rc::__from_str`, replacing their use with `Rc::from`
Tracking issue: #40475
- fixes evaluation of array length for zero-sized type referenced by
rvalue operand.
- adds test to verify fix.
Cause of the issue.
Zero-sized aggregates are handled as operands, not lvalues. Therefore while
visiting Assign statement by LocalAnalyser, mark_as_lvalue() is not called for
related Local. This behaviour is controlled by rvalue_creates_operand() method.
As result it causes error later, when rvalue operand is evaluated in
trans_rvalue_operand() while handling Rvalue::Len case. Array length evaluation
invokes trans_lvalue() which expects referenced Local to be value, not operand.
How it is fixed.
In certain cases result of Rvalue::Len can be evaluated without calling
trans_lvalue(). Method evaluate_array_len() is introduced to handle length
evaluation for zero-sized types referenced by Locals.
Clarify windows build instructions in README
The old wording made me think you were supposed to do `python x.py --build=msvc`, which is not the case. Specify that you need to use the target triple.
Mention null_mut on the pointer primitive docs.
Also adds a few mentions that both `*const` and `*mut` support functions, when only `*const` was mentioned before.
libproc_macro docs: fix brace and bracket mixup
The documentation indicates that brace is `[`.
Brace is mapped token::Brace which (expectedly) is `{`.
So the documentation is simply confusing brace and bracket there.
Even though it's just a very small issue, it can lead to quite some confusion.