Commit Graph

194 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Oli Scherer
d54195db22 Revert "Auto merge of #92007 - oli-obk:lazy_tait2, r=nikomatsakis"
This reverts commit e7cc3bddbe, reversing
changes made to 734368a200.
2022-02-11 07:18:06 +00:00
bors
e7aca89598 Auto merge of #93741 - Mark-Simulacrum:global-job-id, r=cjgillot
Refactor query system to maintain a global job id counter

This replaces the per-shard counters with a single global counter, simplifying
the JobId struct down to just a u64 and removing the need to pipe a DepKind
generic through a bunch of code. The performance implications on non-parallel
compilers are likely minimal (this switches to `Cell<u64>` as the backing
storage over a `u64`, but the latter was already inside a `RefCell` so it's not
really a significance divergence). On parallel compilers, the cost of a single
global u64 counter may be more significant: it adds a serialization point in
theory. On the other hand, we can imagine changing the counter to have a
thread-local component if it becomes worrisome or some similar structure.

The new design is sufficiently simpler that it warrants the potential for slight
changes down the line if/when we get parallel compilation to be more of a
default.

A u64 counter, instead of u32 (the old per-shard width), is chosen to avoid
possibly overflowing it and causing problems; it is effectively impossible that
we would overflow a u64 counter in this context.
2022-02-09 18:54:30 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
e240783a4d Switch QueryJobId to a single global counter
This replaces the per-shard counters with a single global counter, simplifying
the JobId struct down to just a u64 and removing the need to pipe a DepKind
generic through a bunch of code. The performance implications on non-parallel
compilers are likely minimal (this switches to `Cell<u64>` as the backing
storage over a `u64`, but the latter was already inside a `RefCell` so it's not
really a significance divergence). On parallel compilers, the cost of a single
global u64 counter may be more significant: it adds a serialization point in
theory. On the other hand, we can imagine changing the counter to have a
thread-local component if it becomes worrisome or some similar structure.

The new design is sufficiently simpler that it warrants the potential for slight
changes down the line if/when we get parallel compilation to be more of a
default.

A u64 counter, instead of u32 (the old per-shard width), is chosen to avoid
possibly overflowing it and causing problems; it is effectively impossible that
we would overflow a u64 counter in this context.
2022-02-08 18:49:55 -05:00
bors
e7cc3bddbe Auto merge of #92007 - oli-obk:lazy_tait2, r=nikomatsakis
Lazy type-alias-impl-trait

Previously opaque types were processed by

1. replacing all mentions of them with inference variables
2. memorizing these inference variables in a side-table
3. at the end of typeck, resolve the inference variables in the side table and use the resolved type as the hidden type of the opaque type

This worked okayish for `impl Trait` in return position, but required lots of roundabout type inference hacks and processing.

This PR instead stops this process of replacing opaque types with inference variables, and just keeps the opaque types around.
Whenever an opaque type `O` is compared with another type `T`, we make the comparison succeed and record `T` as the hidden type. If `O` is compared to `U` while there is a recorded hidden type for it, we grab the recorded type (`T`) and compare that against `U`. This makes implementing

* https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2515

much simpler (previous attempts on the inference based scheme were very prone to ICEs and general misbehaviour that was not explainable except by random implementation defined oddities).

r? `@nikomatsakis`

fixes #93411
fixes #88236
2022-02-07 23:40:26 +00:00
Oli Scherer
0f6e06b7c0 Lazily resolve type-alias-impl-trait defining uses
by using an opaque type obligation to bubble up comparisons between opaque types and other types

Also uses proper obligation causes so that the body id works, because out of some reason nll uses body ids for logic instead of just diagnostics.
2022-02-02 15:40:11 +00:00
est31
08be313feb Use Option::then in two places 2022-02-02 16:10:16 +01:00
lcnr
a1a30f7548 add a rustc::query_stability lint 2022-02-01 10:15:59 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
37fbd91eb5 Address review comments. 2022-01-22 10:38:34 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
416399dc10 Make Decodable and Decoder infallible.
`Decoder` has two impls:
- opaque: this impl is already partly infallible, i.e. in some places it
  currently panics on failure (e.g. if the input is too short, or on a
  bad `Result` discriminant), and in some places it returns an error
  (e.g. on a bad `Option` discriminant). The number of places where
  either happens is surprisingly small, just because the binary
  representation has very little redundancy and a lot of input reading
  can occur even on malformed data.
- json: this impl is fully fallible, but it's only used (a) for the
  `.rlink` file production, and there's a `FIXME` comment suggesting it
  should change to a binary format, and (b) in a few tests in
  non-fundamental ways. Indeed #85993 is open to remove it entirely.

And the top-level places in the compiler that call into decoding just
abort on error anyway. So the fallibility is providing little value, and
getting rid of it leads to some non-trivial performance improvements.

Much of this commit is pretty boring and mechanical. Some notes about
a few interesting parts:
- The commit removes `Decoder::{Error,error}`.
- `InternIteratorElement::intern_with`: the impl for `T` now has the same
  optimization for small counts that the impl for `Result<T, E>` has,
  because it's now much hotter.
- Decodable impls for SmallVec, LinkedList, VecDeque now all use
  `collect`, which is nice; the one for `Vec` uses unsafe code, because
  that gave better perf on some benchmarks.
2022-01-22 10:38:31 +11:00
bors
42852d7857 Auto merge of #92740 - cuviper:update-rayons, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Update rayon and rustc-rayon

This updates rayon for various tools and rustc-rayon for the compiler's parallel mode.

- rayon v1.3.1 -> v1.5.1
- rayon-core v1.7.1 -> v1.9.1
- rustc-rayon v0.3.1 -> v0.3.2
- rustc-rayon-core v0.3.1 -> v0.3.2

... and indirectly, this updates all of crossbeam-* to their latest versions.

Fixes #92677 by removing crossbeam-queue, but there's still a lingering question about how tidy discovers "runtime" dependencies. None of this is truly in the standard library's dependency tree at all.
2022-01-16 08:12:23 +00:00
bors
02c9e73e6c Auto merge of #92681 - Aaron1011:task-deps-ref, r=cjgillot
Introduce new `TaskDepsRef` enum to track allow/ignore/forbid status
2022-01-14 14:20:17 +00:00
Josh Stone
f3b8812f24 Update rayon and rustc-rayon 2022-01-10 11:34:07 -08:00
bors
d63a8d965e Auto merge of #92278 - Aaron1011:fix-fingerprint-caching, r=michaelwoerister
Ensure that `Fingerprint` caching respects hashing configuration

Fixes #92266

In some `HashStable` impls, we use a cache to avoid re-computing
the same `Fingerprint` from the same structure (e.g. an `AdtDef`).
However, the `StableHashingContext` used can be configured to
perform hashing in different ways (e.g. skipping `Span`s). This
configuration information is not included in the cache key,
which will cause an incorrect `Fingerprint` to be used if
we hash the same structure with different `StableHashingContext`
settings.

To fix this, the configuration settings of `StableHashingContext`
are split out into a separate `HashingControls` struct. This
struct is used as part of the cache key, ensuring that our caches
always produce the correct result for the given settings.

With this in place, we now turn off `Span` hashing during the
entire process of computing the hash included in legacy symbols.
This current has no effect, but will matter when a future PR
starts hashing more `Span`s that we currently skip.
2022-01-10 00:26:07 +00:00
Aaron Hill
f64cd87ca6
Introduce new TaskDepsRef enum to track allow/ignore/forbid status 2022-01-08 18:22:06 -05:00
bors
a7e2e33960 Auto merge of #91919 - Aaron1011:query-recursive-read, r=michaelwoerister
Don't perform any new queries while reading a query result on disk

In addition to being very confusing, this can cause us to add dep node edges between two queries that would not otherwise have an edge.

We now panic if any new dep node edges are created during the deserialization of a query result. This requires serializing the full `AdtDef` to disk, instead of just serializing the `DefId` and invoking the `adt_def` query during deserialization.

I'll probably split this up into several smaller PRs for perf runs.
2022-01-08 18:32:31 +00:00
Aaron Hill
4ca275add0
Address review comments 2022-01-05 10:30:49 -05:00
Aaron Hill
560c90f5df
Adjust assert_default_hashing_controls 2022-01-05 10:13:29 -05:00
Aaron Hill
5580e5e1dd
Ensure that Fingerprint caching respects hashing configuration
Fixes #92266

In some `HashStable` impls, we use a cache to avoid re-computing
the same `Fingerprint` from the same structure (e.g. an `AdtDef`).
However, the `StableHashingContext` used can be configured to
perform hashing in different ways (e.g. skipping `Span`s). This
configuration information is not included in the cache key,
which will cause an incorrect `Fingerprint` to be used if
we hash the same structure with different `StableHashingContext`
settings.

To fix this, the configuration settings of `StableHashingContext`
are split out into a separate `HashingControls` struct. This
struct is used as part of the cache key, ensuring that our caches
always produce the correct result for the given settings.

With this in place, we now turn off `Span` hashing during the
entire process of computing the hash included in legacy symbols.
This current has no effect, but will matter when a future PR
starts hashing more `Span`s that we currently skip.
2022-01-05 10:13:28 -05:00
bors
2b681ac06b Auto merge of #92259 - Aaron1011:normal-mod-hashing, r=michaelwoerister
Remove special-cased stable hashing for HIR module

All other 'containers' (e.g. `impl` blocks) hashed their contents
in the normal, order-dependent way. However, `Mod` was hashing
its contents in a (sort-of) order-independent way. However, the
exact order is exposed to consumers through `Mod.item_ids`,
and through query results like `hir_module_items`. Therefore,
stable hashing needs to take the order of items into account,
to avoid fingerprint ICEs.

Unforuntately, I was unable to directly build a reproducer
for the ICE, due to the behavior of `Fingerprint::combine_commutative`.
This operation swaps the upper and lower `u64` when constructing the
result, which makes the function non-associative. Since we start
the hashing of module items by combining `Fingerprint::ZERO` with
the first item, it's difficult to actually build an example where
changing the order of module items leaves the final hash unchanged.

However, this appears to have been hit in practice in #92218
While we're not able to reproduce it, the fact that proc-macros
are involved (which can give an entire module the same span, preventing
any span-related invalidations) makes me confident that the root
cause of that issue is our method of hashing module items.

This PR removes all of the special handling for `Mod`, instead deriving
a `HashStable` implementation. This makes `Mod` consistent with other
'contains' like `Impl`, which hash their contents through the typical
derive of `HashStable`.
2022-01-04 00:25:23 +00:00
Aaron Hill
da3f196a4e
Remove special-cased stable hashing for HIR module
All other 'containers' (e.g. `impl` blocks) hashed their contents
in the normal, order-dependent way. However, `Mod` was hashing
its contents in a (sort-of) order-independent way. However, the
exact order is exposed to consumers through `Mod.item_ids`,
and through query results like `hir_module_items`. Therefore,
stable hashing needs to take the order of items into account,
to avoid fingerprint ICEs.

Unforuntately, I was unable to directly build a reproducer
for the ICE, due to the behavior of `Fingerprint::combine_commutative`.
This operation swaps the upper and lower `u64` when constructing the
result, which makes the function non-associative. Since we start
the hashing of module items by combining `Fingerprint::ZERO` with
the first item, it's difficult to actually build an example where
changing the order of module items leaves the final hash unchanged.

However, this appears to have been hit in practice in #92218
While we're not able to reproduce it, the fact that proc-macros
are involved (which can give an entire module the same span, preventing
any span-related invalidations) makes me confident that the root
cause of that issue is our method of hashing module items.

This PR removes all of the special handling for `Mod`, instead deriving
a `HashStable` implementation. This makes `Mod` consistent with other
'contains' like `Impl`, which hash their contents through the typical
derive of `HashStable`.
2021-12-24 12:38:29 -05:00
Aaron Hill
27ed52c0a2
Adjust wording of comment 2021-12-23 13:44:04 -05:00
Aaron Hill
28f19f62c7
Address review comments 2021-12-23 13:38:54 -05:00
Aaron Hill
ab168e69ac
Some cleanup 2021-12-23 13:38:53 -05:00
Aaron Hill
49560e9c49
Ban deps only during query loading from disk 2021-12-23 13:38:53 -05:00
Aaron Hill
75181dc22f
Error if we try to read dep during deserialization 2021-12-23 13:38:53 -05:00
Aaron Hill
f1d682334d
Add #[rustc_clean(loaded_from_disk)] to assert loading of query result
Currently, you can use `#[rustc_clean]` to assert to that a particular
query (technically, a `DepNode`) is green or red. However, a green
`DepNode` does not mean that the query result was actually deserialized
from disk - we might have never re-run a query that needed the result.

Some incremental tests are written as regression tests for ICEs that
occured during query result decoding. Using
`#[rustc_clean(loaded_from_disk="typeck")]`, you can now assert
that the result of a particular query (e.g. `typeck`) was actually
loaded from disk, in addition to being green.
2021-12-21 16:34:12 -05:00
PFPoitras
304ede6bcc Stabilize iter::zip. 2021-12-14 18:50:31 -04:00
Alex Crichton
a0c959750a std: Stabilize the thread_local_const_init feature
This commit is intended to follow the stabilization disposition of the
FCP that has now finished in #84223. This stabilizes the ability to flag
thread local initializers as `const` expressions which enables the macro
to generate more efficient code for accessing it, notably removing
runtime checks for initialization.

More information can also be found in #84223 as well as the tests where
the feature usage was removed in this PR.

Closes #84223
2021-11-29 07:23:46 -08:00
Mark Rousskov
dc65b22901 Manually outline error on incremental_verify_ich
This reduces codegen for rustc_query_impl by 169k lines of LLVM IR, representing
a 1.2% improvement.
2021-11-22 21:32:20 -05:00
bors
495322d776 Auto merge of #90361 - Mark-Simulacrum:always-verify, r=michaelwoerister
Enable verification for 1/32th of queries loaded from disk

This is a limited enabling of incremental verification for query results loaded from disk, which previously did not run without -Zincremental-verify-ich. If enabled for all queries, we see a probably unacceptable hit of ~50% in the worst case, so this pairs back the verification to a more limited set based on the hash key.

Per collected [perf results](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/84227#issuecomment-953350582), this is a regression of at most 7% on coercions opt incr-unchanged, and typically less than 0.5% on other benchmarks (largely limited to incr-unchanged). I believe this is acceptable performance to land, and we can either ratchet it up or down fairly easily.

We have no real sense of whether this will lead to a large amount of assertions in the wild, but since those assertions may lead to miscompilations today, it seems potentially warranted. We have a good bit of lead time until the next stable release, though the holiday season will also start soon; we may wish to discuss the timing of enabling this and weigh the desire to prevent (possible) miscompilations against assertions.

cc `@rust-lang/wg-incr-comp`
2021-11-08 13:38:08 +00:00
bors
88a5a984fe Auto merge of #90380 - Mark-Simulacrum:revert-89558-query-stable-lint, r=lcnr
Revert "Add rustc lint, warning when iterating over hashmaps"

Fixes perf regressions introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/90235 by temporarily reverting the relevant PR.
2021-10-29 04:55:51 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
3215eeb99f
Revert "Add rustc lint, warning when iterating over hashmaps" 2021-10-28 11:01:42 -04:00
Mark Rousskov
49e7c993ee Enable verification for 1/32th of queries loaded from disk 2021-10-28 09:57:31 -04:00
bors
c4ff03f689 Auto merge of #90145 - cjgillot:sorted-map, r=michaelwoerister
Use SortedMap in HIR.

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89788
r? `@ghost`
2021-10-28 13:04:40 +00:00
bors
28d0e75269 Auto merge of #90210 - cjgillot:qarray2, r=Mark-Simulacrum
Build the query vtable directly.

Continuation of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/89978.

This shrinks the query interface and attempts to reduce the amount of function pointer calls.
2021-10-25 01:10:50 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
87822b27ee
Rollup merge of #89558 - lcnr:query-stable-lint, r=estebank
Add rustc lint, warning when iterating over hashmaps

r? rust-lang/wg-incr-comp
2021-10-24 15:48:42 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
138e96b719 Do not require QueryCtxt for cache_on_disk. 2021-10-23 18:12:43 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
7c0920f5fb Build the query vtable directly. 2021-10-23 16:59:19 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
6f6fa8b954 Use SortedMap in HIR. 2021-10-21 23:08:57 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
0a5666b838 Do not depend on the stored value when trying to cache on disk. 2021-10-21 20:00:45 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
b11ec29e28 Address review. 2021-10-20 18:51:15 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
8785b70774 Inline DepNodeParams methods. 2021-10-20 18:46:25 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
df71d0874a Compute query vtable manually. 2021-10-20 18:41:28 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
69a3594635 Store node_intern_event_id in CurrentDepGraph. 2021-10-20 18:37:11 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
bd5c107672 Build jump table at runtime. 2021-10-20 18:32:29 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
602d3cbce3 Invoke callbacks from rustc_middle. 2021-10-20 18:29:33 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
b09de95fab Merge two query callbacks arrays. 2021-10-20 18:29:27 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
dc7143367c Drop has_params. 2021-10-20 18:29:22 +02:00
Camille GILLOT
aa404c24dd Make hash_result an Option. 2021-10-20 18:29:18 +02:00
Yuki Okushi
3d95330230
Rollup merge of #87404 - rylev:artifact-size-profiling, r=wesleywiser
Add support for artifact size profiling

This adds support for profiling artifact file sizes (incremental compilation artifacts and query cache to begin with).

Eventually we want to track this in perf.rlo so we can ensure that file sizes do not change dramatically on each pull request.

This relies on support in measureme: https://github.com/rust-lang/measureme/pull/169. Once that lands we can update this PR to not point to a git dependency.

This was worked on together with `@michaelwoerister.`

r? `@wesleywiser`
2021-10-20 04:35:11 +09:00