Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/28692
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/28992
Fixes some other similar issues (see the tests)
[breaking-change], needs crater run (cc @brson or @alexcrichton )
The pattern with parens `UnitVariant(..)` for unit variants seems to be popular in rustc (see the second commit), but mostly used by one person (@nikomatsakis), according to git blame. If it causes breakage on crates.io I'll add an exceptional case for it.
Trait references are always invariant, so all uses of subtyping between
them are equivalent to using equality.
Moreover, the overlap check was previously performed twice per impl
pair, once in each direction. It is now performed only once, and
internally uses the equality check.
On glium, a crate that spends some time in coherence, this change sped
up coherence checking by a few percent (not very significant).
trait definitions, and give prefence to the former. This is consistent
with what we do for selection. It also works around a limitation
that was leading to #28871.
paths, and construct paths for all definitions. Also, stop rewriting
DefIds for closures, and instead just load the closure data from
the original def-id, which may be in another crate.
Because of type inference, duplicate obligations exist and cause duplicate
errors. To avoid this, only display the first error for each (predicate,span).
The inclusion of the span is somewhat bikesheddy, but *is* the more
conservative option (it does not remove some instability, as duplicate
obligations are ignored by `duplicate_set` under some inference conditions).
Fixes#28098
cc #21528 (is it a dupe?)
new error style:
```
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 error: the trait `core::marker::Sized` is not implemented for the type `[u8]` [E0277]
path.rs:4 fn f(p: Path) {}
^
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 help: run `rustc --explain E0277` to see a detailed explanation
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: `[u8]` does not have a constant size known at compile-time
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: required because it appears within the type `std::sys::os_str::Slice`
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: required because it appears within the type `std::ffi::os_str::OsStr`
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: required because it appears within the type `std::path::Path`
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: all local variables must have a statically known size
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 error: the trait `core::marker::Send` is not implemented for the type `alloc::rc::Rc<()>` [E0277]
path.rs:7 foo::<BTreeMap<Rc<()>, Rc<()>>>();
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 help: run `rustc --explain E0277` to see a detailed explanation
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: `alloc::rc::Rc<()>` cannot be sent between threads safely
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: required because it appears within the type `collections::btree::node::Node<alloc::rc::Rc<()>, alloc::rc::Rc<()>>`
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: required because it appears within the type `collections::btree::map::BTreeMap<alloc::rc::Rc<()>, alloc::rc::Rc<()>>`
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: required by `foo`
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
```
Fixes#21793Fixes#23286
r? @nikomatsakis
new error style:
```
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 error: the trait `core::marker::Sized` is not implemented for the type `[u8]` [E0277]
path.rs:4 fn f(p: Path) {}
^
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 help: run `rustc --explain E0277` to see a detailed explanation
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: `[u8]` does not have a constant size known at compile-time
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: required because it appears within the type `std::sys::os_str::Slice`
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: required because it appears within the type `std::ffi::os_str::OsStr`
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: required because it appears within the type `std::path::Path`
path.rs:4:6: 4:7 note: all local variables must have a statically known size
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 error: the trait `core::marker::Send` is not implemented for the type `alloc::rc::Rc<()>` [E0277]
path.rs:7 foo::<BTreeMap<Rc<()>, Rc<()>>>();
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 help: run `rustc --explain E0277` to see a detailed explanation
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: `alloc::rc::Rc<()>` cannot be sent between threads safely
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: required because it appears within the type `collections::btree::node::Node<alloc::rc::Rc<()>, alloc::rc::Rc<()>>`
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: required because it appears within the type `collections::btree::map::BTreeMap<alloc::rc::Rc<()>, alloc::rc::Rc<()>>`
path.rs:7:5: 7:36 note: required by `foo`
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
```
This improves the #21793/#23286 situation
this resolves type-variables early in assemble_candidates and
bails out quickly if the self type is an inference variable (which would
fail anyway because of `assemble_candidates_from_projected_tys`).
In both these cases, `assemble_candidates_from_impls` would try to go
over all impls and match them, leading to O(`n*m`) performance. Fixing this
improves rustc type-checking performance by 10%. As type-checking is only
is 5% of compilation, this doesn't impact bootstrap times, but *does*
improve type-error-detection time which is nice.
Crates that have many dependencies and contain significant amounts of
generic functions could see a bigger perf boost. As a microbenchmark,
the crate generated by
```
echo '#![feature(rustc_private)]'
echo 'extern crate rustc_driver;'
for i in {1..1000}; do cat << _EOF_
pub fn foo$i<T>() {
let mut v = Vec::new();
let _w = v.clone();
v.push("");
}
_EOF_
done
```
sees performance improve from 7.2 to 1.4 seconds. I imagine many crates
would fall somewhere in-between.
r? @nikomatsakis
this resolves type-variables early in assemble_candidates and
bails out quickly if the self type is an inference variable (which would
fail anyway because of `assemble_candidates_from_projected_tys`).
In both these cases, `assemble_candidates_from_impls` would try to go
over all impls and match them, leading to O(n*m) performance. Fixing this
improves rustc type-checking performance by 10%. As type-checking is only
is 5% of compilation, this doesn't impact bootstrap times, but *does*
improve type-error-detection time which is nice.
Crates that have many dependencies and contain significant amounts of
generic functions could see a bigger perf boost. As a microbenchmark,
the crate generated by
echo '#![feature(rustc_private)]'
echo 'extern crate rustc_driver;'
for i in {1..1000}; do cat << _EOF_
pub fn foo$i<T>() {
let mut v = Vec::new();
let _w = v.clone();
v.push("");
}
_EOF_
done
sees performance improve from 7.2 to 1.4 seconds. I imagine many crates
would fall somewhere in-between.