Commit Graph

1044 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Cameron Steffen
98a11e01e5 Remove closure_tree 2021-04-19 15:40:20 -05:00
Aaron Hill
169a221618
Mark has_global_allocator query as eval_always
Fixes #84252

This query reads from untracked global state in `CStore`.
2021-04-16 16:28:54 -04:00
Dylan DPC
c905e9d0ca
Rollup merge of #84014 - estebank:cool-bears-hot-tip, r=varkor
Improve trait/impl method discrepancy errors

* Use more accurate spans
* Clean up some code by removing previous hack
* Provide structured suggestions

Structured suggestions are particularly useful for cases where arbitrary self types are used, like in custom `Future`s, because the way to write `self: Pin<&mut Self>` is not necessarily self-evident when first encountered.
2021-04-12 01:04:04 +02:00
bors
cd56e255c4 Auto merge of #83870 - jackh726:binder-refactor-fix, r=nikomatsakis
Don't concatenate binders across types

Partially addresses #83737

There's actually two issues that I uncovered in #83737. The first is that we are concatenating bound vars across types, i.e. in
```
F: Fn(&()) -> &mut (dyn Future<Output = ()> + Unpin)
```
the bound vars on `Future` get set as `for<anon>` since those are the binders on `Fn(&()`. This is obviously wrong, since we should only concatenate directly nested trait refs. This is solved here by introducing a new `TraitRefBoundary` scope, that we put around the "syntactical" trait refs and basically don't allow concatenation across.

Now, this alone *shouldn't* be a super terrible problem. At least not until you consider the other issue, which is a much more elusive and harder to design a "perfect" fix. A repro can be seen in:
```
use core::future::Future;

async fn handle<F>(slf: &F)
where
    F: Fn(&()) -> &mut (dyn for<'a> Future<Output = ()> + Unpin),
{
    (slf)(&()).await;
}
```
Notice the `for<'a>` around `Future`. Here, `'a` is unused, so the `for<'a>` Binder gets changed to a `for<>` Binder in the generator witness, but the "local decl" still has it. This has heavy intersections with region anonymization and erasing. Luckily, it's not *super* common to find this unique set of circumstances. It only became apparently because of the first issue mentioned here. However, this *is* still a problem, so I'm leaving #83737 open.

r? `@nikomatsakis`
2021-04-09 01:50:01 +00:00
bors
2e495d2e84 Auto merge of #84008 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-invxvg8, r=Dylan-DPC
Rollup of 6 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #80733 (Improve links in inline code in `core::pin`.)
 - #81764 (Stabilize `rustdoc::bare_urls` lint)
 - #81938 (Stabilize `peekable_peek_mut`)
 - #83980 (Fix outdated crate names in compiler docs)
 - #83992 (Merge idents when generating source content)
 - #84001 (Update Clippy)

Failed merges:

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2021-04-08 19:38:54 +00:00
Dylan DPC
74b23f9d11
Rollup merge of #83980 - pierwill:fix-compiler-librustc-names, r=davidtwco
Fix outdated crate names in compiler docs

Changes `librustc_X` to `rustc_X`, only in documentation comments.
Plain code comments are left unchanged.
2021-04-08 20:29:58 +02:00
Esteban Küber
d43ede10e4 Use more accurate spans for trait/impl method arg divergence 2021-04-08 10:19:56 -07:00
pierwill
0019ca9141 Fix outdated crate names in compiler docs
Changes `librustc_X` to `rustc_X`, only in documentation comments.
Plain code comments are left unchanged.

Also fix incorrect file paths.
2021-04-08 11:12:14 -05:00
Alex Crichton
482a3d06c3 rustc: Add a new wasm ABI
This commit implements the idea of a new ABI for the WebAssembly target,
one called `"wasm"`. This ABI is entirely of my own invention
and has no current precedent, but I think that the addition of this ABI
might help solve a number of issues with the WebAssembly targets.

When `wasm32-unknown-unknown` was first added to Rust I naively
"implemented an abi" for the target. I then went to write `wasm-bindgen`
which accidentally relied on details of this ABI. Turns out the ABI
definition didn't match C, which is causing issues for C/Rust interop.
Currently the compiler has a "wasm32 bindgen compat" ABI which is the
original implementation I added, and it's purely there for, well,
`wasm-bindgen`.

Another issue with the WebAssembly target is that it's not clear to me
when and if the default C ABI will change to account for WebAssembly's
multi-value feature (a feature that allows functions to return multiple
values). Even if this does happen, though, it seems like the C ABI will
be guided based on the performance of WebAssembly code and will likely
not match even what the current wasm-bindgen-compat ABI is today. This
leaves a hole in Rust's expressivity in binding WebAssembly where given
a particular import type, Rust may not be able to import that signature
with an updated C ABI for multi-value.

To fix these issues I had the idea of a new ABI for WebAssembly, one
called `wasm`. The definition of this ABI is "what you write
maps straight to wasm". The goal here is that whatever you write down in
the parameter list or in the return values goes straight into the
function's signature in the WebAssembly file. This special ABI is for
intentionally matching the ABI of an imported function from the
environment or exporting a function with the right signature.

With the addition of a new ABI, this enables rustc to:

* Eventually remove the "wasm-bindgen compat hack". Once this
  ABI is stable wasm-bindgen can switch to using it everywhere.
  Afterwards the wasm32-unknown-unknown target can have its default ABI
  updated to match C.

* Expose the ability to precisely match an ABI signature for a
  WebAssembly function, regardless of what the C ABI that clang chooses
  turns out to be.

* Continue to evolve the definition of the default C ABI to match what
  clang does on all targets, since the purpose of that ABI will be
  explicitly matching C rather than generating particular function
  imports/exports.

Naturally this is implemented as an unstable feature initially, but it
would be nice for this to get stabilized (if it works) in the near-ish
future to remove the wasm32-unknown-unknown incompatibility with the C
ABI. Doing this, however, requires the feature to be on stable because
wasm-bindgen works with stable Rust.
2021-04-08 08:03:18 -07:00
bors
ef2ef926a5 Auto merge of #81047 - glittershark:stabilize-cmp-min-max-by, r=kodraus
Stabilize cmp_min_max_by

I would like to propose cmp::{min_by, min_by_key, max_by, max_by_key}
for stabilization.

These are relatively simple and seemingly uncontroversial functions and
have been unchanged in unstable for a while now.

Closes: #64460
2021-04-07 18:02:21 +00:00
Griffin Smith
462f86da9a Stabilize cmp_min_max_by
I would like to propose cmp::{min_by, min_by_key, max_by, max_by_key}
for stabilization.

These are relatively simple and seemingly uncontroversial functions and
have been unchanged in unstable for a while now.
2021-04-07 10:29:04 -04:00
Dylan DPC
b81c6cdb57
Rollup merge of #83916 - Amanieu:asm_anonconst, r=petrochenkov
Use AnonConst for asm! constants

This replaces the old system which used explicit promotion. See #83169 for more background.

The syntax for `const` operands is still the same as before: `const <expr>`.

Fixes #83169

Because the implementation is heavily based on inline consts, we suffer from the same issues:
- We lose the ability to use expressions derived from generics. See the deleted tests in `src/test/ui/asm/const.rs`.
- We are hitting the same ICEs as inline consts, for example #78174. It is unlikely that we will be able to stabilize this before inline consts are stabilized.
2021-04-07 13:07:14 +02:00
Amanieu d'Antras
32be124e30 Use AnonConst for asm! constants 2021-04-06 12:35:41 +01:00
bors
a6e7a5aa5d Auto merge of #81234 - repnop:fn-alignment, r=lcnr
Allow specifying alignment for functions

Fixes #75072

This allows the user to specify alignment for functions, which can be useful for low level work where functions need to necessarily be aligned to a specific value.

I believe the error cases not covered in the match are caught earlier based on my testing so I had them just return `None`.
2021-04-06 04:35:26 +00:00
Wesley Norris
448d07683a Allow specifying alignment for functions 2021-04-05 17:36:51 -04:00
bors
d203fceeb1 Auto merge of #83406 - b-naber:issue-83510, r=lcnr
Prevent very long compilation runtimes in LateBoundRegionNameCollector

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83150

On recursive types such as in the example given in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83150, the current implementation of `LateBoundRegionNameCollector` has very long compilation runtimes. To prevent those we store the types visited in the `middle::ty::Visitor` implementation of `LateBoundRegionNameCollector` in a `SsoHashSet`.
2021-04-05 18:50:42 +00:00
Jack Huey
1a14315975 Don't concatenate binders across types 2021-04-05 00:41:08 -04:00
Dylan DPC
3c2e4ff525
Rollup merge of #83820 - petrochenkov:nolinkargs, r=nagisa
Remove attribute `#[link_args]`

Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29596

The attribute could always be replaced with `-C link-arg`, but cargo didn't provide a reasonable way to pass such flags to rustc.
Now cargo supports `cargo:rustc-link-arg*` directives in build scripts (https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/unstable.html#extra-link-arg), so this attribute can be removed.
2021-04-05 00:24:33 +02:00
Dylan DPC
a89eab9bca
Rollup merge of #83521 - sexxi-goose:quick-diagnostic-fix, r=nikomatsakis
2229: Fix diagnostic issue when using FakeReads in closures

This PR fixes a diagnostic issue caused by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/82536. A temporary work around was used in this merged PR which involved feature gating the addition of FakeReads introduced as a result of pattern matching in closures.

The fix involves adding an optional closure DefId to ForLet and ForMatchedPlace FakeReadCauses. This DefId will only be added if a closure pattern matches a Place starting with an Upvar.

r? ```@nikomatsakis```
2021-04-04 19:20:01 +02:00
Vadim Petrochenkov
5839bff0ba Remove attribute #[link_args] 2021-04-03 21:25:53 +03:00
bors
836c317426 Auto merge of #83774 - richkadel:zero-based-counters, r=tmandry
Translate counters from Rust 1-based to LLVM 0-based counter ids

A colleague contacted me and asked why Rust's counters start at 1, when
Clangs appear to start at 0. There is a reason why Rust's internal
counters start at 1 (see the docs), and I tried to keep them consistent
when codegenned to LLVM's coverage mapping format. LLVM should be
tolerant of missing counters, but as my colleague pointed out,
`llvm-cov` will silently fail to generate a coverage report for a
function based on LLVM's assumption that the counters are 0-based.

See:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/llvm/lib/ProfileData/Coverage/CoverageMapping.cpp#L170

Apparently, if, for example, a function has no branches, it would have
exactly 1 counter. `CounterValues.size()` would be 1, and (with the
1-based index), the counter ID would be 1. This would fail the check
and abort reporting coverage for the function.

It turns out that by correcting for this during coverage map generation,
by subtracting 1 from the Rust Counter ID (both when generating the
counter increment intrinsic call, and when adding counters to the map),
some uncovered functions (including in tests) now appear covered! This
corrects the coverage for a few tests!

r? `@tmandry`
FYI: `@wesleywiser`
2021-04-03 06:27:03 +00:00
Rich Kadel
7ceff6835a Translate counters from Rust 1-based to LLVM 0-based counter ids
A colleague contacted me and asked why Rust's counters start at 1, when
Clangs appear to start at 0. There is a reason why Rust's internal
counters start at 1 (see the docs), and I tried to keep them consistent
when codegenned to LLVM's coverage mapping format. LLVM should be
tolerant of missing counters, but as my colleague pointed out,
`llvm-cov` will silently fail to generate a coverage report for a
function based on LLVM's assumption that the counters are 0-based.

See:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/llvm/lib/ProfileData/Coverage/CoverageMapping.cpp#L170

Apparently, if, for example, a function has no branches, it would have
exactly 1 counter. `CounterValues.size()` would be 1, and (with the
1-based index), the counter ID would be 1. This would fail the check
and abort reporting coverage for the function.

It turns out that by correcting for this during coverage map generation,
by subtracting 1 from the Rust Counter ID (both when generating the
counter increment intrinsic call, and when adding counters to the map),
some uncovered functions (including in tests) now appear covered! This
corrects the coverage for a few tests!
2021-04-02 17:16:36 -07:00
Roxane
0a97eee8df Reduce size of statements 2021-04-02 19:11:50 -04:00
Roxane
2fb1fb7634 Fix diagnostic issue when using FakeReads in closures 2021-04-02 19:11:50 -04:00
Simonas Kazlauskas
64af7eae1e Move SanitizerSet to rustc_target 2021-04-03 00:37:49 +03:00
bors
0978a9eb99 Auto merge of #83207 - oli-obk:valtree2, r=lcnr
normalize mir::Constant differently from ty::Const in preparation for valtrees

Valtrees are unable to represent many kind of constant values (this is on purpose). For constants that are used at runtime, we do not need a valtree representation and can thus use a different form of evaluation. In order to make this explicit and less fragile, I added a `fold_constant` method to `TypeFolder` and implemented it for normalization. Normalization can now, when it wants to eagerly evaluate a constant, normalize `mir::Constant` directly into a `mir::ConstantKind::Val` instead of relying on the `ty::Const` evaluation.

In the future we can get rid of the `ty::Const` in there entirely and add our own `Unevaluated` variant to `mir::ConstantKind`. This would allow us to remove the `promoted` field from `ty::ConstKind::Unevaluated`, as promoteds can never occur in the type system.

cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval`

r? `@lcnr`
2021-04-02 10:28:12 +00:00
bors
4fa76a4a77 Auto merge of #80828 - SNCPlay42:opaque-projections, r=estebank
Fix expected/found order on impl trait projection mismatch error

fixes #68561

This PR adds a new `ObligationCauseCode` used when checking the concrete type of an impl trait satisfies its bounds, and checks for that cause code in the existing test to see if a projection's normalized type should be the "expected" or "found" type.

The second commit adds a `peel_derives` to that test, which appears to be necessary in some cases (see projection-mismatch-in-impl-where-clause.rs, which would still give expected/found in the wrong order otherwise). This caused some other changes in diagnostics not involving impl trait, but they look correct to me.
2021-04-02 03:39:32 +00:00
bors
d474075a8f Auto merge of #82780 - cjgillot:dep-stream, r=michaelwoerister
Stream the dep-graph to a file instead of storing it in-memory.

This is a reimplementation of #60035.

Instead of storing the dep-graph in-memory, the nodes are encoded as they come
into the a temporary file as they come. At the end of a successful the compilation,
this file is renamed to be the persistent dep-graph, to be decoded during the next
compilation session.

This two-files scheme avoids overwriting the dep-graph on unsuccessful or crashing compilations.

The structure of the file is modified to be the sequence of `(DepNode, Fingerprint, EdgesVec)`.
The deserialization is responsible for going to the more compressed representation.
The `node_count` and `edge_count` are stored in the last 16 bytes of the file,
in order to accurately reserve capacity for the vectors.

At the end of the compilation, the encoder is flushed and dropped.
The graph is not usable after this point: any creation of a node will ICE.

I had to retrofit the debugging options, which is not really pretty.
2021-04-01 16:29:33 +00:00
Oli Scherer
c6676db7ae Some more fine-grained forced inlining 2021-04-01 10:40:50 +00:00
Oli Scherer
d81f5ab100 Inline some functions that suddenly show up more in traces 2021-04-01 09:22:12 +00:00
b-naber
3194b26ab0 prevent very long compilation runtimes in LateBoundRegionNameCollector 2021-03-31 23:28:01 +02:00
Jack Huey
7108918db6 Cleanups and comments 2021-03-31 10:16:37 -04:00
Jack Huey
4ff65ec782 Fmt and test revert 2021-03-31 10:16:37 -04:00
Jack Huey
8ad7e5685e Fix new problem from rebase and a little cleanup 2021-03-31 10:16:37 -04:00
Jack Huey
6d5efa9f04 Add var to BoundRegion. Add query to get bound vars for applicable items. 2021-03-31 10:16:37 -04:00
Jack Huey
666859a6f8 Make late and late_anon regions track the bound var position 2021-03-31 10:15:56 -04:00
Jack Huey
30187c81f6 Track bound vars 2021-03-31 10:15:27 -04:00
Jack Huey
62a49c3bb8 Add tcx lifetime to Binder 2021-03-31 10:13:57 -04:00
Jack Huey
74851f4cf3 count bound vars 2021-03-31 10:11:47 -04:00
Jack Huey
97a22a4f9c Add u32 for bound variables to Binder 2021-03-31 10:05:32 -04:00
Jack Huey
4955d755d3 Some rebinds and dummys 2021-03-31 10:05:32 -04:00
Oli Scherer
d139968d19 bail out early when substituting mir constants that don't need substituting 2021-03-31 10:40:45 +00:00
Oli Scherer
dbacfbc368 Add a new normalization query just for mir constants 2021-03-31 10:40:42 +00:00
bors
a5029ac0ab Auto merge of #83684 - cjgillot:csp, r=petrochenkov
Remove hir::CrateItem.

The crate span is exactly the crate module's inner span. There is no need to store it twice.
2021-03-31 08:34:40 +00:00
bors
2a32abbcde Auto merge of #83681 - jyn514:blanket-impls-tweaks, r=Aaron1011
rustdoc: Only look at blanket impls in `get_blanket_impls`

The idea here is that all the work in 16156fb278/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/trait_def.rs (L172-L186) doesn't matter for `get_blanket_impls` - Rustdoc will already pick up on those blocks when it documents the item.
2021-03-31 05:47:22 +00:00
bors
6ff482bde5 Auto merge of #83666 - Amanieu:instrprof-order, r=tmandry
Run LLVM coverage instrumentation passes before optimization passes

This matches the behavior of Clang and allows us to remove several
hacks which were needed to ensure functions weren't optimized away
before reaching the instrumentation pass.

Fixes #83429

cc `@richkadel`

r? `@tmandry`
2021-03-31 03:20:33 +00:00
Camille GILLOT
9d8f833e05 Remove hir::CrateItem. 2021-03-30 20:31:06 +02:00
Joshua Nelson
6f06b761b9 Only look at blanket impls in get_blanket_impls 2021-03-30 12:28:33 -04:00
Camille GILLOT
6bfaf3a9cb Stream the dep-graph to a file. 2021-03-30 18:09:59 +02:00
Amanieu d'Antras
26d260bfa4 Run LLVM coverage instrumentation passes before optimization passes
This matches the behavior of Clang and allows us to remove several
hacks which were needed to ensure functions weren't optimized away
before reaching the instrumentation pass.
2021-03-30 02:10:28 +01:00