I am not certain if this will improve performance,
but it seems having a .clone() without any need should be removed.
This was done with clippy, and manually reviewed:
```
cargo clippy --fix -- -A clippy::all -D clippy::redundant_clone
```
fix: normalize projection after discarding free `BoundVar`s in RPIT
Fixes#13307
When we lower the return type of a function, it may contain free `BoundVar`s in `OpaqueType`'s substitution, which would cause panic during canonicalization as part of projection normalization. Those `BoundVar`s are irrelevant in this context and will be discarded, and we should defer projection normalization until then.
fix: only shift `BoundVar`s that come from outside lowering context
Fixes#13734
There are some free functions `TyLoweringContext` methods call, which do not know anything about current binders in scope. We need to shift in the `BoundVar`s in substitutions that we get from them (#4952), but not those we get from `TyLoweringContext` methods.
Compute data layout of types
cc #4091
Things that aren't working:
* Closures
* Generators (so no support for `Future` I think)
* Opaque types
* Type alias and associated types which may need normalization
Things that show wrong result:
* ~Enums with explicit discriminant~
* SIMD types
* ~`NonZero*` and similar standard library items which control layout with special attributes~
At the user level, I didn't put much work, since I wasn't confident about what is the best way to present this information. Currently it shows size and align for ADTs, and size, align, offset for struct fields, in the hover, similar to clangd. I used it some days and I feel I liked it, but we may consider it too noisy and move it to an assist or command.
The old value was for the old chalk-engine solver, nowadays the newer chalk-recursive solver is used.
The new solver currently uses fuel a bit more quickly, so a higher value is needed.
Running analysis-stats showed that a value of 100 increases the amount of unknown types,
while for a value of 1000 it's staying mostly the same.