Add `intrinsics::transmute_unchecked`
This takes a whole 3 lines in `compiler/` since it lowers to `CastKind::Transmute` in MIR *exactly* the same as the existing `intrinsics::transmute` does, it just doesn't have the fancy checking in `hir_typeck`.
Added to enable experimenting with the request in <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106281#issuecomment-1496648190> and because the portable-simd folks might be interested for dependently-sized array-vector conversions.
It also simplifies a couple places in `core`.
See also https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/108442#issuecomment-1474777273, where `CastKind::Transmute` was added having exactly these semantics before the lang meeting (which I wasn't in) independently expressed interest.
`tests/run-make/alloc-no-oom-handling` tests that `alloc` under
`no_global_oom_handling` builds and is warning-free.
Do the same for `core` to prevent issues such as [1].
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110649 [1]
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
rustdoc: clean up settings.css and settings.js
`handleKey` was added in 9dc5dfb975 and 704050da23 because the browser-native checkbox was `display: none`, breaking native keyboard accessibility.
The native checkbox is now merely `appearance: none`, which does not turn off [behavior semantics], so JavaScript to reimplement it isn't needed any more.
[behavior semantics]: https://w3c.github.io/csswg-drafts/css-ui/#appearance-semantics
The other, one line change to settings.css is follow-up to #110205
Remove the size of locals heuristic in MIR inlining
This heuristic doesn't necessarily correlate to complexity of the MIR Body. In particular, a lot of straight-line code in MIR tends to never reuse a local, even though any optimizer would effectively reuse the storage or just put everything in registers. So it doesn't even necessarily make sense that this would be a stack size heuristic.
So... what happens if we just delete the heuristic? The benchmark suite improves significantly. Less heuristics better?
r? `@cjgillot`
Run various queries from other queries instead of explicitly in phases
These are just legacy leftovers from when rustc didn't have a query system. While there are more cleanups of this sort that can be done here, I want to land them in smaller steps.
This phased order of query invocations was already a lie, as any query that looks at types (e.g. the wf checks run before) can invoke e.g. const eval which invokes borrowck, which invokes typeck, ...
This takes a whole 3 lines in `compiler/` since it lowers to `CastKind::Transmute` in MIR *exactly* the same as the existing `intrinsics::transmute` does, it just doesn't have the fancy checking in `hir_typeck`.
Added to enable experimenting with the request in <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106281#issuecomment-1496648190> and because the portable-simd folks might be interested for dependently-sized array-vector conversions.
It also simplifies a couple places in `core`.
Clone region var origins instead of taking them in borrowck
Fixes an issue with the new solver where reporting a borrow-checker error ICEs because it calls `InferCtxt::evaluate_obligation`.
This also removes a handful of unnecessary `tcx.infer_ctxt().build()` calls that are only there to mitigate this same exact issue, but with the old solver.
Fixescompiler-errors/next-solver-hir-issues#12.
----
This implements `@aliemjay's` solution where we just don't *take* the region constraints, but clone them. This potentially makes it easier to write a bug about taking region constraints twice or never at all, but again, not many folks are touching this code.
Report allocation errors as panics
OOM is now reported as a panic but with a custom payload type (`AllocErrorPanicPayload`) which holds the layout that was passed to `handle_alloc_error`.
This should be review one commit at a time:
- The first commit adds `AllocErrorPanicPayload` and changes allocation errors to always be reported as panics.
- The second commit removes `#[alloc_error_handler]` and the `alloc_error_hook` API.
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/192Closes#51540Closes#51245
Evaluate place expression in `PlaceMention`
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/102256 introduces a `PlaceMention(place)` MIR statement which keep trace of `let _ = place` statements from surface rust, but without semantics.
This PR proposes to change the behaviour of `let _ =` patterns with respect to the borrow-checker to verify that the bound place is live.
Specifically, consider this code:
```rust
let _ = {
let a = 5;
&a
};
```
This passes borrowck without error on stable. Meanwhile, replacing `_` by `_: _` or `_p` errors with "error[E0597]: `a` does not live long enough", [see playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=c448d25a7c205dc95a0967fe96bccce8).
This PR *does not* change how `_` patterns behave with respect to initializedness: it remains ok to bind a moved-from place to `_`.
The relevant test is `tests/ui/borrowck/let_underscore_temporary.rs`. Crater check found no regression.
For consistency, this PR changes miri to evaluate the place found in `PlaceMention`, and report eventual dangling pointers found within it.
r? `@RalfJung`
Add offset_of! macro (RFC 3308)
Implements https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3308 (tracking issue #106655) by adding the built in macro `core::mem::offset_of`. Two of the future possibilities are also implemented:
* Nested field accesses (without array indexing)
* DST support (for `Sized` fields)
I wrote this a few months ago, before the RFC merged. Now that it's merged, I decided to rebase and finish it.
cc `@thomcc` (RFC author)
This code was added in 9dc5dfb975
and 704050da23 because the browser-
native checkbox was `display: none`, breaking native keyboard
accessibility.
The native checkbox is now merely `appearance: none`, which does
not turn off [behavior semantics], so JavaScript to
reimplement it isn't needed any more.
[behavior semantics]: https://w3c.github.io/csswg-drafts/css-ui/#appearance-semantics
Rollup of 5 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #110333 (rustc_metadata: Split `children` into multiple tables)
- #110501 (rustdoc: fix ICE from rustc_resolve and librustdoc parse divergence)
- #110608 (Specialize some `io::Read` and `io::Write` methods for `VecDeque<u8>` and `&[u8]`)
- #110632 (Panic instead of truncating if the incremental on-disk cache is too big)
- #110633 (More `mem::take` in `library`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Ensure mir_drops_elaborated_and_const_checked when requiring codegen.
mir_drops_elaborated_and_const_checked may emit errors while codegen has started, and the compiler would exit leaving object code files around.
Found by `@cuviper` in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/109731
By placing the stdout in a CDATA block we avoid almost all escaping, as
there's only two byte sequences you can't sneak into a CDATA and you can
handle that with some only slightly regrettable CDATA-splitting. I've
done this in at least two other implementations of the junit xml format
over the years and it's always worked out. The only quirk new to this
(for me) is smuggling newlines as 
 to avoid literal newlines in the
output.
Deduplicate unreachable blocks, for real this time
In https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/106428 (in particular 41eda69516) we noticed that inlining `unreachable_unchecked` can produce duplicate unreachable blocks. So we improved two MIR optimizations: `SimplifyCfg` was given a simplify to deduplicate unreachable blocks, then `InstCombine` was given a combiner to deduplicate switch targets that point at the same block. The problem is that change doesn't actually work.
Our current pass order is
```
SimplifyCfg (does nothing relevant to this situation)
Inline (produces multiple unreachable blocks)
InstCombine (doesn't do anything here, oops)
SimplifyCfg (produces the duplicate SwitchTargets that InstCombine is looking for)
```
So in here, I have factored out the specific function from `InstCombine` and placed it inside the simplify that produces the case it is looking for. This should ensure that it runs in the scenario it was designed for.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110551
r? `@cjgillot`
Allow to feed a value in another query's cache and remove `WithOptConstParam`
I used it to remove `WithOptConstParam` queries, as an example.
The idea is that a query (here `typeck(function)`) can write into another query's cache (here `type_of(anon const)`). The dependency node for `type_of` would depend on all the current dependencies of `typeck`.
There is still an issue with cycles: if `type_of(anon const)` is accessed before `typeck(function)`, we will still have the usual cycle. The way around this issue is to `ensure` that `typeck(function)` is called before accessing `type_of(anon const)`.
When replayed, we may the following cases:
- `typeck` is green, in that case `type_of` is green too, and all is right;
- `type_of` is green, `typeck` may still be marked as red (it depends on strictly more things than `type_of`) -> we verify that the saved value and the re-computed value of `type_of` have the same hash;
- `type_of` is red, then `typeck` is red -> it's the caller responsibility to ensure `typeck` is recomputed *before* `type_of`.
As `anon consts` have their own `DefPathData`, it's not possible to have the def-id of the anon-const point to something outside the original function, but the general case may have to be resolved before using this device more broadly.
There is an open question about loading from the on-disk cache. If `typeck` is loaded from the on-disk cache, the side-effect does not happen. The regular `type_of` implementation can go and fetch the correct value from the decoded `typeck` results, and the dep-graph will check that the hashes match, but I'm not sure we want to rely on this behaviour.
I specifically allowed to feed the value to `type_of` from inside a call to `type_of`. In that case, the dep-graph will check that the fingerprints of both values match.
This implementation is still very sensitive to cycles, and requires that we call `typeck(function)` before `typeck(anon const)`. The reason is that `typeck(anon const)` calls `type_of(anon const)`, which calls `typeck(function)`, which feeds `type_of(anon const)`, and needs to build the MIR so needs `typeck(anon const)`. The latter call would not cycle, since `type_of(anon const)` has been set, but I'd rather not remove the cycle check.
Add regression test for #46506Fixes#46506.
This issue was fixed very likely alongside the others when we cleaned up the re-exports code.
r? `@notriddle`
Substitute missing trait items suggestion correctly
Properly substitute missing item suggestions, so that when they reference generics from their parent trait they actually have the right time for the impl.
Also, some other minor tweaks like using `/* Type */` to signify a GAT's type is actually missing, and fixing generic arg suggestions for GATs in general.
fix lint regression in `non_upper_case_globals`
Fixes#110573
The issue also exists for inherent associated types (where I copied my impl from). `EarlyContext` is more involved to fix in this way, so I'll leave it be for now (note it's unstable so that's not urgent).
r? `@compiler-errors`
Implement `Neg` for signed non-zero integers.
Negating a non-zero integer currently requires unpacking to a primitive and re-wrapping. Since negation of non-zero signed integers always produces a non-zero result, it is safe to implement `Neg` for `NonZeroI{N}`.
The new `impl` is marked as stable because trait impls for two stable types can't be marked unstable.
See discussion on https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/105 for additional context.
Negating a non-zero integer currently requires unpacking to a
primitive and re-wrapping. Since negation of non-zero signed
integers always produces a non-zero result, it is safe to
implement `Neg` for `NonZeroI{N}`.
The new `impl` is marked as stable because trait implementations
for two stable types can't be marked unstable.
Add suggestion to use closure argument instead of a capture on borrowck error
Fixes#109271
r? `@compiler-errors`
This should probably be refined a bit, but opening a PR so that I don't forget anything.
Support AIX-style archive type
Reading facility of AIX big archive has been supported by `object` since 0.30.0.
Writing facility of AIX big archive has already been supported by `ar_archive_writer`, but we need to bump the version to support the new archive type enum.
Missing blanket impl trait not public
Fixes#94183.
The problem was that we should have checked if the trait was reachable instead of only "directly public".
r? `@notriddle`
Fix `tests/run-make-translation` when download-rustc is enabled
When building locally, we never generate a `share` directory in the local sysroot. However, when we download the `rustc` component from ci, it includes a `share/man` directory in the sysroot. The `run-make/translation` test assumed that it didn't exist, and would create a link from `fakeroot` to the real share directory, and write symbolic links into it. Change it not to create the link, so that rustc doesn't try to load multiple copies of the same `.ftl` file.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110357.
Add `rustc_fluent_macro` to decouple fluent from `rustc_macros`
Fluent, with all the icu4x it brings in, takes quite some time to compile. `fluent_messages!` is only needed in further downstream rustc crates, but is blocking more upstream crates like `rustc_index`. By splitting it out, we allow `rustc_macros` to be compiled earlier, which speeds up `x check compiler` by about 5 seconds (and even more after the needless dependency on `serde_json` is removed from `rustc_data_structures`).
When building locally, we never generate a `share` directory in the
local sysroot. However, when we download the `rustc` component from ci,
it includes a `share/man` directory in the sysroot. The
`run-make/translation` test assumed that it didn't exist, and would
create a link from `fakeroot` to the real share directory, and write
symbolic links into it. Change it not to create the link, so that rustc
doesn't try to load multiple copies of the same `.ftl` file.
make `non_upper_case_globals` lint not report trait impls
We should not lint on trait `impl`s for `non_upper_case_globals`; the user doesn't have control over the name. This brings `non_upper_case_globals` into consistency with other `nonstandard_style` lints.
Fix no_std tests that load libc from the sysroot when download-rustc is enabled
There were a series of unfortunate interactions here. Here's an MCVE of the test this fixes (committed as `tests/ui/meta/no_std-extern-libc.rs`):
```rust
#![crate_type = "lib"]
#![no_std]
#![feature(rustc_private)]
extern crate libc;
```
Before, this would give an error about duplicate versions of libc:
```
error[E0464]: multiple candidates for `rlib` dependency `libc` found
--> fake-test-src-base/allocator/no_std-alloc-error-handler-default.rs:15:1
|
LL | extern crate libc;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: candidate #1: /home/gh-jyn514/rust/build/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-358db1024b7d9957.rlib
= note: candidate #2: /home/gh-jyn514/rust/build/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-ebc478710122a279.rmeta
```
Both these versions were downloaded from CI, but one came from the `rust-std` component and one came from `rustc-dev`:
```
; tar -tf build/cache/f2d9a3d0771504f1ae776226a5799dcb4408a91a/rust-std-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.xz | grep liblibc
rust-std-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/rust-std-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-68a2d9e195dd6ed2.rlib
; tar -tf build/cache/f2d9a3d0771504f1ae776226a5799dcb4408a91a/rustc-dev-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.xz | grep liblibc
rustc-dev-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/rustc-dev/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-f226c9fbdd92a0fd.rmeta
```
The fix was to only copy files from `rust-std` unless a Step explicitly requests for the `rustc-dev` components to be available by calling `builder.ensure(compile::Rustc)`.
To avoid having to re-parse the `rustc-dev.tar.xz` tarball every time, which is quite slow, this adds a new `build/host/ci-rustc/.rustc-dev-contents` cache file which stores only the names of files we need to copy into the sysroot.
This also allows reverting the hack in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110121; now that we only copy rustc-dev on-demand, we can correctly add the `Rustc` check artifacts into the sysroot, so that this works correctly even when `download-rustc` is forced to `true` and some tool depends on a local change to `compiler`.
---
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108767#issuecomment-1501217657 for why `no_std` is required for the MCVE test to fail; it's complicated and not particularly important.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108767.
Fluent, with all the icu4x it brings in, takes quite some time to
compile. `fluent_messages!` is only needed in further downstream rustc
crates, but is blocking more upstream crates like `rustc_index`. By
splitting it out, we allow `rustc_macros` to be compiled earlier, which
speeds up `x check compiler` by about 5 seconds (and even more after the
needless dependency on `serde_json` is removed from
`rustc_data_structures`).
Spelling compiler
This is per https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110392#issuecomment-1510193656
I'm going to delay performing a squash because I really don't expect people to be perfectly happy w/ my changes, I really am a human and I really do make mistakes.
r? Nilstrieb
I'm going to be flying this evening, but I should be able to squash / respond to reviews w/in a day or two.
I tried to be careful about dropping changes to `tests`, afaict only two files had changes that were likely related to the changes for a given commit (this is where not having eagerly squashed should have given me an advantage), but, that said, picking things apart can be error prone.
There were a series of unfortunate interactions here. Here's an MCVE of the test this fixes (committed as `tests/ui/meta/no_std-extern-libc.rs`):
```rust
#![crate_type = "lib"]
#![no_std]
#![feature(rustc_private)]
extern crate libc;
```
Before, this would give an error about duplicate versions of libc:
```
error[E0464]: multiple candidates for `rlib` dependency `libc` found
--> fake-test-src-base/allocator/no_std-alloc-error-handler-default.rs:15:1
|
LL | extern crate libc;
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: candidate #1: /home/gh-jyn514/rust/build/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-358db1024b7d9957.rlib
= note: candidate #2: /home/gh-jyn514/rust/build/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/stage2/lib/rustlib/aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-ebc478710122a279.rmeta
```
Both these versions were downloaded from CI, but one came from the `rust-std` component and one came from `rustc-dev`:
```
; tar -tf build/cache/f2d9a3d0771504f1ae776226a5799dcb4408a91a/rust-std-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.xz | grep liblibc
rust-std-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/rust-std-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-68a2d9e195dd6ed2.rlib
; tar -tf build/cache/f2d9a3d0771504f1ae776226a5799dcb4408a91a/rustc-dev-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.tar.xz | grep liblibc
rustc-dev-nightly-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/rustc-dev/lib/rustlib/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/lib/liblibc-f226c9fbdd92a0fd.rmeta
```
The fix was to only copy files from `rust-std` unless a Step explicitly requests for the `rustc-dev` components to be available by calling `builder.ensure(compile::Rustc)`.
To avoid having to re-parse the `rustc-dev.tar.xz` tarball every time, which is quite slow, this adds a new `build/host/ci-rustc/.rustc-dev-contents` cache file which stores only the names of files we need to copy into the sysroot.
This also allows reverting the hack in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/110121; now that we only copy
rustc-dev on-demand, we can correctly add the `Rustc` check artifacts
into the sysroot, so that this works correctly even when
`download-rustc` is forced to `true`.
---
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108767#issuecomment-1501217657 for why `no_std` is required for the MCVE test to fail; it's complicated and not particularly important.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108767.
Support `x test --stage 1 ui-fulldeps`
`@Nilstrieb` had an excellent idea the other day: the same way that rustdoc is able to load `rustc_driver` from the sysroot, ui-fulldeps tests should also be able to load it from the sysroot. That allows us to run fulldeps tests with stage1, without having to fully rebuild the compiler twice. It does unfortunately have the downside that we're building the tests with the *bootstrap* compiler, not the in-tree sources, but since most of the fulldeps tests are for the *API* of the compiler, that seems ok.
I think it's possible to extend this to `run-make-fulldeps`, but I've run out of energy for tonight.
- Move `plugin` tests into a subdirectory.
Plugins are loaded at runtime with `dlopen` and so require the ABI of the running compile to match the ABI of the compiler linked with `rustc_driver`. As a result they can't be supported in stage 1 and have to use `// ignore-stage1`.
- Remove `ignore-stage1` from most non-plugin tests
- Ignore diagnostic tests in stage 1. Even though this requires a stage 2 build to load rustc_driver, it's primarily testing the error message that the *running* compiler emits when the diagnostic struct is malformed.
- Pass `-Zforce-unstable-if-unmarked` in stage1, not just stage2. That allows running `hash-stable-is-unstable` in stage1, since it now suggests adding `rustc_private` to enable loading the crates.
- Add libLLVM.so to the stage0 target sysroot, to allow fulldeps tests that act as custom drivers to load it at runtime.
- Pass `--sysroot stage0-sysroot` in compiletest so that we use the correct version of std.
- Move a few lint tests from ui-fulldeps to ui
These had an `aux-build:lint-group-plugin-test.rs` that they never actually loaded with `feature(plugin)` nor tested. I removed the unused aux-build and they pass fine with stage 1.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75905.
ci: add a runner for vanilla LLVM 16
Like #107044, this will let us track compatibility with LLVM 16 going
forward, especially after we eventually upgrade our own to the next.
This also drops `tidy` here and in `x86_64-gnu-llvm-15`, syncing with
that change in #106085.
rustdoc: Fix invalid handling of nested items with `--document-private-items`
Fixes#110422.
The problem is that only impl block and re-exported `macro_rules!` items are "visible" as nested items. This PR adds the missing checks to handle this correctly.
cc `@compiler-errors`
r? `@notriddle`
Set commit information environment variables when building tools
This fixes#107094.
~I'm trying to add a regression test for this issue.~
**Update**: I've added a test and a new test header `needs-git-hash` which makes sure it doesn't run when commit hashes are ignored (`bootstrap`'s `ignore-git` option).
Nils had an excellent idea the other day: the same way that rustdoc is
able to load `rustc_driver` from the sysroot, ui-fulldeps tests should
also be able to load it from the sysroot. That allows us to run fulldeps
tests with stage1, without having to fully rebuild the compiler twice.
It does unfortunately have the downside that we're running the tests on
the *bootstrap* compiler, not the in-tree sources, but since most of the
fulldeps tests are for the *API* of the compiler, that seems ok.
I think it's possible to extend this to `run-make-fulldeps`, but I've
run out of energy for tonight.
- Move `plugin` tests into a subdirectory.
Plugins are loaded at runtime with `dlopen` and so require the ABI of
the running compile to match the ABI of the compiler linked with
`rustc_driver`. As a result they can't be supported in stage 1 and have
to use `// ignore-stage1`.
- Remove `ignore-stage1` from most non-plugin tests
- Ignore diagnostic tests in stage 1. Even though this requires a stage
2 build to load rustc_driver, it's primarily testing the error message
that the *running* compiler emits when the diagnostic struct is malformed.
- Pass `-Zforce-unstable-if-unmarked` in stage1, not just stage2. That
allows running `hash-stable-is-unstable` in stage1, since it now
suggests adding `rustc_private` to enable loading the crates.
- Add libLLVM.so to the stage0 target sysroot, to allow fulldeps tests
that act as custom drivers to load it at runtime.
- Pass `--sysroot stage0-sysroot` in compiletest so that we use the
correct version of std.
This change makes it so, instead of mixing string distance with
type unification, function signature search works by
mapping names to IDs at the start, reporting to the user any
cases where it had to make corrections, and then matches with
IDs when going through the items.
This only changes function searches. Name searches are left alone,
and corrections are only done when there's a single item in the
search query.
tests: adapt for LLVM change 5b386b864c7619897c51a1da97d78f1cf6f3eff6
The above-mentioned change modified the output of thread-local.rs by changing some variable names. Rather than assume things get put in %0, we capture the variable so the test passes in both the old and new version.
Check freeze with right param-env in `deduced_param_attrs`
We're checking if a trait (`Freeze`) holds in a polymorphic function, but not using that function's own (reveal-all) param-env. This causes us to try to eagerly normalize a specializable projection type that has no default value, which causes an ICE.
Fixes#110171
The above-mentioned change modified the output of thread-local.rs by
changing some variable names. Rather than assume things get put in %0,
we capture the variable so the test passes in both the old and new
version.
Permit MIR inlining without #[inline]
I noticed that there are at least a handful of portable-simd functions that have no `#[inline]` but compile to an assign + return.
I locally benchmarked inlining thresholds between 0 and 50 in increments of 5, and 50 seems to be the best. Interesting. That didn't include check builds though, ~maybe perf will have something to say about that~.
Perf has little useful to say about this. We generally regress all the check builds, as best as I can tell, due to a number of small codegen changes in a particular hot function in the compiler. Probably this is because we've nudged the inlining outcomes all over, and uses of `#[inline(always)]`/`#[inline(never)]` might need to be adjusted.
Like #107044, this will let us track compatibility with LLVM 16 going
forward, especially after we eventually upgrade our own to the next.
This also drops `tidy` here and in `x86_64-gnu-llvm-15`, syncing with
that change in #106085.
Remove `remap_env_constness` in queries
This removes some of the complexities with const traits. #88119 used to be caused by this but was fixed by `param_env = param_env.without_const()`.
Update some ignored tests.
This unignores some tests which no longer need to be ignored (see individual commits for reasons why). This also adds some descriptions to why tests are ignored so they can be seen in the test output.
suggest lifetime for closure parameter type when mismatch
This is a draft PR, will add test cases later and be ready for review.
This PR fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105675 by adding a diagnostics suggestion. Also a partial fix to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/105528.
The following code will have a compile error now:
```
fn const_if_unit(input: bool) -> impl for<'a> FnOnce(&'a ()) -> usize {
let x = |_| 1;
x
}
```
Before this PR:
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/lib.rs:3:5
|
3 | x
| ^ one type is more general than the other
|
= note: expected trait `for<'a> FnOnce<(&'a (),)>`
found trait `FnOnce<(&(),)>`
note: this closure does not fulfill the lifetime requirements
--> src/lib.rs:2:13
|
2 | let x = |_| 1;
| ^^^
error: implementation of `FnOnce` is not general enough
--> src/lib.rs:3:5
|
3 | x
| ^ implementation of `FnOnce` is not general enough
|
= note: closure with signature `fn(&'2 ()) -> usize` must implement `FnOnce<(&'1 (),)>`, for any lifetime `'1`...
= note: ...but it actually implements `FnOnce<(&'2 (),)>`, for some specific lifetime `'2`
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0308`.
error: could not compile `rust-test` due to 2 previous errors
```
After this PR:
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/lib.rs:3:5
|
3 | x
| ^ one type is more general than the other
|
= note: expected trait `for<'a> FnOnce<(&'a (),)>`
found trait `FnOnce<(&(),)>`
note: this closure does not fulfill the lifetime requirements
--> src/lib.rs:2:13
|
2 | let x = |_| 1;
| ^^^
help: consider changing the type of the closure parameters
|
2 | let x = |_: &_| 1;
| ~~~~~~~
error: implementation of `FnOnce` is not general enough
--> src/lib.rs:3:5
|
3 | x
| ^ implementation of `FnOnce` is not general enough
|
= note: closure with signature `fn(&'2 ()) -> usize` must implement `FnOnce<(&'1 (),)>`, for any lifetime `'1`...
= note: ...but it actually implements `FnOnce<(&'2 (),)>`, for some specific lifetime `'2`
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0308`.
error: could not compile `rust-test` due to 2 previous errors
```
After applying the suggestion, it compiles. The suggestion might not always be correct as the generation procedure of that suggestion is quite simple...
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #110033 (Add 1.69.0 release notes)
- #110272 (fix: skip implied bounds if unconstrained lifetime exists)
- #110307 (Allow everyone to set the beta-nominated label)
- #110347 (Add intra-doc links to size_of_* functions)
- #110350 (Add a UI test for #79605)
- #110356 (Fix `x test rust-installer` when `cargo` is set to a relative path)
- #110364 (remove redundant clones)
- #110366 (fix some clippy::complexity)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
[compiletest] Add more test ignore reasons, `needs-` validation, and improved error messages
This PR makes more improvements to the way compiletest ignoring headers are handled, following up on #108905:
* Human-readable ignore reasons have been added for the remaining ignore causes (`needs-*` directives, `*llvm*` directives, and debugger version directives). All ignored tests should now have a human-readable reason.
* The code handling `needs-*` directives has been refactored, and now invalid `needs-*` directive emit errors like `ignore-*` and `only-*`.
* All errors are now displayed at startup (with line numbers) rather than just the first error of the first file.
This PR is best reviewed commit-by-commit.
r? `@ehuss`
This test was ignored long ago in
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/20578/ when the syntax for
closures was changed.
The current status is that a closure with an explicit `!` return type
will trigger the `unreachable_code` lint which appears to be the
original intent of the test
(https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/16836). A closure without a
return type won't trigger the lint since the `!` type isn't inferred
(AFAIK). This restores the test to its original form.
rustdoc-search: add support for nested generics
This change allows `search.js` to parse nested generics (which look `Like<This<Example>>`) and match them. It maintains the existing "bag semantics", so that the order of type parameters is ignored but the number is required to be greater than or equal to what's in the query.
For example, a function with the signature `fn read_all(&mut self: impl Read) -> Result<Vec<u8>, Error>` will match these queries:
* `Read -> Result<Vec<u8>, Error>`
* `Read -> Result<Error, Vec>`
* `Read -> Result<Vec<u8>>`
But it *does not* match `Result<Vec, u8>` or `Result<u8<Vec>>`.
Do not attempt to commute comparison and cast to codegen discriminants
The general algorithm to compute a discriminant is:
```
relative_tag = tag - niche_start
is_niche = relative_tag <= (ule) relative_max
discr = if is_niche {
cast(relative_tag) + niche_variants.start()
} else {
untagged_variant
}
```
We have an optimization branch which attempts to merge the addition and the subtraction by commuting them with the cast. We currently get this optimization wrong.
This PR takes the easiest and safest way: remove the optimization, and let LLVM handle it. (Perf may not agree with that course of action 😅)
There may be a less invasive solution, but I don't have the necessary knowledge of LLVM semantics to find it. Cranelift has the same optimization, which should be handled similarly.
cc `@nikic` and `@bjorn3` if you have a better solution.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110128
Reformulate `point_at_expr_source_of_inferred_type` to be more accurate
Be more accurate when deducing where along the several usages of a binding it is constrained to be some type that is incompatible with an expectation.
This also renames the method to `note_source_of_type_mismatch_constraint` because I prefer that name, though I guess I can revert that. (Also drive-by rename `note_result_coercion` -> `suggest_coercing_result_via_try_operator`, because it's suggesting, not noting!)
This PR is (probably?) best reviewed per commit, but it does regress a bit only to fix it later on, so it could also be reviewed as a whole if that makes the final results more clear.
r? `@estebank`
Add a stable MIR way to get the main function
This is useful for analysis tools that only analyze the code paths that a specific program actually goes through. Or for code generators built on top of stable MIR.
rustdoc: Correctly handle built-in compiler proc-macros as proc-macro and not macro
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110111.
There were actually one issue split in two parts:
* Compiler built-in proc-macro were incorrectly considered as macros and not proc-macros.
* Re-exports of compiler built-in proc-macros were considering them as macros.
Both issues can be fixed by looking at the `MacroKind` variant instead of just relying on information extracted later on.
r? ``@fmease``
Remove all but one of the spans in `BoundRegionKind::BrAnon`
There are only three places where `BoundRegionKind::BrAnon` uses `Some(span)` instead of `None`. Two of them are easy to remove, which this PR does.
r? ```@jackh726```
don't uniquify regions when canonicalizing
uniquifying causes a bunch of issues, most notably it causes `AliasEq(<?x as Trait<'a>>::Assoc, <?x as Trait<'a>>::Assoc)` to result in ambiguity because both `normalizes-to` paths result in ambiguity and substs equate should trivially succeed but doesn't because we uniquified `'a` to two different regions.
I originally added uniquification to make it easier to deal with requirement 6 from the dev-guide: https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/solve/trait-solving.html#requirements
> ### 6. Trait solving must be (free) lifetime agnostic
>
> Trait solving during codegen should have the same result as during typeck. As we erase
> all free regions during codegen we must not rely on them during typeck. A noteworthy example
> is special behavior for `'static`.
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/1671
Relying on regions being identical may cause ICE during MIR typeck, but even without this PR we can end up relying on that as type inference vars can resolve to types which contain an identical region. Let's land this and deal with any ICE that crop up as we go. Will look at this issue again before stabilization.
r? ```@compiler-errors```
Improve safe transmute error reporting
This patch updates the error reporting when Safe Transmute is not possible between 2 types by including the reason.
Also, fix some small bugs that occur when computing the `Answer` for transmutability.
The `std` test straightforwardly can't work without file descriptors;
#99417 tracks moving it out of tests/ui.
`issue-13560.rs` requires the target to support dynamic linking.
`extern-mod-syntax` is interesting. The original test was added to check
if `extern mod` could be parsed correctly and used `extern mod std` and
an import:
138dc3048a (diff-73700e1e851b7a37bc92174635dab726124c82e5bfabbbc45b4a3c2e8e14fadd)
At some point `std::json::Object` was moved out of std to an unstable
rustc-only `extras` crate, and rather than just changing the import it
got changed to use the unstable crate. When `extras` was removed, people
assumed the test was meant to also test rustc_private and changed it to
another unstable crate rather than using something in std.
This changes the test to remove the `rustc_private` import, to allow it
to work properly when cross-compiling.
This patch updates the error reporting when Safe Transmute is not
possible between 2 types by including the reason.
Also, fix some small bugs that occur when computing the `Answer` for
transmutability.
Added diagnostic for pin! macro in addition to Box::pin if Unpin isn't implemented
I made a PR earlier, but accidentally renamed a branch and that deleted the PR... sorry for the duplicate
Currently, if an operation on `Pin<T>` is performed that requires `T` to implement `Unpin`, the diagnostic suggestion is to use `Box::pin` ("note: consider using `Box::pin`").
This PR suggests pin! as well, as that's another valid way of pinning a value, and avoids a heap allocation. Appropriate diagnostic suggestions were included to highlight the difference in semantics (local pinning for pin! vs non-local for Box::pin).
Fixes#109964
Check for body owner fallibly in error reporting
Sometimes the "body id" we use for an obligation cause is not actually a body owner, like when we're doing WF checking on items.
Fixes#110157
Fix diff option conflict in UI test
Trivial fix for test case `tests/run-make/rustdoc-verify-output-files`,
it's failing on MacOS, the `-u` option specifies the unified context format, while the `-q` option specifies only brief output. These two options are incompatible, since the unified context format produces a more detailed output than the brief output format.
Add inline assembly support for m68k
I believe this should be correct, to the extent I understand the logic around inline assembly. M68k is fairly straightforward here, other than having separate address registers.
Erase lifetimes above `ty::INNERMOST` when probing ambiguous types
Turns out that `TyCtxt::replace_escaping_bound_vars_uncached` only erases bound vars exactly at `ty::INNERMOST`, and not everything above. This regresses the suggestions for non-lifetime binders, but oh well, I don't really care about those.
Fixes#110052
Preserve argument indexes when inlining MIR
We store argument indexes on VarDebugInfo. Unlike the previous method of relying on the variable index to know whether a variable is an argument, this survives MIR inlining.
We also no longer check if var.source_info.scope is the outermost scope. When a function gets inlined, the arguments to the inner function will no longer be in the outermost scope. What we care about though is whether they were in the outermost scope prior to inlining, which we know by whether we assigned an argument index.
Fixes#83217
I considered using `Option<NonZeroU16>` instead of `Option<u16>` to store the index. I didn't because `TypeFoldable` isn't implemented for `NonZeroU16` and because it looks like due to padding, it currently wouldn't make any difference. But I indexed from 1 anyway because (a) it'll make it easier if later it becomes worthwhile to use a `NonZeroU16` and because the arguments were previously indexed from 1, so it made for a smaller change.
This is my first PR on rust-lang/rust, so apologies if I've gotten anything not quite right.