Check if call return type is visibly uninhabited when building MIR
The main motivation behind the change is to expose information about diverging
calls to the generator transform and match the precision of drop range tracking
which already understands that call expressions with visibly uninhabited types
diverges.
This change should also accept strictly more programs than before. That is
programs that were previously rejected due to errors raised by control-flow
sensitive checks in a code that is no longer considered reachable.
Fixes#93161.
Update cargo
7 commits in dba5baf4345858c591517b24801902a062c399f8..edffc4ada3d77799e5a04eeafd9b2f843d29fc23
2022-04-13 21:58:27 +0000 to 2022-04-19 17:38:29 +0000
- Document cargo-add (rust-lang/cargo#10578)
- feat: Support '-F' as an alias for '--features' (rust-lang/cargo#10576)
- Completion support for `cargo-add` (rust-lang/cargo#10577)
- Add a link to the document in the timings report (rust-lang/cargo#10492)
- feat: Import cargo-add into cargo (rust-lang/cargo#10472)
- Part 8 of RFC2906 - Keep `InheritableFields` in a `LazyCell` inside `… (rust-lang/cargo#10568)
- Part 7 of RFC2906 - Add support for inheriting `exclude` and `include` (rust-lang/cargo#10565)
A Google search of the error message fails to return any relevant
resuts, suggesting this has never occurred in practice. And removeing it
reduces instruction counts by up to 2% on some benchmarks.
Previously, we would retrieve the span from the `Body` using
the `locations` field. However, we may end up changing the
`locations` field when moving a constraint from a promoted
to a different body.
We now store the original `Span` in a dedication field, so that
changes to the `locations` do not affect the quality of our
diagnostics.
The loop is there to handle a `NoDelim` open/close token. This commit
changes `TokenCursor::inlined_next` so it never returns such a token.
This is a performance win because the conditional test in `bump()` is
removed.
If the parser needs changing in the future to handle `NoDelim` tokens,
then `inlined_next()` can easily be changed to return them.
The `DelimToken` here is `NoDelim`, which means the returned delim
tokens will just be ignored by `Parser::bump()`. This commit changes
things so the delim tokens won't be returned.
Temporarily, only enable split debuginfo on Windows if not building with
the boostrap compiler as there is a bug that isn't fixed in the
bootstrap compiler which would result in `thorin` being run on Windows.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #95740 (asm: Add a kreg0 register class on x86 which includes k0)
- #95813 (Remove extra space before a where clause)
- #96029 (Refactor loop into iterator; simplify negation logic.)
- #96162 (interpret: Fix writing uninit to an allocation)
- #96165 (Miri provenance cleanup)
- #96205 (Use futex locks on emscripten.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Miri provenance cleanup
Reviewing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95826 by ``@carbotaniuman`` made me realize that we could clean things up a little here.
``@carbotaniuman`` please let me know if you're okay with landing this (it will create a lot of conflicts with your PR), or if you'd prefer incorporating the ideas from this PR into yours. I think we want to end up in a situation where the function you called `ptr_reify_alloc` returns just two things, a concrete tag and an offset. Getting an `AllocId` from a concrete tag should be infallible like now. However a concrete tag and `Tag` don't have to be the same type.
r? ``@oli-obk``
interpret: Fix writing uninit to an allocation
When calling `mark_init`, we need to also be mindful of what happens with the relocations! Specifically, when we de-init memory, we need to clear relocations in that range as well or else strange things will happen (and printing will not show the de-init, since relocations take precedence there).
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/2068.
Here's the Miri testcase that this fixes (requires `-Zmiri-disable-validation`):
```rust
use std::mem::MaybeUninit;
fn main() { unsafe {
let mut x = MaybeUninit::<i64>::uninit();
// Put in a ptr.
x.as_mut_ptr().cast::<&i32>().write_unaligned(&0);
// Overwrite parts of that pointer with 'uninit' through a Scalar.
let ptr = x.as_mut_ptr().cast::<i32>();
*ptr = MaybeUninit::uninit().assume_init();
// Reading this back should hence work fine.
let _c = *ptr;
} }
```
Previously this failed with
```
error: unsupported operation: unable to turn pointer into raw bytes
--> ../miri/uninit.rs:11:14
|
11 | let _c = *ptr;
| ^^^^ unable to turn pointer into raw bytes
|
= help: this is likely not a bug in the program; it indicates that the program performed an operation that the interpreter does not support
= note: inside `main` at ../miri/uninit.rs:11:14
```
Refactor loop into iterator; simplify negation logic.
is_dummy should return when a non-dummy is found, but instead is iterated until completion. With some inspiration from line 323 this was refactored to a single line that returns once a single counterexample is found.
asm: Add a kreg0 register class on x86 which includes k0
Previously we only exposed a kreg register class which excludes the k0
register since it can't be used in many instructions. However k0 is a
valid register and we need to have a way of marking it as clobbered for
clobber_abi.
Fixes#94977
This implementation returns a best attempt at the current exe path. On
fuchsia, fdio will always use `argv[0]` as the process name and if it is
not set then an error will be returned. Because this is not guaranteed
to be the case, this implementation returns an error if `argv` does not
contain any elements.
- Cache doc link resolutions obtained early
- Cache markdown links retrieved from doc strings early
- Rename and restructure the code in early doc link resolution to be closer to #94857
Previously we only exposed a kreg register class which excludes the k0
register since it can't be used in many instructions. However k0 is a
valid register and we need to have a way of marking it as clobbered for
clobber_abi.
Fixes#94977
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #94493 (Improved diagnostic on failure to meet send bound on future in a foreign crate)
- #95809 (Fix typo in bootstrap.py)
- #96086 (Remove `--extern-location` and all associated code)
- #96089 (`alloc`: make `vec!` unavailable under `no_global_oom_handling`)
- #96122 (Fix an invalid error for a suggestion to add a slice in pattern-matching)
- #96142 (Stop using CRATE_DEF_INDEX outside of metadata encoding.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Stop using CRATE_DEF_INDEX outside of metadata encoding.
`CRATE_DEF_ID` and `CrateNum::as_def_id` are almost always what we want. We should not manipulate raw `DefIndex` outside of metadata encoding.
`alloc`: make `vec!` unavailable under `no_global_oom_handling`
`alloc`: make `vec!` unavailable under `no_global_oom_handling`
The `vec!` macro has 3 rules, but two are not usable under
`no_global_oom_handling` builds of the standard library
(even with a zero size):
```rust
let _ = vec![42]; // Error: requires `exchange_malloc` lang_item.
let _ = vec![42; 0]; // Error: cannot find function `from_elem`.
```
Thus those two rules should not be available to begin with.
The remaining one, with an empty matcher, is just a shorthand for
`new()` and may not make as much sense to have alone, since the
idea behind `vec!` is to enable `Vec`s to be defined with the same
syntax as array expressions. Furthermore, the documentation can be
confusing since it shows the other rules.
Thus perhaps it is better and simpler to disable `vec!` entirely
under `no_global_oom_handling` environments, and let users call
`new()` instead:
```rust
let _: Vec<i32> = vec![];
let _: Vec<i32> = Vec::new();
```
Notwithstanding this, a `try_vec!` macro would be useful, such as
the one introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/95051.
If the shorthand for `new()` is deemed worth keeping on its own,
then it may be interesting to have a separate `vec!` macro with
a single rule and different, simpler documentation.
Signed-off-by: Miguel Ojeda <ojeda@kernel.org>
Remove `--extern-location` and all associated code
`--extern-location` was an experiment to investigate the best way to
generate useful diagnostics for unused dependency warnings by enabling a
build system to identify the corresponding build config.
While I did successfully use this, I've since been convinced the
alternative `--json unused-externs` mechanism is the way to go, and
there's no point in having two mechanisms with basically the same
functionality.
This effectively reverts https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72603
Improved diagnostic on failure to meet send bound on future in a foreign crate
Provide a better diagnostic on failure to meet send bound on futures in a foreign crate.
fixes#78543