`auto_ref()` currently returns an Rvalue datum for the ref'd value,
which is fine for thin pointers, but for fat pointers this means that
once the pointer is moved out of that datum, its memory will be marked
as dead. And because there is not necessarily an intermediate temporary
involved we can end up marking memory as dead that is actually still
used.
As I don't want to break the micro-optimization for thin pointers by
always returning an Lvalue datum, I decided to only do so for fat
pointers.
Fix#30478
This PR is a rebase of the original PR by @eddyb https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/21836 with some unrebasable parts manually reapplied, feature gate added + type equality restriction added as described below.
This implementation is partial because the type equality restriction is applied to all type ascription expressions and not only those in lvalue contexts. Thus, all difficulties with detection of these contexts and translation of coercions having effect in runtime are avoided.
So, you can't write things with coercions like `let slice = &[1, 2, 3]: &[u8];`. It obviously makes type ascription less useful than it should be, but it's still much more useful than not having type ascription at all.
In particular, things like `let v = something.iter().collect(): Vec<_>;` and `let u = t.into(): U;` work as expected and I'm pretty happy with these improvements alone.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/23416
LLVM doesn't really support reusing the same module to emit more than
one file. One bug this causes is that the IR is invalidated by the stack
coloring pass when emitting the first file, and then the IR verifier
complains by the time we try to emit the second file. Also, we get
different binaries with --emit=asm,link than with just --emit=link. In
some cases leading to segfaults.
Unfortunately, it seems that at this point in time, the most sensible
option to circumvent this problem is to just clone the whole llvm module
for the asm output if we need both, asm and obj file output.
Fixes#24876Fixes#26235
LLVM doesn't really support reusing the same module to emit more than
one file. One bug this causes is that the IR is invalidated by the stack
coloring pass when emitting the first file, and then the IR verifier
complains by the time we try to emit the second file. Also, we get
different binaries with --emit=asm,link than with just --emit=link. In
some cases leading to segfaults.
Unfortunately, it seems that at this point in time, the most sensible
option to circumvent this problem is to just clone the whole llvm module
for the asm output if we need both, asm and obj file output.
Fixes#24876Fixes#26235
Still will not translate references to items like `X` or `Y::V` where
```
struct X;
enum Y { V }
```
but I must go work on university things so I’m PRing what I have.
r? @nikomatsakis
This fixes a bug in which unused imports can get wrongly marked as used when checking for unused qualifications in `resolve_path` (issue #30078), and it removes unused imports that were previously undetected because of the bug.
We can now handle name resolution errors and get past type checking (if we're a bit lucky). This is the first step towards doing code completion for partial programs (we need error recovery in the parser and early access to save-analysis).
What I've done here is try to make the code match what vcvars does much more closely. It now chooses which SDK to find based on the version of MSVC that it found. It also bases the decision of whether to find all the things on whether `VCINSTALLDIR` has been set, which is more likely to have only been set by an invocation of vcvars, unlike previously where it would do some things only if `LIB` wasn't set even though there was a valid use case for libraries to add themselves to `LIB` without having invoked vcvars.
There are still some debug `println!`s so people can test the PR and make sure it works correctly on various setups.
It supports VS 2015, 2013, and 2012. People who want to use versions of VS older (or newer) than that will have to manually invoke the appropriate vcvars bat file to set the proper environment variables themselves.
Do not merge yet.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30229
This handles cases when the LLVM used isn't configured will the 'usual' targets. Also, cases where LLVM is shared are also handled (ie with `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` etc).