Stabilize backtrace
This PR stabilizes the std::backtrace module. As of #99431, the std::Error::backtrace item has been removed, and so the rest of the backtrace feature is set to be stabilized.
Previous discussion can be found in #72981, #3156.
Stabilized API summary:
```rust
pub mod std {
pub mod backtrace {
pub struct Backtrace { }
pub enum BacktraceStatus {
Unsupported,
Disabled,
Captured,
}
impl fmt::Debug for Backtrace {}
impl Backtrace {
pub fn capture() -> Backtrace;
pub fn force_capture() -> Backtrace;
pub const fn disabled() -> Backtrace;
pub fn status(&self) -> BacktraceStatus;
}
impl fmt::Display for Backtrace {}
}
}
```
`@yaahc`
consider unnormalized types for implied bounds
extracted, and slightly modified, from #98900
The idea here is that generally, rustc is split into things which can assume its inputs are well formed[^1], and things which have verify that themselves.
Generally most predicates should only deal with well formed inputs, e.g. a `&'a &'b (): Trait` predicate should be able to assume that `'b: 'a` holds. Normalization can loosen wf requirements (see #91068) and must therefore not be used in places which still have to check well formedness. The only such place should hopefully be `WellFormed` predicates
fixes#87748 and #98543
r? `@jackh726` cc `@rust-lang/types`
[^1]: These places may still encounter non-wf inputs and have to deal with them without causing an ICE as we may check for well formedness out of order.
Don't document impossible to call default trait items on impls
Closes#100176
This only skips documenting _default_ trait items on impls, not ones that are written inside the impl block. This is a conservative approach, since I think we should document all items written in an impl block (I guess unless hidden or whatever), but the existence of this new query I added makes this easy to extend to other rustdoc cases.
Implement `#[rustc_default_body_unstable]`
This PR implements a new stability attribute — `#[rustc_default_body_unstable]`.
`#[rustc_default_body_unstable]` controls the stability of default bodies in traits.
For example:
```rust
pub trait Trait {
#[rustc_default_body_unstable(feature = "feat", isssue = "none")]
fn item() {}
}
```
In order to implement `Trait` user needs to either
- implement `item` (even though it has a default implementation)
- enable `#![feature(feat)]`
This is useful in conjunction with [`#[rustc_must_implement_one_of]`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/92164), we may want to relax requirements for a trait, for example allowing implementing either of `PartialEq::{eq, ne}`, but do so in a safe way — making implementation of only `PartialEq::ne` unstable.
r? `@Aaron1011`
cc `@nrc` (iirc you were interested in this wrt `read_buf`), `@danielhenrymantilla` (you were interested in the related `#[rustc_must_implement_one_of]`)
P.S. This is my first time working with stability attributes, so I'm not sure if I did everything right 😅
Split create_def and lowering of lifetimes for opaque types and bare async fns
r? `@cjgillot`
This work is kind of half-way, but I think it could be merged anyway.
I think we should be able to remove all the vacant arms in `new_named_lifetime_with_res`, if I'm not wrong that requires visiting more nodes. We can do that as a follow up.
In follow-up PRs, besides the thing mentioned previously, I'll be trying to remove `LifetimeCaptureContext`, `captured_lifetimes` as a global data structure, global `binders_to_ignore` and all their friends :).
Also try to remap in a more general way based on def-ids.
make `PlaceholderConst` not store the type of the const
Currently the `Placeholder` variant on `ConstKind` is 28 bytes when with this PR its 8 bytes, i am not sure this is really useful at all rn since `Unevaluated` and `Value` variants are huge still but eventually it should be possible to get both down to 16 bytes 🤔. Mostly opening this to see if this change has any perf impact when done before it can make `ConstKind`/`ConstS` smaller
Improve size assertions.
- For any file with four or more size assertions, move them into a
separate module (as is already done for `hir.rs`).
- Add some more for AST nodes and THIR nodes.
- Put the `hir.rs` ones in alphabetical order.
r? `@lqd`
Fix ICE in Definitions::create_def
`Debug` implementation for `LocalDefId` uses global `Definitions`. Normally it’s ok, but we can’t do it while holding a mutable reference to `Definitions`, since it causes ICE or deadlock (depending on whether `parallel_compiler` is enabled).
This PR effectively copies the `Debug` implementation into the problematic method. I don’t particularly love this solution (since it creates code duplication), but I don’t see any other options.
This issue was discovered when running `rustdoc` with `RUSTDOC_LOG=trace` on the following file:
```rust
pub struct SomeStruct;
fn asdf() {
impl SomeStruct {
pub fn qwop(&self) {
println!("hidden function");
}
}
}
```
I’m not sure how to create a test for this behavior.
- For any file with four or more size assertions, move them into a
separate module (as is already done for `hir.rs`).
- Add some more for AST nodes and THIR nodes.
- Put the `hir.rs` ones in alphabetical order.
Layout things
These two commits are pretty independent, but didn't seem worth doing individual PRs for:
- Always check that size is a multiple of align, even without debug assertions
- Change Layout debug printing to put `variants` last, since it often huge and not usually the part we are most interested in
Cc `@eddyb`
Fix the size of niche enums with ZST alignment
For enums with an aligned ZST variant, like `[T; 0]`, the niche layout
was not computing a sufficient size to be consistent with alignment. Now
we pad that size up to the alignment, and also make sure to only use the
niche variant's ABI when the size and alignment still match.
Fixes#99836
r? `@eddyb`
For enums with an aligned ZST variant, like `[T; 0]`, the niche layout
was not computing a sufficient size to be consistent with alignment. Now
we pad that size up to the alignment, and also make sure to only use the
niche variant's ABI when the size and alignment still match.