Recognize discriminant reads as no-ops in RemoveNoopLandingPads
The cleanup blocks often contain read of discriminants. Teach
RemoveNoopLandingPads to recognize them as no-ops to remove
additional no-op landing pads.
The cleanup blocks often contain read of discriminants. Teach
RemoveNoopLandingPads to recognize them as no-ops to remove
additional no-op landing pads.
Use `pretty::create_dump_file` for dumping dataflow results
The old code wasn't incorporating promoteds into the path, meaning other `dot` files could get clobbered. Use the MIR dump infrastructure to generate paths so that this doesn't occur in the future.
perf: UninhabitedEnumBranching avoid n^2
Avoid n² complexity. This showed up in a profile for match-stress-enum that has 8192 variants
I have only profiled locally against `match-stress-enum`, so we should have it perf tested to make sure it does not regress other crates.
Give `impl Trait` in a `const fn` its own feature gate
...previously it was gated under `#![feature(const_fn)]`.
I think we actually want to do this in all const-contexts? If so, this should be `#![feature(const_impl_trait)]` instead. I don't think there's any way to make use of `impl Trait` within a `const` initializer.
cc #77463
r? `@oli-obk`
inliner: use caller param_env
We used the callee param env instead of the caller param env by accident in #77430, this PR fixes that and caches it in the `Inliner` struct.
fixes#77564
r? @ecstatic-morse
This is a combination of 18 commits.
Commit #2:
Additional examples and some small improvements.
Commit #3:
fixed mir-opt non-mir extensions and spanview title elements
Corrected a fairly recent assumption in runtest.rs that all MIR dump
files end in .mir. (It was appending .mir to the graphviz .dot and
spanview .html file names when generating blessed output files. That
also left outdated files in the baseline alongside the files with the
incorrect names, which I've now removed.)
Updated spanview HTML title elements to match their content, replacing a
hardcoded and incorrect name that was left in accidentally when
originally submitted.
Commit #4:
added more test examples
also improved Makefiles with support for non-zero exit status and to
force validation of tests unless a specific test overrides it with a
specific comment.
Commit #5:
Fixed rare issues after testing on real-world crate
Commit #6:
Addressed PR feedback, and removed temporary -Zexperimental-coverage
-Zinstrument-coverage once again supports the latest capabilities of
LLVM instrprof coverage instrumentation.
Also fixed a bug in spanview.
Commit #7:
Fix closure handling, add tests for closures and inner items
And cleaned up other tests for consistency, and to make it more clear
where spans start/end by breaking up lines.
Commit #8:
renamed "typical" test results "expected"
Now that the `llvm-cov show` tests are improved to normally expect
matching actuals, and to allow individual tests to override that
expectation.
Commit #9:
test coverage of inline generic struct function
Commit #10:
Addressed review feedback
* Removed unnecessary Unreachable filter.
* Replaced a match wildcard with remining variants.
* Added more comments to help clarify the role of successors() in the
CFG traversal
Commit #11:
refactoring based on feedback
* refactored `fn coverage_spans()`.
* changed the way I expand an empty coverage span to improve performance
* fixed a typo that I had accidently left in, in visit.rs
Commit #12:
Optimized use of SourceMap and SourceFile
Commit #13:
Fixed a regression, and synched with upstream
Some generated test file names changed due to some new change upstream.
Commit #14:
Stripping out crate disambiguators from demangled names
These can vary depending on the test platform.
Commit #15:
Ignore llvm-cov show diff on test with generics, expand IO error message
Tests with generics produce llvm-cov show results with demangled names
that can include an unstable "crate disambiguator" (hex value). The
value changes when run in the Rust CI Windows environment. I added a sed
filter to strip them out (in a prior commit), but sed also appears to
fail in the same environment. Until I can figure out a workaround, I'm
just going to ignore this specific test result. I added a FIXME to
follow up later, but it's not that critical.
I also saw an error with Windows GNU, but the IO error did not
specify a path for the directory or file that triggered the error. I
updated the error messages to provide more info for next, time but also
noticed some other tests with similar steps did not fail. Looks
spurious.
Commit #16:
Modify rust-demangler to strip disambiguators by default
Commit #17:
Remove std::process::exit from coverage tests
Due to Issue #77553, programs that call std::process::exit() do not
generate coverage results on Windows MSVC.
Commit #18:
fix: test file paths exceeding Windows max path len
Fix miscompile in SimplifyBranchSame
Cherry-picked from #77486, but with a different test case that used to be compiled incorrectly on both master & beta branches.
Replace `(Body, DefId)` with `Body` where possible
Follow-up to #77430.
I `grep`-ed for parameter lists in which a `Body` appeared within a few lines of a `DefId`, so it's possible that I missed some cases, but this should be pretty complete. Most of these changes were mechanical, but there's a few places where I started calling things "caller" and "callee" when multiple `DefId`s were in-scope at once. Also, we should probably have a helper function on `Body` that returns a `LocalDefId`. I can do that in this PR or in a follow-up.
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #75853 (Use more intra-doc-links in `core::fmt`)
- #75928 (Remove trait_selection error message in specific case)
- #76329 (Add check for doc alias attribute at crate level)
- #77219 (core::global_allocator docs link to std::alloc::GlobalAlloc)
- #77395 (BTreeMap: admit the existence of leaf edges in comments)
- #77407 (Improve build-manifest to work with the improved promote-release)
- #77426 (Include scope id in SocketAddrV6::Display)
- #77439 (Fix missing diagnostic span for `impl Trait` with const generics, and add various tests for `min_const_generics` and `const_generics`)
- #77471 (BTreeMap: refactoring around edges, missed spots)
- #77512 (Allow `Abort` terminators in all const-contexts)
- #77514 (Replace some once(x).chain(once(y)) with [x, y] IntoIter)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
Allow `Abort` terminators in all const-contexts
We never unwind during const-eval, so we basically have these semantics already. Also I just figured out that these only appear along the cleanup path, which doesn't get const-checked. In other words, this doesn't actually change behavior: the `check-pass` test I added compiles just fine on nightly.
r? @RalfJung
cc @rust-lang/wg-const-eval
Use `tracing` spans to trace the entire MIR interp stack
r? @RalfJung
While being very verbose, this allows really good tracking of what's going on. While I considered schemes like the previous indenter that we had (which we could get by using the `tracing-tree` crate), this will break down horribly with things like multithreaded rustc. Instead, we can now use `RUSTC_LOG` to restrict the things being traced. You could specify a filter in a way that only shows the logging of a specific frame.
![screenshot of command line output of the new formatting](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/332036/89291343-aa40de00-d65a-11ea-9f6c-ea06c1806327.png)
If we lower the span's level to `debug`, then in `info` level logging we'd not see the frames, but in `debug` level we would see them. The filtering rules in `tracing` are super powerful, but I'm not sure if we can specify a filter so we do see `debug` level events, but *not* the `frame` spans. The documentation at https://docs.rs/tracing-subscriber/0.2.10/tracing_subscriber/struct.EnvFilter.html makes me think that we can only turn on things, not turn off things at a more precise level.
cc @hawkw
The destination propagation as currently implemented does not supersede
the NRVO, e.g., the destination propagation never applies if either
local has an address taken, while NRVO might.
Additionally, the issue with failing assertions had been already
resolved.
Continue running both optimizations at mir-opt-level >= 2.
These appear along the cleanup path inside functions with
`#[unwind(aborts)]`. We don't const-check the cleanup path anyways,
since const-eval already has "abort-on-panic" semantics and there's
often drops that would otherwise be forbidden, so the check wasn't
really preventing anything anyways.
Bypass const_item_mutation if const's type has Drop impl
Follow-up to #75573. This PR disables the const_item_mutation lint in cases that the const has a Drop impl which observes the mutation.
```rust
struct Log { msg: &'static str }
const LOG: Log = Log { msg: "" };
impl Drop for Log {
fn drop(&mut self) { println!("{}", self.msg); }
}
LOG.msg = "wow"; // prints "wow"
```
r? @Aaron1011
Add `-Zprecise-enum-drop-elaboration`
Its purpose is to assist in debugging #77382 and #74551. Passing `-Zprecise-enum-drop-elaboration=no` will turn off the added precision that seems to be causing issues on some platforms. This assumes that we can reproduce #77382 on the latest master. I should have done this earlier. Oh well.
cc @cuviper
r? @pnkfelix