This just applies the suggested fixes from the compatibility warnings,
leaving any that are in practice spurious in. This is primarily intended to
provide a starting point to identify possible fixes to the migrations (e.g., by
avoiding spurious warnings).
A secondary commit cleans these up where they are false positives (as is true in
many of the cases).
Add initial support for m68k
This patch series adds initial support for m68k making use of the new M68k
backend introduced with LLVM-13. Additional changes will be needed to be
able to actually use the backend for this target.
Fix debuginfo tests for the latest version of the Windows SDK.
Re-enable the tests that were disabled to fix CI.
Changes:
- Cdb now correctly visualizes enums.
- Cdb doesn't render emoji characters in `OSStr` anymore.
- Cdb doesn't always render `str` correctly (#88840)
Add `ConstraintCategory::Usage` for handling aggregate construction
In some cases, we emit borrowcheck diagnostics pointing
at a particular field expression in a struct expression
(e.g. `MyStruct { field: my_expr }`). However, this
behavior currently relies on us choosing the
`ConstraintCategory::Boring` with the 'correct' span.
When adding additional variants to `ConstraintCategory`,
(or changing existing usages away from `ConstraintCategory::Boring`),
the current behavior can easily get broken, since a non-boring
constraint will get chosen over a boring one.
To make the diagnostic output less fragile, this commit
adds a `ConstraintCategory::Usage` variant. We use this variant
for the temporary assignments created for each field of
an aggregate we are constructing.
Using this new variant, we can emit a message mentioning
"this usage", emphasizing the fact that the error message
is related to the specific use site (in the struct expression).
This is preparation for additional work on improving NLL error messages
(see #57374)
Querify `FnAbi::of_{fn_ptr,instance}` as `fn_abi_of_{fn_ptr,instance}`.
*Note: opening this PR as draft because it's based on #88499*
This more or less replicates the `LayoutOf::layout_of` setup from #88499, to replace `FnAbi::of_{fn_ptr,instance}` with `FnAbiOf::fn_abi_of_{fn_ptr,instance}`, and also route them through queries (which `layout_of` has used for a while).
The two changes at the use sites (other than the names) are:
* return type is now wrapped in `&'tcx`
* the value *is* interned, which may affect performance
* the `extra_args` list is now an interned `&'tcx ty::List<Ty<'tcx>>`
* should be cheap (it's empty for anything other than C variadics)
Theoretically, a `FnAbiOfHelpers` implementer could choose to keep the `Result<...>` instead of eagerly erroring, but the only existing users of these APIs are codegen backends, so they don't (want to) take advantage of this.
At least miri could make use of this, since it prefers propagating errors (it "just" doesn't use `FnAbi` yet - cc `@RalfJung).`
The way this is done is probably less efficient than what is possible, because the queries handle the correctness-oriented API (i.e. the split into `fn` pointers vs instances), whereas a lower-level query could end up with more reuse between different instances with identical signatures.
r? `@nagisa` cc `@oli-obk` `@bjorn3`
Convert `debug_assert` to `assert` in `CachingSourceMapView`
I suspect that there's a bug somewhere in this code, which is
leading to the `predicates_of` ICE being seen in #89035
Gather module items after lowering.
This avoids having a non-local analysis inside lowering.
By implementing `hir_module_items` using a visitor, we make sure that iterations and visitors are consistent.
Rollup of 10 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #87960 (Suggest replacing an inexisting field for an unmentioned field)
- #88855 (Allow simd_shuffle to accept vectors of any length)
- #88966 (Check for shadowing issues involving block labels)
- #88996 (Fix linting when trailing macro expands to a trailing semi)
- #89017 (fix potential race in AtomicU64 time monotonizer)
- #89021 (Add a separate error for `dyn Trait` in `const fn`)
- #89051 (Add intra-doc links and small changes to `std::os` to be more consistent)
- #89053 (refactor: VecDeques IntoIter fields to private)
- #89055 (Suggest better place to add call parentheses for method expressions wrapped in parentheses)
- #89081 (Fix a typo)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Suggest better place to add call parentheses for method expressions wrapped in parentheses
I wanted to improve the suggestion a bit to both remove the wrapping parentheses **and** add call parentheses by both calling `suggest_method_call` and using `multipart_suggestion`. But I very quickly ran into a problem where multiple overlapping machine applicable suggestions cannot be properly applied together. So I applied the suggestion from the issue and only added the call parentheses directly after the expression.
Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89044
refactor: VecDeques IntoIter fields to private
Made the fields of VecDeque's IntoIter private by creating a IntoIter::from(...) function to create a new instance of IntoIter and migrating usage to use IntoIter::from(...).
Add intra-doc links and small changes to `std::os` to be more consistent
I believe that a few items in `std::os` should be linked. I've also added a basic example in `std::os::windows`.
Add a separate error for `dyn Trait` in `const fn`
Previously "trait bounds other than `Sized` on const fn parameters are unstable" error was used for both trait bounds (`<T: Trait>`) and trait objects (`dyn Trait`). This was pretty confusing.
This PR adds a separate error for trait objects: "trait objects in const fn are unstable". The error for trait bounds is otherwise intact.
This is follow up to #88907
r? ``@estebank``
``@rustbot`` label: +A-diagnostics
fix potential race in AtomicU64 time monotonizer
The AtomicU64-based monotonizer introduced in #83093 is incorrect because several threads could try to update the value concurrently and a thread which doesn't have the newest value among all the updates could win.
That bug probably has little real world impact since it doesn't make observed time worse than hardware clocks. The worst case would probably be a thread which has a clock that is behind by several cycles observing several inconsistent fixups, which should be similar to observing the unfiltered backslide in the first place.
New benchmarks, they don't look as good as the original PR but still an improvement compared to the mutex.
I don't know why the contended mutex case is faster now than in the previous benchmarks.
```
actually_monotonic() == true:
test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 44 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 45 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 46 ns/iter (+/- 0)
atomic u64:
test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 66 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 287 ns/iter (+/- 14)
test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 296 ns/iter (+/- 43)
test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 604 ns/iter (+/- 163)
test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 1,147 ns/iter (+/- 29)
mutex:
test time::tests::instant_contention_01_threads ... bench: 78 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test time::tests::instant_contention_02_threads ... bench: 652 ns/iter (+/- 275)
test time::tests::instant_contention_04_threads ... bench: 900 ns/iter (+/- 32)
test time::tests::instant_contention_08_threads ... bench: 1,927 ns/iter (+/- 62)
test time::tests::instant_contention_16_threads ... bench: 3,748 ns/iter (+/- 146)
```
Fix linting when trailing macro expands to a trailing semi
When a macro is used in the trailing expression position of a block
(e.g. `fn foo() { my_macro!() }`), we currently parse it as an
expression, rather than a statement. As a result, we ended up
using the `NodeId` of the containing statement as our `lint_node_id`,
even though we don't normally do this for macro calls.
If such a macro expands to an expression with a `#[cfg]` attribute,
then the trailing statement can get removed entirely. This lead to
an ICE, since we were usng the `NodeId` of the expression to emit
a lint.
Ths commit makes us skip updating `lint_node_id` when handling
a macro in trailing expression position. This will cause us to
lint at the closest parent of the macro call.
Suggest replacing an inexisting field for an unmentioned field
Fix#87938
This PR adds a suggestion to replace an inexisting field for an
unmentioned field. Given the following code:
```rust
enum Foo {
Bar { alpha: u8, bravo: u8, charlie: u8 },
}
fn foo(foo: Foo) {
match foo {
Foo::Bar {
alpha,
beta, // `bravo` miswritten as `beta` here.
charlie,
} => todo!(),
}
}
```
the compiler now emits the error messages below.
```text
error[E0026]: variant `Foo::Bar` does not have a field named `beta`
--> src/lib.rs:9:13
|
9 | beta, // `bravo` miswritten as `beta` here.
| ^^^^
| |
| variant `Foo::Bar` does not have this field
| help: `Foo::Bar` has a field named `bravo`: `bravo`
```
Note that this suggestion is available iff the number of inexisting
fields and unmentioned fields are both 1.
Propagate coercion cause into `try_coerce`
Currently, `coerce_inner` discards its `ObligationCause`
when calling `try_coerce`. This interfers with other
diagnostc improvements I'm working on, since we will lose
the original span by the time the actual coercion occurs.
Additionally, we now use the span of the trailing expression
(rather than the span of the entire function) when performing
a coercion in `check_return_expr`. This currently has no visible
effect on any of the unit tests, but will unblock future
diagnostic improvements.
Start block is not allowed to have basic block predecessors
* The MIR validator is extended to detect potential violations.
* The start block has no predecessors after building MIR, so no changes are required there.
* The SimplifyCfg could previously violate this requirement when collapsing goto chains, so transformation is disabled for the start block, which also substantially simplifies the implementation.
* The LLVM function entry block also must not have basic block predecessors. Previously, to ensure that code generation had to perform necessary adjustments. This now became unnecessary.
The motivation behind the change is to align with analogous requirement in LLVM, and to avoid potential latent bugs like the one reported in #88043.
Disable the evaluation cache when in intercrate mode
It's possible to use the same `InferCtxt` with both
an intercrate and non-intercrate `SelectionContext`. However,
the local (inferctxt) evaluation cache is not aware of this
distinction, so this kind of `InferCtxt` re-use will pollute
the cache wth bad results.
This commit avoids the issue by disabling the evaluation cache
entirely during intercrate mode.
Simplify lazy DefPathHash decoding by using an on-disk hash table.
This PR simplifies the logic around mapping `DefPathHash` values encountered during incremental compilation to valid `DefId`s in the current session. It is able to do so by using an on-disk hash table encoding that allows for looking up values directly, i.e. without deserializing the entire table.
The main simplification comes from not having to keep track of `DefPathHashes` being used during the compilation session.
Skip single use lifetime lint for generated opaque types
Fix: #77175
The opaque type generated by the desugaring process of an async function uses the lifetimes defined by the originating function. The DefId for the lifetimes in the opaque type are different from the ones in the originating async function - as they should be, as far as I understand, and could therefore be considered a single use lifetimes, this causes the single_use_lifetimes lint to fail compilation if explicitly denied. This fix skips the lint for lifetimes used only once in generated opaque types for an async function that are declared in the parent async function definition.
More info in the comments on the original issue: 1 and 2
Avoid codegen for Result::into_ok in lang_start
This extra codegen seems to be the cause for the regressions in max-rss on #86034. While LLVM will certainly optimize the dead code away, avoiding it's generation in the first place seems good, particularly when it is so simple.
#86034 produced this [diff](https://gist.github.com/Mark-Simulacrum/95c7599883093af3b960c35ffadf4dab#file-86034-diff) for a simple `fn main() {}`. With this PR, that diff [becomes limited to just a few extra IR instructions](https://gist.github.com/Mark-Simulacrum/95c7599883093af3b960c35ffadf4dab#file-88988-from-pre-diff) -- no extra functions.
Note that these are pre-optimization; LLVM surely will eliminate this during optimization. However, that optimization can end up generating more work and bump memory usage, and this eliminates that.
Use explicit log level in tracing instrument macro
Specify a log level in tracing instrument macro explicitly.
Additionally reduce the used log level from a default info level to a
debug level (all of those appear to be developer oriented logs, so there
should be no need to include them in release builds).
Move the Lock into symbol::Interner
This makes it easier to make the symbol interner (near) lock free in case of concurrent accesses in the future.
With https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87867 landed this shouldn't affect performance anymore.
Fast reject for NeedsNonConstDrop
Hopefully fixes the regression in #88558.
I've always wanted to help with the performance of rustc, but it doesn't feel the same when you are fixing a regression caused by your own PR...
r? `@oli-obk`
If any block on a goto chain has more than one predecessor, then the new
start block would have basic block predecessors.
Skip the transformation for the start block altogether, to avoid
violating the new invariant that the start block does not have any basic
block predecessors.