Eliminate Receiver::recv_timeout panic
Fixes#54552.
This panic is because `recv_timeout` uses `Instant::now() + timeout` internally. This possible panic is not mentioned in the documentation for this method.
Very recently we merged (still unstable) support for checked addition (#56490) of `Instant + Duration`, so it's now finally possible to add these together without risking a panic.
Fix inconsistent Clone documentation.
Now, arrays of any size Clone if the element type is Clone. So remove the
the document that uses this as an example.
refs #57123
NLL: User type annotations refactor, associated constant patterns and ref bindings.
Fixes#55511 and Fixes#55401. Contributes to #54943.
This PR performs a large refactoring on user type annotations, checks user type annotations for associated constants in patterns and that user type annotations for `ref` bindings are respected.
r? @nikomatsakis
resolve: Simplify treatment of ambiguity errors
If we have a glob conflict like this
```rust
mod m1 { struct S; }
mod m2 { struct S; }
use m1::*;
use m2::*;
```
we treat it as a special "ambiguity item" that's not an error by itself, but produces an error when actually used.
```rust
use m1::*; // primary
use m2::*; // secondary
=>
ambiguity S(m1::S, m2::S);
```
Ambiguity items were *sometimes* treated as their primary items for error recovery, but pretty irregularly.
After this PR they are always treated as their primary items, except that
- If an ambiguity item is marked as used, then it still produces an error.
- Ambiguity items are still filtered away when exported to other crates (which is also a use in some sense).
privacy: Use common `DefId` visiting infrastructure for all privacy visitors
One repeating pattern in privacy checking is going through a type, visiting all `DefId`s inside it and doing something with them.
This is the case because visibilities and reachabilities are attached to `DefId`s.
Previously various privacy visitors visited types slightly differently using their own methods, with most recently written `TypePrivacyVisitor` being the "gold standard".
This mostly worked okay, but differences could manifest in overly conservative reachability analysis, some errors being reported twice, some private-in-public lints (not errors) being wrongly reported or not reported.
This PR does something that I wanted to do since https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/32674#discussion_r58291608 - factoring out the common visiting logic!
Now all the common logic is contained in `struct DefIdVisitorSkeleton`, with specific privacy visitors deciding only what to do with visited `DefId`s (via `trait DefIdVisitor`).
A bunch of cleanups is also applied in the process.
This area is somewhat tricky due to lots of easily miss-able details, but thankfully it's was well covered by tests in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46083 and previous PRs, so I'm relatively sure in the refactoring correctness.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/56837#discussion_r241962239 in particular.
Also this will help with implementing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48054.
Add `-Z instrument-mcount`
This flag inserts `mcount` function call to the beginning of every function
after inline processing. So tracing tools like uftrace [1] (or ftrace for
Linux kernel modules) have a chance to examine function calls.
It is similar to the `-pg` flag provided by gcc or clang, but without
generating a `__gmon_start__` function for executables. If a program
runs without being traced, no `gmon.out` will be written to disk.
Under the hood, it simply adds `"instrument-function-entry-inlined"="mcount"`
attribute to every function. The `post-inline-ee-instrument` LLVM pass does
the actual job.
[1]: https://github.com/namhyung/uftrace
This flag inserts `mcount` function call to the beginning of every function
after inline processing. So tracing tools like uftrace [1] (or ftrace for
Linux kernel modules) have a chance to examine function calls.
It is similar to the `-pg` flag provided by gcc or clang, but without
generating a `__gmon_start__` function for executables. If a program
runs without being traced, no `gmon.out` will be written to disk.
Under the hood, it simply adds `"instrument-function-entry-inlined"="mcount"`
attribute to every function. The `post-inline-ee-instrument` LLVM pass does
the actual job.
[1]: https://github.com/namhyung/uftrace
submodules: update clippy from f7bdf500 to 39bd8449
Fixes clippy toolstate
Changes:
````
UI test cleanup: Extract iter_skip_next from methods.rs
Update test output after rebase
Remove false negatives from known problems
Implement use_self for tuple structs
Document known problems
rustup https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/56225/
Remove unnecessary `use` statements after `cargo fix`
Apply cargo fix --edition-idioms fixes
Use match ergonomics for booleans lint
Use match ergonomics for block_in_if_condition lint
Use match ergonomics for bit_mask lint
Use match ergonomics for attrs lint
Use match ergonomics for assign_ops lint
Use match ergonomics for artithmetic lint
Use match ergonomics for approx_const lint
Remove crate:: prefixes from crate paths
Support array indexing expressions in unused write to a constant
Mark writes to constants as side-effect-less
Update README local run command to remove syspath
Remove unsafe from consts clippy lints
Fix formatting
Merge new_without_default_derive into new_without_default
Only print out question_mark lint when it actually triggered
Add failing test
Reinserted commata
Recomend `.as_ref()?` in certain situations
Deduplicate some code?
````
r? @oli-obk or anyone else
Changes:
````
UI test cleanup: Extract iter_skip_next from methods.rs
Update test output after rebase
Remove false negatives from known problems
Implement use_self for tuple structs
Document known problems
rustup https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/56225/
Remove unnecessary `use` statements after `cargo fix`
Apply cargo fix --edition-idioms fixes
Use match ergonomics for booleans lint
Use match ergonomics for block_in_if_condition lint
Use match ergonomics for bit_mask lint
Use match ergonomics for attrs lint
Use match ergonomics for assign_ops lint
Use match ergonomics for artithmetic lint
Use match ergonomics for approx_const lint
Remove crate:: prefixes from crate paths
Support array indexing expressions in unused write to a constant
Mark writes to constants as side-effect-less
Update README local run command to remove syspath
Remove unsafe from consts clippy lints
Fix formatting
Merge new_without_default_derive into new_without_default
Only print out question_mark lint when it actually triggered
Add failing test
Reinserted commata
Recomend `.as_ref()?` in certain situations
Deduplicate some code?
````
This commit buffers the errors output by the `rustc_dump_user_substs`
attribute so that they can be output in order of span and would
therefore be consistent.
This commit changes how type annotations are handled in bindings during
MIR building.
Instead of building up a `PatternTypeProjections` with the
`CanonicalUserTypeAnnotation` and projections, the
`CanonicalUserTypeAnnotation` is stored in the
`canonical_user_type_annotations` map at the start and the (equivalent)
`UserTypeProjections` is built up with the new index and same projections.
This has the effect of deduplicating type annotations as instead of type
annotations being added to the `canonical_user_type_annotations` map
multiple times at the end after being duplicated (which happens in building
up `PatternTypeProjections`), it is instead added once.
This commit stops well-formedness checking applying to unreachable code
and therefore stops some of the ICEs that the intended solution taken by
this PR causes.
By disabling these checks, we can land the other fixes and larger
refactors that this PR includes.
This commit moves well-formedness check for the
`UserTypeAnnotation::Ty(..)` case from always running to only when the
code is reachable. This solves the ICE that resulted from
`src/test/ui/issue-54943-1.rs` (a minimal repro of `dropck-eyepatch`
run-pass tests that failed).
The main well-formedness check that was intended to be run despite
unreachable code still is, that being the
`UserTypeAnnotation::TypeOf(..)` case. Before this PR, the other case
wasn't being checked at all.
It is possible to fix this ICE while still always checking
well-formedness for the `UserTypeAnnotation::Ty(..)` case but that
solution will ICE in unreachable code for that case, the diff for
that change [can be found here](0).
[0]: https://gist.github.com/davidtwco/f9751ffd9c0508f7251c0f17adc3af53
This commit adds support for user type annotations in variables declared
using `ref` bindings. When a variable declared using a `ref` binding,
then the `LocalDecl` has the type `&T` where the `&` was introduced by
the `ref` binding but the canonicalized type annotation has only a
`T` since the reference is implicit with the `ref` binding.
Therefore, to support type annotations, the canonicalized type
annotation either needs wrapped in a reference, or the `LocalDecl` type
must have a wrapped reference removed for comparison. It is easier to
remove the outer reference from the `LocalDecl` for the purpose of
comparison, so that is the approach this commit takes.
This commit uses the map introduced by the previous commit to ensure
that types are always checked for well-formedness by the NLL type check.
Previously, without the map introduced by the previous commit, types
would not be checked for well-formedness if the `AscribeUserType`
statement that would trigger that check was removed as unreachable code.
This commit refactors the `UserTypeAnnotation` type to be referred to by
an index within `UserTypeProjection`. `UserTypeAnnotation` is instead
kept in an `IndexVec` within the `Mir` struct.
Further, instead of `UserTypeAnnotation` containing canonicalized types,
it now contains normal types and the entire `UserTypeAnnotation` is
canonicalized. To support this, the type was moved from the `rustc::mir`
module to `rustc::ty` module.