Commit Graph

752 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Vadim Petrochenkov
e1d12c8caf macro_rules: Less hacky heuristic for using tt metavariable spans 2024-01-04 03:53:56 +03:00
Nilstrieb
ffafcd8819 Update to bitflags 2 in the compiler
This involves lots of breaking changes. There are two big changes that
force changes. The first is that the bitflag types now don't
automatically implement normal derive traits, so we need to derive them
manually.

Additionally, bitflags now have a hidden inner type by default, which
breaks our custom derives. The bitflags docs recommend using the impl
form in these cases, which I did.
2023-12-30 18:17:28 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
3eb48a35c8
Introduce const Trait (always-const trait bounds) 2023-12-27 12:51:32 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
bdc4480914
Rollup merge of #119231 - aDotInTheVoid:PatKind-struct-bool-docs, r=compiler-errors
Clairify `ast::PatKind::Struct` presese of `..` by using an enum instead of a bool

The bool is mainly used for when a `..` is present, but it is also set on recovery to avoid errors. The doc comment not describes both of these cases.

See cee794ee98/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/pat.rs (L890-L897) for the only place this is constructed.

r? ``@compiler-errors``
2023-12-23 16:23:54 +01:00
Alona Enraght-Moony
1349d86c72 bool->enum for ast::PatKind::Struct presence of ..
See cee794ee98/compiler/rustc_parse/src/parser/pat.rs (L890-L897) for the only place this is constructed.
2023-12-23 02:50:31 +00:00
bors
208dd2032b Auto merge of #118847 - eholk:for-await, r=compiler-errors
Add support for `for await` loops

This adds support for `for await` loops. This includes parsing, desugaring in AST->HIR lowering, and adding some support functions to the library.

Given a loop like:
```rust
for await i in iter {
    ...
}
```
this is desugared to something like:
```rust
let mut iter = iter.into_async_iter();
while let Some(i) = loop {
    match core::pin::Pin::new(&mut iter).poll_next(cx) {
        Poll::Ready(i) => break i,
        Poll::Pending => yield,
    }
} {
    ...
}
```

This PR also adds a basic `IntoAsyncIterator` trait. This is partly for symmetry with the way `Iterator` and `IntoIterator` work. The other reason is that for async iterators it's helpful to have a place apart from the data structure being iterated over to store state. `IntoAsyncIterator` gives us a good place to do this.

I've gated this feature behind `async_for_loop` and opened #118898 as the feature tracking issue.

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-12-22 14:17:10 +00:00
bors
aaef5fe497 Auto merge of #119163 - fmease:refactor-ast-trait-bound-modifiers, r=compiler-errors
Refactor AST trait bound modifiers

Instead of having two types to represent trait bound modifiers in the parser / the AST (`parser::ty::BoundModifiers` & `ast::TraitBoundModifier`), only to map one to the other later, just use `parser::ty::BoundModifiers` (moved & renamed to `ast::TraitBoundModifiers`).

The struct type is more extensible and easier to deal with (see [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119099/files#r1430749981) and [here](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/119099/files#r1430752116) for context) since it more closely models what it represents: A compound of two kinds of modifiers, constness and polarity. Modeling this as an enum (the now removed `ast::TraitBoundModifier`) meant one had to add a new variant per *combination* of modifier kind, which simply isn't scalable and which lead to a lot of explicit non-DRY matches.

NB: `hir::TraitBoundModifier` being an enum is fine since HIR doesn't need to worry representing invalid modifier kind combinations as those get rejected during AST validation thereby immensely cutting down the number of possibilities.
2023-12-22 02:00:55 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
5e4f12b41a
Refactor AST trait bound modifiers 2023-12-20 19:39:46 +01:00
Alona Enraght-Moony
11337805fb Give VariantData::Struct named fields, to clairfy recovered. 2023-12-20 00:07:34 +00:00
Eric Holk
27d6539a46
Plumb awaitness of for loops 2023-12-19 12:26:20 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
6269bf1a3a
Rollup merge of #118880 - GearsDatapacks:issue-118859-fix, r=compiler-errors
More expressions correctly are marked to end with curly braces

Fixes #118859, and replaces the mentioned match statement with an exhaustive list, so that this code doesn't get overlooked in the future
2023-12-17 21:29:59 +01:00
bors
3ad8e2d129 Auto merge of #118897 - nnethercote:more-unescaping-cleanups, r=fee1-dead
More unescaping cleanups

More minor improvements I found while working on #118699.

r? `@fee1-dead`
2023-12-16 08:52:06 +00:00
Michael Goulet
bc1ca6b528 Fix enforcement of generics for associated items 2023-12-15 16:17:28 +00:00
GearsDatapacks
1fc6dbc32b Change expr_trailing_brace to an exhaustive match to force new expression kinds to specify whether they contain a brace
Add inline const and other possible curly brace expressions to expr_trailing_brace

Add tests for `}` before `else` in `let...else` error

Change to explicit cases for expressions with optional values when being checked for trailing braces

Add tests for more complex cases of `}` before `else` in `let..else` statement

Move other possible `}` cases into separate arm and add FIXME for future reference
2023-12-14 18:11:18 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
a50efe2653 Unify single-char and multi-char CStrUnit::Char handling.
The two cases are equivalent. C string literals aren't common so there
is no performance need here.
2023-12-13 10:06:13 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4acc5e6480 Don't rebuild raw strings when unescaping.
Raw strings don't have escape sequences, so for them "unescaping" just
means checking for invalid chars like bare CR. Which means there is no
need to rebuild them one char or byte at a time while escaping, because
the unescaped version will be the same. This commit removes that
rebuilding.

Also, the commit changes things so that "unescaping" is unconditional for
raw strings and raw byte strings. That's simpler and they're rare enough
that the perf effect is negligible.
2023-12-13 09:26:10 +11:00
Nadrieril
19e0c984d3 Don't gate the feature twice 2023-12-12 14:52:05 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
4cfdbd328b Add spacing information to delimiters.
This is an extension of the previous commit. It means the output of
something like this:
```
stringify!(let a: Vec<u32> = vec![];)
```
goes from this:
```
let a: Vec<u32> = vec![] ;
```
With this PR, it now produces this string:
```
let a: Vec<u32> = vec![];
```
2023-12-11 09:36:40 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
925f7fad57 Improve print_tts by changing tokenstream::Spacing.
`tokenstream::Spacing` appears on all `TokenTree::Token` instances,
both punct and non-punct. Its current usage:
- `Joint` means "can join with the next token *and* that token is a
  punct".
- `Alone` means "cannot join with the next token *or* can join with the
  next token but that token is not a punct".

The fact that `Alone` is used for two different cases is awkward.
This commit augments `tokenstream::Spacing` with a new variant
`JointHidden`, resulting in:
- `Joint` means "can join with the next token *and* that token is a
  punct".
- `JointHidden` means "can join with the next token *and* that token is a
  not a punct".
- `Alone` means "cannot join with the next token".

This *drastically* improves the output of `print_tts`. For example,
this:
```
stringify!(let a: Vec<u32> = vec![];)
```
currently produces this string:
```
let a : Vec < u32 > = vec! [] ;
```
With this PR, it now produces this string:
```
let a: Vec<u32> = vec![] ;
```
(The space after the `]` is because `TokenTree::Delimited` currently
doesn't have spacing information. The subsequent commit fixes this.)

The new `print_tts` doesn't replicate original code perfectly. E.g.
multiple space characters will be condensed into a single space
character. But it's much improved.

`print_tts` still produces the old, uglier output for code produced by
proc macros. Because we have to translate the generated code from
`proc_macro::Spacing` to the more expressive `token::Spacing`, which
results in too much `proc_macro::Along` usage and no
`proc_macro::JointHidden` usage. So `space_between` still exists and
is used by `print_tts` in conjunction with the `Spacing` field.

This change will also help with the removal of `Token::Interpolated`.
Currently interpolated tokens are pretty-printed nicely via AST pretty
printing. `Token::Interpolated` removal will mean they get printed with
`print_tts`. Without this change, that would result in much uglier
output for code produced by decl macro expansions. With this change, AST
pretty printing and `print_tts` produce similar results.

The commit also tweaks the comments on `proc_macro::Spacing`. In
particular, it refers to "compound tokens" rather than "multi-char
operators" because lifetimes aren't operators.
2023-12-11 09:19:09 +11:00
surechen
40ae34194c remove redundant imports
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.

for #117772 :

In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and
removing redundant imports code into two PR.
2023-12-10 10:56:22 +08:00
Michael Goulet
8361a7288e Introduce closure_id method on CoroutineKind 2023-12-08 21:46:39 +00:00
bors
f967532a47 Auto merge of #118420 - compiler-errors:async-gen, r=eholk
Introduce support for `async gen` blocks

I'm delighted to demonstrate that `async gen` block are not very difficult to support. They're simply coroutines that yield `Poll<Option<T>>` and return `()`.

**This PR is WIP and in draft mode for now** -- I'm mostly putting it up to show folks that it's possible. This PR needs a lang-team experiment associated with it or possible an RFC, since I don't think it falls under the jurisdiction of the `gen` RFC that was recently authored by oli (https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3513, https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117078).

### Technical note on the pre-generator-transform yield type:

The reason that the underlying coroutines yield `Poll<Option<T>>` and not `Poll<T>` (which would make more sense, IMO, for the pre-transformed coroutine), is because the `TransformVisitor` that is used to turn coroutines into built-in state machine functions would have to destructure and reconstruct the latter into the former, which requires at least inserting a new basic block (for a `switchInt` terminator, to match on the `Poll` discriminant).

This does mean that the desugaring (at the `rustc_ast_lowering` level) of `async gen` blocks is a bit more involved. However, since we already need to intercept both `.await` and `yield` operators, I don't consider it much of a technical burden.

r? `@ghost`
2023-12-08 19:13:57 +00:00
Michael Goulet
a208bae00e Support async gen fn 2023-12-08 17:23:26 +00:00
Michael Goulet
2806c2df7b coro_kind -> coroutine_kind 2023-12-08 17:23:25 +00:00
Michael Goulet
96bb542a31 Implement async gen blocks 2023-12-08 17:23:25 +00:00
bors
2b399b5275 Auto merge of #118527 - Nadrieril:never_patterns_parse, r=compiler-errors
never_patterns: Parse match arms with no body

Never patterns are meant to signal unreachable cases, and thus don't take bodies:
```rust
let ptr: *const Option<!> = ...;
match *ptr {
    None => { foo(); }
    Some(!),
}
```
This PR makes rustc accept the above, and enforces that an arm has a body xor is a never pattern. This affects parsing of match arms even with the feature off, so this is delicate. (Plus this is my first non-trivial change to the parser).

~~The last commit is optional; it introduces a bit of churn to allow the new suggestions to be machine-applicable. There may be a better solution? I'm not sure.~~ EDIT: I removed that commit

r? `@compiler-errors`
2023-12-08 17:08:52 +00:00
Eric Holk
50ef8006eb
Address code review feedback 2023-12-04 14:33:46 -08:00
Eric Holk
f9d1f922dc
Option<CoroutineKind> 2023-12-04 13:03:37 -08:00
Eric Holk
48d5f1f0f2
Merge Async and Gen into CoroutineKind 2023-12-04 12:48:01 -08:00
Eric Holk
bc0d10d4b0
Add genness to FnHeader 2023-12-04 11:22:49 -08:00
Nadrieril
a2dcb3a6d9 Disallow an arm without a body (except for never patterns)
Parsing now accepts a match arm without a body, so we must make sure to
only accept that if the pattern is a never pattern.
2023-12-03 12:25:46 +01:00
Nadrieril
80bdcbf50a Parse a pattern with no arm 2023-12-03 12:25:46 +01:00
bors
4e3dc976e7 Auto merge of #117912 - GeorgeWort:master, r=petrochenkov
Name explicit registers in conflict register errors for inline assembly
2023-12-02 13:38:47 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
c03f8917ee
Rollup merge of #118157 - Nadrieril:never_pat-feature-gate, r=compiler-errors
Add `never_patterns` feature gate

This PR adds the feature gate and most basic parsing for the experimental `never_patterns` feature. See the tracking issue (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118155) for details on the experiment.

`@scottmcm` has agreed to be my lang-team liaison for this experiment.
2023-11-29 12:34:47 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
20473eba0b
Rollup merge of #118394 - nnethercote:rm-hir-Ops, r=cjgillot
Remove HIR opkinds

`hir::BinOp`, `hir::BinOpKind`, and `hir::UnOp` are identical to `ast::BinOp`, `ast::BinOpKind`, and `ast::UnOp`, respectively. This seems silly, so this PR removes the HIR ones. (A re-export lets the AST ones be referred to using a `hir::` qualifier, which avoids renaming churn.)

r? `@cjgillot`
2023-11-29 04:23:23 +01:00
Nadrieril
a3838c8550 Add never_patterns feature gate 2023-11-29 03:58:29 +01:00
George Wort
e0bfb615da Name explicit registers in conflict register errors for inline assembly 2023-11-28 10:37:19 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
d9fef774e3 Remove hir::BinOp, hir::BinOpKind, and hir::UnOp.
They're identical to the same-named types from `ast`. I find it silly
(and inefficient) to have all this boilerplate code to convert one type
to an identical type.

There is already a small amount of type sharing between the AST and HIR,
e.g. `Attribute`, `MacroDef`.

The commit adds a `pub use` to `rustc_hir` so that, for example,
`ast::BinOp` can also be referred to as `hir::BinOp`. This is so the
many existing `hir`-qualified mentions of these types don't need to
change.

The commit also moves a couple of operations from the (removed) HIR
types to the AST types, e.g. `is_by_value`.
2023-11-28 12:14:25 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
705b484922 Rename BinOpKind::lazy as BinOpKind::is_lazy.
To match `BinOpKind::is_comparison` and `hir::BinOpKind::is_lazy`.
2023-11-28 09:45:40 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
0efd2a9d8f Rework ast::BinOpKind::to_string and ast::UnOp::to_string.
- Rename them both `as_str`, which is the typical name for a function
  that returns a `&str`. (`to_string` is appropriate for functions
  returning `String` or maybe `Cow<'a, str>`.)
- Change `UnOp::as_str` from an associated function (weird!) to a
  method.
- Avoid needless `self` dereferences.
2023-11-28 09:42:07 +11:00
Hirochika Matsumoto
e65c060d78 Detect Python-like slicing and suggest how to fix
Fix #108215
2023-11-27 21:48:10 +09:00
Deadbeef
16040a1628 Add Span to TraitBoundModifier 2023-11-24 14:32:05 +00:00
Nicholas Nethercote
7060fc8327 Replace no_ord_impl with orderable.
Similar to the previous commit, this replaces `newtype_index`'s opt-out
`no_ord_impl` attribute with the opt-in `orderable` attribute.
2023-11-22 18:38:17 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
3ef9d4d0ed Replace custom_encodable with encodable.
By default, `newtype_index!` types get a default `Encodable`/`Decodable`
impl. You can opt out of this with `custom_encodable`. Opting out is the
opposite to how Rust normally works with autogenerated (derived) impls.

This commit inverts the behaviour, replacing `custom_encodable` with
`encodable` which opts into the default `Encodable`/`Decodable` impl.
Only 23 of the 59 `newtype_index!` occurrences need `encodable`.

Even better, there were eight crates with a dependency on
`rustc_serialize` just from unused default `Encodable`/`Decodable`
impls. This commit removes that dependency from those eight crates.
2023-11-22 18:37:14 +11:00
Nilstrieb
21a870515b Fix clippy::needless_borrow in the compiler
`x clippy compiler -Aclippy::all -Wclippy::needless_borrow --fix`.

Then I had to remove a few unnecessary parens and muts that were exposed
now.
2023-11-21 20:13:40 +01:00
Michael Goulet
426bc70ad6 Add HashStable_NoContext to simplify HashStable implementations in rustc_type_ir 2023-11-21 05:49:44 +00:00
bors
2831701757 Auto merge of #114292 - estebank:issue-71039, r=b-naber
More detail when expecting expression but encountering bad macro argument

On nested macro invocations where the same macro fragment changes fragment type from one to the next, point at the chain of invocations and at the macro fragment definition place, explaining that the change has occurred.

Fix #71039.

```
error: expected expression, found pattern `1 + 1`
  --> $DIR/trace_faulty_macros.rs:49:37
   |
LL |     (let $p:pat = $e:expr) => {test!(($p,$e))};
   |                   -------                -- this is interpreted as expression, but it is expected to be pattern
   |                   |
   |                   this macro fragment matcher is expression
...
LL |     (($p:pat, $e:pat)) => {let $p = $e;};
   |               ------                ^^ expected expression
   |               |
   |               this macro fragment matcher is pattern
...
LL |     test!(let x = 1+1);
   |     ------------------
   |     |             |
   |     |             this is expected to be expression
   |     in this macro invocation
   |
   = note: when forwarding a matched fragment to another macro-by-example, matchers in the second macro will see an opaque AST of the fragment type, not the underlying tokens
   = note: this error originates in the macro `test` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
2023-11-17 20:57:12 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
92aba63d6b
Rollup merge of #117892 - estebank:fat-arrow-typo, r=compiler-errors
Detect more `=>` typos

Handle and recover `match expr { pat >= { arm } }`.
2023-11-17 00:41:22 +01:00
Esteban Küber
4e418805da More detail when expecting expression but encountering bad macro argument
Partially address #71039.
2023-11-16 16:19:04 +00:00
Mark Rousskov
db3e2bacb6 Bump cfg(bootstrap)s 2023-11-15 19:41:28 -05:00