Refactor vtable encoding and optimize it for the case of multiple marker traits
This PR does two things
- Refactor `prepare_vtable_segments` (this was motivated by the other change, `prepare_vtable_segments` was quite hard to understand and while trying to edit it I've refactored it)
- Mostly remove `loop`s labeled `break`s/`continue`s whenever there is a simpler solution
- Also use `?`
- Make vtable format a bit more efficient wrt to marker traits
- See the tests for an example
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/113840
cc `@crlf0710`
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Review wise it's probably best to review each commit individually, as then it's more clear why the refactoring is correct.
I can split the last two commits (which change behavior) into a separate PR if it makes reviewing easier
new solver: don't consider blanket impls multiple times
only consider candidates which rely on the self type in `assemble_candidates_after_normalizing_self_ty`.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
Verify that all crate sources are in sync
This ensures that rustc will not attempt to link against a cdylib as if it is a rust dylib when an rlib for the same crate is available. Previously rustc didn't actually check if any further formats of a crate which has been loaded are of the same version and if they are actually valid. This caused a cdylib to be interpreted as rust dylib as soon as the corresponding rlib was loaded. As cdylibs don't export any rust symbols, linking would fail if rustc decides to link against the cdylib rather than the rlib.
Two crates depended on the previous behavior by separately compiling a test crate as both rlib and dylib. These have been changed to capture their original spirit to the best of my ability while still working when rustc verifies that all crates are in sync. It is unlikely that build systems depend on the current behavior and in any case we are taking a lot of measures to ensure that any change to either the source or the compilation options (including crate type) results in rustc rejecting it as incompatible. We merely didn't do this check here for now obsolete perf reasons.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/10786
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82151
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/82972
Closes https://github.com/bevy-cheatbook/bevy-cheatbook/issues/114
Use the correct span for displaying the line following a derive sugge…
`span` here is the main span of the diagnostic. In the linked issue's case, this belongs to `main.rs`. However, the line numbers (and line we are trying to display) are in `name.rs`, so using `span_to_lines` gives us the wrong `FileLines`.
Use `parts[0].span` (the span of the suggestion) here like the rest of the code does to get the right file.
Not sure if this needs a dedicated test because this fixes an existing error in the UI suite
Fixes#113844
Fix inline_const with interpolated block
Interpolation already worked when we had a `const $block` that wasn't a statement expr:
```
fn foo() {
let _ = const $block;
}
```
But it was failing when the const block was in statement expr position:
```
fn foo() {
const $block;
}
```
... because of a bug in a check for const items. This fixes that.
---
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/112953#issuecomment-1631354481, though I don't think this requires an FCP since it's already supported in exprs and seems to me to be fully a parser bug.
Better diagnostics for dlltool errors.
When dlltool fails, show the full command that was executed. In particular, llvm-dlltool is not very helpful, printing a generic usage message rather than what actually went wrong, so stdout and stderr aren't of much use when troubleshooting.
allow opaques to be defined by trait queries, again
This basically reverts #112963.
Moreover, all call-sites of `enter_canonical_trait_query` can now define opaque types, see the ui test `defined-by-user-annotation.rs`.
Fixes#113689
r? `@compiler-errors` `@oli-obk`
Restrict recursive opaque type check
We have a recursive opaque check in writeback to avoid inferring the hidden of an opaque type to be itself:
33a2c2487a/compiler/rustc_hir_typeck/src/writeback.rs (L556-L575)
Issue #113619 treats `make_option2` as not defining the TAIT `TestImpl` since it is inferred to have the definition `TestImpl := B<TestImpl>`, which fails this check. This regressed in #102700 (5d15beb591), I think due to the refactoring that made us record the hidden types of TAITs during writeback.
However, nothing actually seems to go bad if we relax this recursion checker to only check for directly recursive definitions. This PR fixes#113619 by changing this recursive check from being a visitor to just checking that the hidden type is exactly the same as the opaque being inferred.
Alternatively, we may be able to fix#113619 by restricting this recursion check only to RPITs/async fns. It seems to only be possible to use misuse the recursion check to cause ICEs for TAITs (though I didn't try too hard to create a bad RPIT example... may be possible, actually.)
r? `@oli-obk`
--
Fixes#113314
Fix removal span calculation of `unused_qualifications` suggestion
Given a path such as `std::ops::Index<str>`, calculate the unnecessary qualification removal span by computing the beginning of the entire span until the ident span of the last path segment, which handles generic arguments and lifetime arguments in the last path segment. Previous logic only kept the ident span of the last path segment which is incorrect.
Closes#113808.
Safe Transmute: Fix ICE (due to UnevaluatedConst)
This patch updates the code that looks at the `Assume` type when evaluating if transmutation is possible. An ICE was being triggered in the case that the `Assume` parameter contained an unevaluated const (in this test case, due to a function with missing parameter names).
Fixes#110892
When dlltool fails, show the full command that was executed. In
particular, llvm-dlltool is not very helpful, printing a generic usage
message rather than what actually went wrong, so stdout and stderr
aren't of much use when troubleshooting.
miri: fail when calling a function that requires an unavailable target feature
miri will report an UB when calling a function that has a `#[target_feature(enable = ...)]` attribute is called and the required feature is not available.
"Available features" are the same that `is_x86_feature_detected!` (or equivalent) reports to be available during miri execution (which can be enabled or disabled with the `-C target-feature` flag).
This patch updates the code that looks at the `Assume` type when evaluating if
transmutation is possible. An ICE was being triggered in the case that the
`Assume` parameter contained an unevaluated const (in this test case, due to a
function with missing parameter names).
Fixes#110892
Generate safe stable code for derives on empty enums
Generate `match *self {}` instead of `unsafe { core::intrinsics::unreachable() }`.
This is:
1. safe
2. stable
for the benefit of everyone looking at these derived impls through `cargo expand`.
[Both expansions compile to the same code at all optimization levels (including `0`).](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/P79joGMh3)
Add support for inherent projections in new solver
Not hard to support these, and it cuts out a really big chunk of failing UI tests with `--compare-mode=next-solver`
r? `@lcnr` (feel free to reassign, anyone can review this)
Generate `match *self {}` instead of `unsafe { core::intrinsics::unreachable() }`.
This is:
1. safe
2. stable
for the benefit of everyone looking at these derived impls through `cargo expand`.
Both expansions compile to the same code at all optimization levels (including `0`).
Don't call `predicate_must_hold`-esque functions during fulfillment in intercrate
Fixes#113415
Given that this only happens in `translate_substs`, I don't actually think that this is something that you can weaponize, but it's still sketchy regardless.
r? `@lcnr`
Check entry type as part of item type checking.
This code is currently executed inside the root `analysis` query.
Instead, check it during `check_for_entry_fn(CRATE_DEF_ID)` to hopefully avoid some re-executions.
`CRATE_DEF_ID` is chosen by considering that entry fn are typically at crate root, so the corresponding HIR should already be in the dependencies.