Use hir::ItemLocalId instead of ast::NodeId in rustc::middle::region::CodeExtent.
This is an alternative to @michaelwoerister's #43887, changing `CodeExtent` instead of `ReScope`.
The benefit here is that the same `Region`s are used same-crate and cross-crate, while preserving the incremental recompilation properties of the stable `hir::ItemLocalId`.
Only places which needed to get back to the `ast::NodeId` from `CodeExtent` was its `span` method, used in error reporting - passing the `&RegionMaps` down allowed using `hir_to_node_id`.
`rustc::cfg` and `dataflow` also had to be converted to `hir::ItemLocalId` because of their interactions with `CodeExtent`, especially in `borrowck`, and from that we have 3 more `hir_to_node_id` calls: `cfg::graphviz` node labels, `borrowck` move reporting, and the `unconditional_recursion` lint.
Out of all of those, *only* the lint actually makes a decision (on whether code will compile) based on the result of the conversion, the others only use it to know how to print information to the user.
So I think we're safe to say that the bulk of the code working with a `CodeExtent` is fine with local IDs.
r? @nikomatsakis
add `fn` to syntax of rustc::ty::maps::define_maps
This is not a functional change, it just makes it possible to find a query by grepping without knowing that it's a query rather than a function.
I didn't pursue renaming everything from "map" to "query" because it seems to be a very invasive change. It would be a good test to exercise an IDE's renaming features.
Closes#44161
r? @eddyb
rustbuild: update the rust-src filter for compiler-rt
We wanted `src/compiler-rt/test` filtered from the `rust-src` package,
but that path is now `src/libcompiler_builtins/compiler-rt/test`. This
saves over half of the installed rust-src size. (50MB -> 22MB)
We wanted `src/compiler-rt/test` filtered from the `rust-src` package,
but that path is now `src/libcompiler_builtins/compiler-rt/test`. This
saves over half of the installed rust-src size. (50MB -> 22MB)
rustc: Remove `specialization_cache` in favor of a query
This commit removes the `specialization_cache` field of `TyCtxt` by moving it to
a dedicated query, which it turned out was already quite easily structured to do
so!
cc #44137
Forward-compatibly deny drops in constants if they *could* actually run.
This is part of #40036, specifically the checks for user-defined destructor invocations on locals which *may not* have been moved away, the motivating example being:
```rust
const FOO: i32 = (HasDrop {...}, 0).1;
```
The evaluation of constant MIR will continue to create `'static` slots for more locals than is necessary (if `Storage{Live,Dead}` statements are ignored), but it shouldn't be misusable.
r? @nikomatsakis
Initial diagnostic API for proc-macros.
This commit introduces the ability to create and emit `Diagnostic` structures from proc-macros, allowing for proc-macro authors to emit warning, error, note, and help messages just like the compiler does.
The API is somewhat based on the diagnostic API already present in `rustc` with several changes that improve usability. The entry point into the diagnostic API is a new `Diagnostic` type which is primarily created through new `error`, `warning`, `help`, and `note` methods on `Span`. The `Diagnostic` type records the diagnostic level, message, and optional `Span` for the top-level diagnostic and contains a `Vec` of all of the child diagnostics. Child diagnostics can be added through builder methods on `Diagnostic`.
A typical use of the API may look like:
```rust
let token = parse_token();
let val = parse_val();
val.span
.error(format!("expected A but found {}", val))
.span_note(token.span, "because of this token")
.help("consider using a different token")
.emit();
```
cc @jseyfried @nrc @dtolnay @alexcrichton