rust/compiler/rustc_hir_analysis
Matthias Krüger 692d764e53
Rollup merge of #114267 - compiler-errors:rpitit-opaque-bounds, r=spastorino
Map RPITIT's opaque type bounds back from projections to opaques

An RPITIT in a program's AST is eventually translated into both a projection GAT and an opaque. The opaque is used for default trait methods, like:

```
trait Foo {
  fn bar() -> impl Sized { 0i32 }
}
```

The item bounds for both the projection and opaque are identical, and both have a *projection* self ty. This is mostly okay, since we can normalize this projection within the default trait method body to the opaque, but it does two things:
1. it leads to bugs in places where we don't normalize item bounds, like `deduce_future_output_from_obligations`
2. it leads to extra match arms that are both suspicious looking and also easy to miss

This PR maps the opaque type bounds of the RPITIT's *opaque* back to the opaque's self type to avoid this quirk. Then we can fix the UI test for #108304 (1.) and also remove a bunch of match arms (2.).

Fixes #108304

r? `@spastorino`
2023-07-31 16:57:55 +02:00
..
src Rollup merge of #114267 - compiler-errors:rpitit-opaque-bounds, r=spastorino 2023-07-31 16:57:55 +02:00
Cargo.toml
messages.ftl Require TAITs to be mentioned in the signatures of functions that register hidden types for them 2023-07-07 13:13:18 +00:00
README.md

For high-level intro to how type checking works in rustc, see the type checking chapter of the rustc dev guide.