Fix alignment passed down to LLVM for simd_masked_load
Follow up to #117953
The alignment for a masked load operation should be that of the element/lane, not the vector as a whole
It can produce miscompilations after the LLVM optimizer notices the higher alignment and promotes this to an unmasked, aligned load followed up by blend/select - https://rust.godbolt.org/z/KEeGbevbb
Correctly gate the parsing of match arms without body
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/118527 accidentally allowed the following to parse on stable:
```rust
match Some(0) {
None => { foo(); }
#[cfg(FALSE)]
Some(_)
}
```
This fixes that oversight. The way I choose which error to emit is the best I could think of, I'm open if you know a better way.
r? `@petrochenkov` since you're the one who noticed
rustc_codegen_llvm: Enforce `rustc::potential_query_instability` lint
Stop allowing `rustc::potential_query_instability` on all of `rustc_codegen_llvm` and instead allow it on a case-by-case basis if it is safe to do so. In this case, all 2 instances are safe to allow.
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84447 which is E-help-wanted.
Improve an error involving attribute values.
Attribute values must be literals. The error you get when that doesn't hold is pretty bad, e.g.:
```
unexpected expression: 1 + 1
```
You also get the same error if the attribute value is a literal, but an invalid literal, e.g.:
```
unexpected expression: "foo"suffix
```
This commit does two things.
- Changes the error message to "attribute value must be a literal", which gives a better idea of what the problem is and how to fix it. It also no longer prints the invalid expression, because the carets below highlight it anyway.
- Separates the "not a literal" case from the "invalid literal" case. Which means invalid literals now get the specific error at the literal level, rather than at the attribute level.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Clarify how to choose a FutureIncompatibilityReason variant.
There has been some confusion about how to choose these variants, or what the procedure is for handling future-incompatible errors. Hopefully this helps provide some more information on how these work.
On borrow return type, suggest borrowing from arg or owned return type
When we encounter a function with a return type that has an anonymous lifetime with no argument to borrow from, besides suggesting the `'static` lifetime we now also suggest changing the arguments to be borrows or changing the return type to be an owned type.
```
error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier
--> $DIR/variadic-ffi-6.rs:7:6
|
LL | ) -> &usize {
| ^ expected named lifetime parameter
|
= help: this function's return type contains a borrowed value, but there is no value for it to be borrowed from
help: consider using the `'static` lifetime, but this is uncommon unless you're returning a borrowed value from a `const` or a `static`
|
LL | ) -> &'static usize {
| +++++++
help: instead, you are more likely to want to change one of the arguments to be borrowed...
|
LL | x: &usize,
| +
help: ...or alternatively, to want to return an owned value
|
LL - ) -> &usize {
LL + ) -> usize {
|
```
Fix#85843.
dont ICE when ConstKind::Expr for is_const_evaluatable
The problem is that we are not handling ConstKind::Expr inside report_not_const_evaluatable_error
Fixes [#114151]
Make most `rustc_type_ir` kinds `Copy` by default
1. There's no reason why `TyKind` and `ConstKind`/`ConstData` can't be `Copy`. This allows us to avoid needing a typed arena for the two types.
2. Simplify some impls into derives.
Stop allowing `rustc::potential_query_instability` on all of
`rustc_codegen_llvm` and instead allow it on a case-by-case basis. In
this case, both instances are safe to allow.
Fix BinOp `ty()` assertion and `fn_sig()` for closures
`BinOp::ty()` was asserting that the argument types were primitives. However, the primitive check doesn't include pointers, which can be used in a `BinaryOperation`. Thus extend the arguments to include them.
Since I had to add methods to check for pointers in TyKind, I just went ahead and added a bunch more utility checks that can be handy for our users and fixed the `fn_sig()` method to also include closures.
`@compiler-errors` just wanted to confirm that today no `BinaryOperation` accept SIMD types. Is that correct?
r? `@compiler-errors`
Monomorphize args while building Instance body in StableMIR
The function `Instance::body()` in StableMIR is supposed to return a monomorphic body by instantiating all possibly generic constructs. We were previously instantiating type and constants, but not generic arguments. This PR ensures that we also instantiate them.
r? ``@compiler-errors``
End locals' live range before suspending coroutine
State transforms retains storage statements for locals that are not
stored inside a coroutine. It ensures those locals are live when
resuming by inserting StorageLive as appropriate. It forgot to end the
storage of those locals when suspending, which is fixed here.
While the end of live range is implicit when executing return, it is
nevertheless useful for inliner which would otherwise extend the live
range beyond return.
Fixes#117733
Attribute values must be literals. The error you get when that doesn't
hold is pretty bad, e.g.:
```
unexpected expression: 1 + 1
```
You also get the same error if the attribute value is a literal, but an
invalid literal, e.g.:
```
unexpected expression: "foo"suffix
```
This commit does two things.
- Changes the error message to "attribute value must be a literal",
which gives a better idea of what the problem is and how to fix it. It
also no longer prints the invalid expression, because the carets below
highlight it anyway.
- Separates the "not a literal" case from the "invalid literal" case.
Which means invalid literals now get the specific error at the literal
level, rather than at the attribute level.
State transforms retains storage statements for locals that are not
stored inside a coroutine. It ensures those locals are live when
resuming by inserting StorageLive as appropriate. It forgot to end the
storage of those locals when suspending, which is fixed here.
While the end of live range is implicit when executing return, it is
nevertheless useful for inliner which would otherwise extend the live
range beyond return.
`.debug_pubnames` and `.debug_pubtypes` are poorly designed and people
seldom use them. However, they take a considerable portion of size in
the final binary. This tells LLVM stop emitting those sections on
DWARFv4 or lower. DWARFv5 use `.debug_names` which is more concise
in size and performant for name lookup.
Extract exhaustiveness into its own crate
It now makes sense to extract exhaustiveness into its own crate! This was much-requested by rust-analyzer (they currently maintain by hand a copy of the algorithm), and I hope this can serve other projects e.g. clippy.
This is the churny PR: it exclusively moves code around. It's not yet useable outside of rustc but I wanted the churny parts to be out of the way.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Do not parenthesize exterior struct lit inside match guards
Before this PR, the AST pretty-printer injects parentheses around expressions any time parens _could_ be needed depending on what else is in the code that surrounds that expression. But the pretty-printer did not pass around enough context to understand whether parentheses really _are_ needed on any particular expression. As a consequence, there are false positives where unneeded parentheses are being inserted.
Example:
```rust
#![feature(if_let_guard)]
macro_rules! pp {
($e:expr) => {
stringify!($e)
};
}
fn main() {
println!("{}", pp!(match () { () if let _ = Struct {} => {} }));
}
```
**Before:**
```console
match () { () if let _ = (Struct {}) => {} }
```
**After:**
```console
match () { () if let _ = Struct {} => {} }
```
This PR introduces a bit of state that is passed across various expression printing methods to help understand accurately whether particular situations require parentheses injected by the pretty printer, and it fixes one such false positive involving match guards as shown above.
There are other parenthesization false positive cases not fixed by this PR. I intend to address these in follow-up PRs. For example here is one: the expression `{ let _ = match x {} + 1; }` is pretty-printed as `{ let _ = (match x {}) + 1; }` despite there being no reason for parentheses to appear there.