Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #130549 (Add RISC-V vxworks targets)
- #130595 (Initial std library support for NuttX)
- #130734 (Fix: ices on virtual-function-elimination about principal trait)
- #130787 (Ban combination of GCE and new solver)
- #130809 (Update llvm triple for OpenHarmony targets)
- #130810 (Don't trap into the debugger on panics under Linux)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Ban combination of GCE and new solver
These do not work together. I don't want anyone to have the impression that they do.
I reused the conflicting features diagnostic but I guess I could make it more tailored to the new solver? OTOH I don't really about the presentation of diagnostics here; these are nightly features after all.
r? `@BoxyUwU` thoughts on this?
Fix: ices on virtual-function-elimination about principal trait
Extract `load_vtable` function to ensure the `virtual_function_elimination` option is always checked.
It's okay not to use `llvm.type.checked.load` to load the vtable if there is no principal trait.
Fixes#123955Fixes#124092
Add `File` constructors that return files wrapped with a buffer
In addition to the light convenience, these are intended to raise visibility that buffering is something you should consider when opening a file, since unbuffered I/O is a common performance footgun to Rust newcomers.
ACP: https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/446
Tracking Issue: #130804
rustdoc: inherit parent's stability where applicable
It is currently not possible for a re-export to have a different stability (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30827). Therefore the standard library uses a hack when moving items like `std::error::Error` or `std::net::IpAddr` into `core` by marking the containing module (`core::error` / `core::net`) as unstable or stable in a later version than the items the module contains.
Previously, rustdoc would always show the *stability as declared* for an item rather than the *stability as publicly reachable* (i.e. the features required to actually access the item), which could be confusing when viewing the docs. This PR changes it so that we show the stability of the first unstable parent or the most recently stabilized parent instead, to hopefully make things less confusing.
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130765
screenshots:
![error in std](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2ab9bdb9-ed81-4e45-a832-ac7d3ba1be3f) ![error in core](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/46f46182-5642-4ac5-b92e-0b99a8e2496d)
Pin memchr to 2.5.0 in the library rather than rustc_ast
The latest versions of `memchr` experience LTO-related issues when compiling for windows-gnu [1], so needs to be pinned. The issue is present in the standard library.
`memchr` has been pinned in `rustc_ast`, but since the workspace was recently split, this pin no longer has any effect on library crates.
Resolve this by adding `memchr` as an _unused_ dependency in `std`, pinned to 2.5. Additionally, remove the pin in `rustc_ast` to allow non-library crates to upgrade to the latest version.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127890 [1]
try-job: x86_64-mingw
try-job: x86_64-msvc
Separate collection of crate-local inherent impls from error tracking
#119895 changed the return type of the `crate_inherent_impls` query from `CrateInherentImpls` to `Result<CrateInherentImpls, ErrorGuaranteed>` to avoid needing to use the non-parallel-friendly `track_errors()` to track if an error was reporting from within the query... This was mostly fine until #121113, which stopped halting compilation when we hit an `Err(ErrorGuaranteed)` in the `crate_inherent_impls` query.
Thus we proceed onwards to typeck, and since a return type of `Result<CrateInherentImpls, ErrorGuaranteed>` means that the query can *either* return one of "the list inherent impls" or "error has been reported", later on when we want to assemble method or associated item candidates for inherent impls, we were just treating any `Err(ErrorGuaranteed)` return value as if Rust had no inherent impls defined anywhere at all! This leads to basically every inherent method call failing with an error, lol, which was reported in #127798.
This PR changes the `crate_inherent_impls` query to return `(CrateInherentImpls, Result<(), ErrorGuaranteed>)`, i.e. returning the inherent impls collected *and* whether an error was reported in the query itself. It firewalls the latter part of that query into a new `crate_inherent_impls_validity_check` just for the `ensure()` call.
This fixes#127798.
This changes the remaining span for the cast, because the new `Cast`
category has a higher priority (lower `Ord`) than the old `Coercion`
category, so we no longer report the region error for the "unsizing"
coercion from `*const Trait` to itself.
The latest versions of `memchr` experience LTO-related issues when
compiling for windows-gnu [1], so needs to be pinned. The issue is
present in the standard library.
`memchr` has been pinned in `rustc_ast`, but since the workspace was
recently split, this pin no longer has any effect on library crates.
Resolve this by adding `memchr` as an _unused_ dependency in `std`,
pinned to 2.5. Additionally, remove the pin in `rustc_ast` to allow
non-library crates to upgrade to the latest version.
Link: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/127890 [1]
Revert "Apply EarlyOtherwiseBranch to scalar value #129047"
This reverts PR #129047, commit a772336fb3, reversing changes made to 702987f75b.
cc `@DianQK` and `@cjgillot` as the PR author and reviewer of #129047 respectively.
It seems [Apply EarlyOtherwiseBranch to scalar value #129047](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129047) may have lead to several nightly regressions:
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130769
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130774
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130771
Example test that would ICE with changes in #129047 (this test is included in this PR):
```rs
//@ compile-flags: -C opt-level=3
//@ check-pass
use std::task::Poll;
pub fn poll(val: Poll<Result<Option<Vec<u8>>, u8>>) {
match val {
Poll::Ready(Ok(Some(_trailers))) => {}
Poll::Ready(Err(_err)) => {}
Poll::Ready(Ok(None)) => {}
Poll::Pending => {}
}
}
```
Since this is a mir-opt ICE that seems to quite easy to trigger with real-world crates being affected, let's revert for now and reland the mir-opt after these are fixed.
llvm: replace some deprecated functions
`LLVMMDStringInContext` and `LLVMMDNodeInContext` are deprecated, replace them with `LLVMMDStringInContext2` and `LLVMMDNodeInContext2`.
Also replace `Value` with `Metadata` in some function signatures for better consistency.
Revert "Add recursion limit to FFI safety lint"
It's not necessarily clear if warning when we hit the recursion limit is the right thing to do, first of all.
**More importantly**, this PR was implemented incorrectly in the first place; it was not decrementing the recursion limit when stepping out of a type, so it would trigger when a ctype has more than RECURSION_LIMIT fields *anywhere* in the type's set of recursively reachable fields.
Reverts #130598Reopens#130310Fixes#130757
Check vtable projections for validity in miri
Currently, miri does not catch when we transmute `dyn Trait<Assoc = A>` to `dyn Trait<Assoc = B>`. This PR implements such a check, and fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/miri/issues/3905.
To do this, we modify `GlobalAlloc::VTable` to contain the *whole* list of `PolyExistentialPredicate`, and then modify `check_vtable_for_type` to validate the `PolyExistentialProjection`s of the vtable, along with the principal trait that was already being validated.
cc ``@RalfJung``
r? ``@lcnr`` or types
I also tweaked the diagnostics a bit.
---
**Open question:** We don't validate the auto traits. You can transmute `dyn Foo` into `dyn Foo + Send`. Should we check that? We currently have a test that *exercises* this as not being UB:
6c6d210089/src/tools/miri/tests/pass/dyn-upcast.rs (L14-L20)
I'm not actually sure if we ever decided that's actually UB or not 🤔
We could perhaps still check that the underlying type of the object (i.e. the concrete type that was unsized) implements the auto traits, to catch UB like:
```rust
fn main() {
let x: &dyn Trait = &std::ptr::null_mut::<()>();
let _: &(dyn Trait + Send) = std::mem::transmute(x);
//~^ this vtable is not allocated for a type that is `Send`!
}
```
Skip query in get_parent_item when possible.
For HirIds with a non-zero item local id, `self.parent_owner_iter(hir_id).next()` just returns the same HirId with the item local id set to 0, but also does a query to retrieve the Node which is ignored here, which seems wasteful.
Rework `non_local_definitions` lint to only use a syntactic heuristic
This PR reworks the `non_local_definitions` lint to only use a syntactic heuristic, i.e. not use a type-system logic for whenever an `impl` is local or not.
Instead the new logic wanted by T-lang in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/126768#issuecomment-2192634762, which is to consider every paths in `Self` and `Trait` and to no longer use the type-system inference trick.
`@rustbot` labels +L-non_local_definitions
Fixes#126768
add unqualified_local_imports lint
This lint helps deal with https://github.com/rust-lang/rustfmt/issues/4709 by having the compiler detect imports of local items that are not syntactically distinguishable from imports from other cates. Making them syntactically distinguishable ensures rustfmt can consistently apply the desired import grouping.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #129201 (std: implement the `random` feature (alternative version))
- #130536 (bootstrap: Set the dylib path when building books with rustdoc)
- #130551 (Fix `break_last_token`.)
- #130657 (Remove x86_64-fuchsia and aarch64-fuchsia target aliases)
- #130721 (Add more test cases for block-no-opening-brace)
- #130736 (Add rustfmt 2024 reformatting to git blame ignore)
- #130746 (readd `@tgross35` and `@joboet` to the review rotation)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Fix `break_last_token`.
It currently doesn't handle the three-char tokens `>>=` and `<<=` correctly. These can be broken twice, resulting in three individual tokens. This is a latent bug that currently doesn't cause any problems, but does cause problems for #124141, because that PR increases the usage of lazy token streams.
r? `@petrochenkov`