Commit graph

1073 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Esteban Küber
9ac95c10c0 Introduce default_field_values feature
Initial implementation of `#[feature(default_field_values]`, proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3681.

Support default fields in enum struct variant

Allow default values in an enum struct variant definition:

```rust
pub enum Bar {
    Foo {
        bar: S = S,
        baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
    }
}
```

Allow using `..` without a base on an enum struct variant

```rust
Bar::Foo { .. }
```

`#[derive(Default)]` doesn't account for these as it is still gating `#[default]` only being allowed on unit variants.

Support `#[derive(Default)]` on enum struct variants with all defaulted fields

```rust
pub enum Bar {
    #[default]
    Foo {
        bar: S = S,
        baz: i32 = 42 + 3,
    }
}
```

Check for missing fields in typeck instead of mir_build.

Expand test with `const` param case (needs `generic_const_exprs` enabled).

Properly instantiate MIR const

The following works:

```rust
struct S<A> {
    a: Vec<A> = Vec::new(),
}
S::<i32> { .. }
```

Add lint for default fields that will always fail const-eval

We *allow* this to happen for API writers that might want to rely on users'
getting a compile error when using the default field, different to the error
that they would get when the field isn't default. We could change this to
*always* error instead of being a lint, if we wanted.

This will *not* catch errors for partially evaluated consts, like when the
expression relies on a const parameter.

Suggestions when encountering `Foo { .. }` without `#[feature(default_field_values)]`:

 - Suggest adding a base expression if there are missing fields.
 - Suggest enabling the feature if all the missing fields have optional values.
 - Suggest removing `..` if there are no missing fields.
2024-12-09 21:55:01 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
1868c8f66f
Rollup merge of #133424 - Nadrieril:guard-patterns-parsing, r=fee1-dead
Parse guard patterns

This implements the parsing of [RFC3637 Guard Patterns](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3637-guard-patterns.html) (see also [tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/129967)). This PR is extracted from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/129996 with minor modifications.

cc `@max-niederman`
2024-12-08 17:18:50 +01:00
Michael Goulet
05c34cc5ed Fix suggestion when shorthand self has erroneous type 2024-12-04 19:52:53 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
45088fdf68
Rollup merge of #133784 - dtolnay:visitspans, r=compiler-errors
Fix MutVisitor's default implementations to visit Stmt's and BinOp's spans

The `Stmt` case is a bug introduced almost certainly unintentionally by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/126993. The code _used_ to visit and mutate `span` correctly, but got changed as follows by that PR. Notice how `span` is **copied** into the output by `|kind| Stmt { id, kind, span }` which happens after the mutation in the correct code (red) and before the mutation in the incorrect code (green).

```diff
  pub fn noop_flat_map_stmt<T: MutVisitor>(
      Stmt { kind, mut span, mut id }: Stmt,
      vis: &mut T,
  ) -> SmallVec<[Stmt; 1]> {
      vis.visit_id(&mut id);
-     vis.visit_span(&mut span);
      let stmts: SmallVec<_> = noop_flat_map_stmt_kind(kind, vis)
          .into_iter()
          .map(|kind| Stmt { id, kind, span })
          .collect();
      if stmts.len() > 1 {
          panic!(...);
      }
+     vis.visit_span(&mut span);
      stmts
  }
```
2024-12-04 05:42:08 +01:00
David Tolnay
a3cfe2fd08
Visit Stmt span in MutVisitor::flat_map_stmt 2024-12-03 07:03:26 -08:00
David Tolnay
a2eca35c15
Visit BinOp span in MutVisitor::visit_expr 2024-12-03 07:03:26 -08:00
Guillaume Gomez
6f9f17fc08
Rollup merge of #133746 - oli-obk:push-xwyrylxmrtvq, r=jieyouxu
Change `AttrArgs::Eq` to a struct variant

Cleanups for simplifying https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/131808

Basically changes `AttrArgs::Eq` to a struct variant and then avoids several matches on `AttrArgsEq` in favor of methods on it. This will make future refactorings simpler, as they can either keep methods or switch to field accesses without having to restructure code
2024-12-02 23:08:58 +01:00
Oli Scherer
da182b6d95 Deduplicate some matches that always panic in one arm 2024-12-02 11:04:57 +00:00
Oli Scherer
c0b532277b Add a helper method for extracting spans from AttrArgsEq 2024-12-02 11:04:57 +00:00
Oli Scherer
778321d155 Change AttrArgs::Eq into a struct variant 2024-12-02 10:28:58 +00:00
David Tolnay
7ced18f329
Eliminate magic numbers from expression precedence 2024-11-30 17:53:40 -08:00
David Tolnay
ca8f47439e
Eliminate PREC_FORCE_PAREN 2024-11-30 17:53:39 -08:00
lcnr
94131bd0a8 always create DefIds when lowering anon-consts 2024-11-28 12:22:02 +00:00
Michael Goulet
6e5bac19d0
Rollup merge of #133140 - dtolnay:precedence, r=fmease
Inline ExprPrecedence::order into Expr::precedence

The representation of expression precedence in rustc_ast has been an obstacle to further improvements in the pretty-printer (continuing from #119105 and #119427).

Previously the operation of *"does this expression have lower precedence than that one"* (relevant for parenthesis insertion in macro-generated syntax trees) consisted of 3 steps:

1. Convert `Expr` to `ExprPrecedence` using `.precedence()`
2. Convert `ExprPrecedence` to `i8` using `.order()`
3. Compare using `<`

As far as I can guess, the reason for the separation between `precedence()` and `order()` was so that both `rustc_ast::Expr` and `rustc_hir::Expr` could convert as straightforwardly as possible to the same `ExprPrecedence` enum, and then the more finicky logic performed by `order` could be present just once.

The mapping between `Expr` and `ExprPrecedence` was intended to be as straightforward as possible:

```rust
match self.kind {
    ExprKind::Closure(..) => ExprPrecedence::Closure,
    ...
}
```

although there were exceptions of both many-to-one, and one-to-many:

```rust
    ExprKind::Underscore => ExprPrecedence::Path,
    ExprKind::Path(..) => ExprPrecedence::Path,
    ...
    ExprKind::Match(_, _, MatchKind::Prefix) => ExprPrecedence::Match,
    ExprKind::Match(_, _, MatchKind::Postfix) => ExprPrecedence::PostfixMatch,
```

Where the nature of `ExprPrecedence` becomes problematic is when a single expression kind might be associated with multiple different precedence levels depending on context (outside the expression) and contents (inside the expression). For example consider what is the precedence of an ExprKind::Closure `$closure`. Well, on the left-hand side of a binary operator it would need parentheses in order to avoid the trailing binary operator being absorbed into the closure body: `($closure) + Rhs`, so the precedence is something lower than that of `+`. But on the right-hand side of a binary operator, a closure is just a straightforward prefix expression like a unary op, which is a relatively high precedence level, higher than binops but lower than method calls: `Lhs + $closure` is fine without parens but `($closure).method()` needs them. But as a third case, if the closure contains an explicit return type, then the precedence is an even higher level than that, never needing parenthesization even in a binop left-hand side or method call: `|| -> bool { false } + Rhs` or `|| -> bool { false }.method()`.

You can see that trying to capture all of this resolution about expressions into `ExprPrecedence` violates the intention of `ExprPrecedence` being a straightforward one-to-one correspondence from each AST and HIR `ExprKind` variant. It would be possible to attempt that by doing stuff like `ExprPrecedence::Closure(Side::Leading, ReturnType::No)`, but I don't foresee the original envisioned benefit of the `precedence()`/`order()` distinction being retained in this approach. Instead I want to move toward a model that Syn has been using successfully. In Syn, there is a Precedence enum but it differs from rustc in the following ways:

- There are [relatively few variants](https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/blob/2.0.87/src/precedence.rs#L11-L47) compared to rustc's `ExprPrecedence`. For example there is no distinction at the precedence level between returns and closures, or between loops and method calls.

- We distinguish between [leading](https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/blob/2.0.87/src/fixup.rs#L293) and [trailing](https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/blob/2.0.87/src/fixup.rs#L309) precedence, taking into account an expression's context such as what token follows it (for various syntactic bail-outs in Rust's grammar, like ambiguities around break-with-value) and how it relates to operators from the surrounding syntax tree.

- There are no hardcoded mysterious integer quantities like rustc's `PREC_CLOSURE = -40`. All precedence comparisons are performed via PartialOrd on a C-like enum.

This PR is just a first step in these changes. As you can tell from Syn, I definitely think there is value in having a dedicated type to represent precedence, instead of what `order()` is doing with `i8`. But that is a whole separate adventure because rustc_ast doesn't even agree consistently on `i8` being the type for precedence order; `AssocOp::precedence` instead uses `usize` and there are casts in both directions. It is likely that a type called `ExprPrecedence` will re-appear, but it will look substantially different from the one that existed before this PR.
2024-11-26 12:03:41 -05:00
Frank King
161221da9e Refactor where predicates, and reserve for attributes support 2024-11-25 16:38:35 +08:00
Max Niederman
9b8bfed73b add guard pattern AST node 2024-11-24 18:08:20 +01:00
Luca Versari
9022bb2d6f Implement the unsafe-fields RFC.
Co-Authored-By: Jacob Pratt <jacob@jhpratt.dev>
2024-11-21 19:32:07 +01:00
bors
717f5df2c3 Auto merge of #132629 - nnethercote:124141-preliminaries, r=petrochenkov
#124141 preliminaries

Preliminary changes required to start removing `Nonterminal` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/124141).

r? `@petrochenkov`
2024-11-21 10:57:22 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9d70af54e4
Rollup merge of #133153 - maxcabrajac:flat_maps, r=petrochenkov
Add visits to nodes that already have flat_maps in ast::MutVisitor

This PR aims to add `visit_` methods for every node that has a `flat_map_` in MutVisitor, giving implementers free choice over overriding `flat_map` for 1-to-n conversions or `visit` for a 1-to-1.

There is one major problem: `flat_map_stmt`.
While all other default implementations of `flat_map`s are 1-to-1 conversion, as they either only call visits or a internal 1-to-many conversions are natural, `flat_map_stmt` doesn't follow this pattern.

`flat_map_stmt`'s default implementation is a 1-to-n conversion that panics if n > 1 (effectively being a 1-to-[0;1]). This means that it cannot be used as is for a default `visit_stmt`, which would be required to be a 1-to-1.

Implementing `visit_stmt` without runtime checks would require it to reach over a potential `flat_map_item` or `filter_map_expr` overrides and call for their `visit` counterparts directly.
Other than that, if we want to keep the behavior of `flat_map_stmt` it cannot call `visit_stmt` internally.

To me, it seems reasonable to make all default implementations 1-to-1 conversions and let implementers handle `visit_stmt` if they need it, but I don't know if calling `visit` directly when a 1-to-1 is required is ok or not.

related to #128974 & #127615

r? ``@petrochenkov``
2024-11-21 07:56:12 +01:00
Nicholas Nethercote
cee88f7a3f Prepare for invisible delimiters.
Current places where `Interpolated` is used are going to change to
instead use invisible delimiters. This prepares for that.
- It adds invisible delimiter cases to the `can_begin_*`/`may_be_*`
  methods and the `failed_to_match_macro` that are equivalent to the
  existing `Interpolated` cases.
- It adds panics/asserts in some places where invisible delimiters
  should never occur.
- In `Parser::parse_struct_fields` it excludes an ident + invisible
  delimiter from special consideration in an error message, because
  that's quite different to an ident + paren/brace/bracket.
2024-11-21 08:22:11 +11:00
Nicholas Nethercote
afe238f66f Introduce InvisibleOrigin on invisible delimiters.
It's not used meaningfully yet, but will be needed to get rid of
interpolated tokens.
2024-11-21 08:16:54 +11:00
maxcabrajac
1dc12367b9 Items 2024-11-20 16:42:18 -03:00
maxcabrajac
f6340f13bb Add MutVisitor::visit_fn_ret_ty 2024-11-18 15:49:09 -03:00
maxcabrajac
e65deb5ee1 Add Visitor::visit_qself 2024-11-18 15:43:35 -03:00
maxcabrajac
09c268417f Add Visitor::visit_fn_decl 2024-11-18 15:40:34 -03:00
maxcabrajac
5c2de73700 PatField 2024-11-17 23:05:09 -03:00
maxcabrajac
eb2f1c85b3 ExprField 2024-11-17 23:05:07 -03:00
maxcabrajac
8b0284afd3 GenericParam 2024-11-17 23:05:04 -03:00
maxcabrajac
f4fbe88a4d Param 2024-11-17 23:05:00 -03:00
maxcabrajac
e52cef19a4 Variant 2024-11-17 23:04:49 -03:00
maxcabrajac
b96758bb71 Arm 2024-11-17 23:04:36 -03:00
maxcabrajac
f2f7d32948 FieldDef 2024-11-17 23:03:44 -03:00
David Tolnay
e5f1555000
Inline ExprPrecedence::order into Expr::precedence 2024-11-17 14:01:37 -08:00
Matthias Krüger
6b47c6d786
Rollup merge of #132787 - maxcabrajac:fnctxt, r=petrochenkov
Unify FnKind between AST visitors and make WalkItemKind more straight forward

Unifying `FnKind` requires a bunch of changes to `WalkItemKind::walk` signature so I'll change them in one go

related to #128974

r? `@petrochenkov`
2024-11-16 21:05:46 +01:00
Guillaume Gomez
325bc6c201
Rollup merge of #132956 - maxcabrajac:coroutine_kind, r=petrochenkov
Add visit_coroutine_kind to ast::Visitor

r? ``@petrochenkov``

related to #128974
2024-11-15 23:38:10 +01:00
maxcabrajac
516a3b0c9b Make WalkItemKind::walk signature compatible between Visitor versions 2024-11-15 17:01:53 -03:00
maxcabrajac
6180173612 Add WalkItemKind::Ctxt so AssocCtxt is not sent to non-Assoc ItemKinds 2024-11-15 17:00:01 -03:00
maxcabrajac
1236656319 Make Visitor::FnKind and MutVisitor::FnKind compatible 2024-11-15 16:59:47 -03:00
Matthias Krüger
a111716c42
Rollup merge of #133049 - maxcabrajac:visit_precise_capturing_arg, r=compiler-errors
Change Visitor::visit_precise_capturing_arg so it returns a Visitor::Result

r? `@petrochenkov`

related to #128974
2024-11-15 19:05:18 +01:00
maxcabrajac
9fde49b338 Change visit_precise_capturing_arg so it returns a Self::Result 2024-11-14 17:07:46 -03:00
maxcabrajac
a7ac8bfc22 format 2024-11-12 21:57:25 -03:00
maxcabrajac
49713c0c20 Add visit_coroutine_kind 2024-11-12 13:44:46 -03:00
bors
6503543d11 Auto merge of #132282 - Noratrieb:it-is-the-end-of-serial, r=cjgillot
Delete the `cfg(not(parallel))` serial compiler

Since it's inception a long time ago, the parallel compiler and its cfgs have been a maintenance burden. This was a necessary evil the allow iteration while not degrading performance because of synchronization overhead.

But this time is over. Thanks to the amazing work by the parallel working group (and the dyn sync crimes), the parallel compiler has now been fast enough to be shipped by default in nightly for quite a while now.
Stable and beta have still been on the serial compiler, because they can't use `-Zthreads` anyways.
But this is quite suboptimal:
- the maintenance burden still sucks
- we're not testing the serial compiler in nightly

Because of these reasons, it's time to end it. The serial compiler has served us well in the years since it was split from the parallel one, but it's over now.

Let the knight slay one head of the two-headed dragon!

#113349

Note that the default is still 1 thread, as more than 1 thread is still fairly broken.

cc `@onur-ozkan` to see if i did the bootstrap field removal correctly, `@SparrowLii` on the sync parts
2024-11-12 15:14:56 +00:00
Noratrieb
505b8e1332 Delete the cfg(not(parallel)) serial compiler
Since it's inception a long time ago, the parallel compiler and its cfgs
have been a maintenance burden. This was a necessary evil the allow
iteration while not degrading performance because of synchronization
overhead.

But this time is over. Thanks to the amazing work by the parallel
working group (and the dyn sync crimes), the parallel compiler has now
been fast enough to be shipped by default in nightly for quite a while
now.
Stable and beta have still been on the serial compiler, because they
can't use `-Zthreads` anyways.
But this is quite suboptimal:
- the maintenance burden still sucks
- we're not testing the serial compiler in nightly

Because of these reasons, it's time to end it. The serial compiler has
served us well in the years since it was split from the parallel one,
but it's over now.

Let the knight slay one head of the two-headed dragon!
2024-11-12 13:38:58 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
b7dc4813a8
Rollup merge of #132653 - BoxyUwU:const_arg_stmt_mac_call, r=compiler-errors
Don't use `maybe_unwrap_block` when checking for macro calls in a block expr

Fixes #131915

Using `maybe_unwrap_block` to determine if we are looking at a `{ mac_call!{} }` will fail sometimes as `mac_call!{}` could be a `StmtKind::MacCall` not a `StmtKind::Expr`. This caused the def collector to think that `{ mac_call!{} }` was a non-trivial const argument and create a definition for it even though it should not.

r? `@compiler-errors`  cc `@camelid`
2024-11-12 06:27:17 +01:00
Boxy
1d6e847674 Check for both StmtKind::MacCall and ExprKind::MacCall 2024-11-05 18:23:21 +00:00
Guillaume Gomez
33009601af Add documentation on ast::Attribute 2024-11-05 16:38:15 +01:00
Michael Goulet
16394e9776 Do not format generic consts 2024-11-02 20:25:06 +00:00
Mara Bos
cb26fa07bb Improve the missing_abi lint. 2024-10-31 10:55:45 +01:00
klensy
746b675c5a fix clippy::clone_on_ref_ptr for compiler 2024-10-28 18:05:08 +03:00