remove redundant imports
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.
for #117772 :
In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and removing redundant imports code into two PR.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Don't print host effect param in pretty `path_generic_args`
Make `own_args_no_defaults` pass back the `GenericParamDef`, so that we can pass both the args *and* param definitions into `path_generic_args`. That allows us to use the `GenericParamDef` to filter out effect params.
This allows us to filter out the host param regardless of whether it's `sym::host` or `true`/`false`.
This also renames a couple of `const_effect_param` -> `host_effect_param`, and restores `~const` pretty printing to `TraitPredPrintModifiersAndPath`.
cc #118785
r? `@fee1-dead` cc `@oli-obk`
detects redundant imports that can be eliminated.
for #117772 :
In order to facilitate review and modification, split the checking code and
removing redundant imports code into two PR.
Don't warn an empty pattern unreachable if we're not sure the data is valid
Exhaustiveness checking used to be naive about the possibility of a place containing invalid data. This could cause it to emit an "unreachable pattern" lint on an arm that was in fact reachable, as in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117119.
This PR fixes that. We now track whether a place that is matched on may hold invalid data. This also forced me to be extra precise about how exhaustiveness manages empty types.
Note that this now errs in the opposite direction: the following arm is truly unreachable (because the binding causes a read of the value) but not linted as such. I'd rather not recommend writing a `match ... {}` that has the implicit side-effect of loading the value. [Never patterns](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/118155) will solve this cleanly.
```rust
match union.value {
_x => unreachable!(),
}
```
I recommend reviewing commit by commit. I went all-in on the test suite because this went through a lot of iterations and I kept everything. The bit I'm least confident in is `is_known_valid_scrutinee` in `check_match.rs`.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117119.
coverage: Use `SpanMarker` to improve coverage spans for `if !` expressions
Coverage instrumentation works by extracting source code spans from MIR. However, some kinds of syntax are effectively erased during MIR building, so their spans don't necessarily exist anywhere in MIR, making them invisible to the coverage instrumentor (unless we resort to various heuristics and hacks to recover them).
This PR introduces `CoverageKind::SpanMarker`, which is a new variant of `StatementKind::Coverage`. Its sole purpose is to represent spans that would otherwise not appear in MIR, so that the coverage instrumentor can extract them.
When coverage is enabled, the MIR builder can insert these dummy statements as needed, to improve the accuracy of spans used by coverage mappings.
Fixes#115468.
---
```@rustbot``` label +A-code-coverage
Rollup of 6 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #117586 (Uplift the (new solver) canonicalizer into `rustc_next_trait_solver`)
- #118502 (fix: correct the arg for 'suggest to use associated function syntax' diagnostic)
- #118694 (Add instance evaluation and methods to read an allocation in StableMIR)
- #118715 (privacy: visit trait def id of projections)
- #118730 (recurse into refs when comparing tys for diagnostics)
- #118736 (temporarily revert "ice on ambguity in mir typeck")
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
This is for post-monomorphization cycles. These are only caught later
(in drop elaboration for the example that I saw), so we need to handle
them here.
This issue wasn't noticed before because exhaustiveness only checked
inhabitedness when `exhaustive_patterns` was on. The preceding commit
now check inhabitedness always, which revealed the problem.
Uplift the (new solver) canonicalizer into `rustc_next_trait_solver`
Uplifts the new trait solver's canonicalizer into a new crate called `rustc_next_trait_solver`.
The crate name is literally a bikeshed-avoidance name, so let's not block this PR on that -- renames are welcome later.
There are a host of other changes that were required to make this possible:
* Expose a `ConstTy` trait to get the `Interner::Ty` from a `Interner::Const`.
* Expose some constructor methods to construct `Bound` variants. These are currently methods defined on the interner themselves, but they could be pulled into traits later.
* Expose a `IntoKind` trait to turn a `Ty`/`Const`/`Region` into their corresponding `*Kind`s.
* Some minor tweaks to other APIs in `rustc_type_ir`.
The canonicalizer code itself is best reviewed **with whitespace ignored.**
r? ``@lcnr``
Explicitly implement `DynSync` and `DynSend` for `TyCtxt`
This is an attempt to short circuit trait resolution. It should get a perf run for bootstrap impact.
There are cases where coverage instrumentation wants to show a span for some
syntax element, but there is no MIR node that naturally carries that span, so
the instrumentor can't see it.
MIR building can now use this new kind of coverage statement to deliberately
include those spans in MIR, attached to a dummy statement that has no other
effect.
Avoid adding builtin functions to `symbols.o`
We found performance regressions in #113923. The problem seems to be that `--gc-sections` does not remove these symbols. I tested that lld removes these symbols, but ld and gold do not.
I found that `used` adds symbols to `symbols.o` at 3e202ead60/compiler/rustc_codegen_ssa/src/back/linker.rs (L1786-L1791).
The PR removes builtin functions.
Note that under LTO, ld still preserves these symbols. (lld will still remove them.)
The first commit also fixes#118559. But I think the second commit also makes sense.
compile-time evaluation: detect writes through immutable pointers
This has two motivations:
- it unblocks https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/116745 (and therefore takes a big step towards `const_mut_refs` stabilization), because we can now detect if the memory that we find in `const` can be interned as "immutable"
- it would detect the UB that was uncovered in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117905, which was caused by accidental stabilization of `copy` functions in `const` that can only be called with UB
When UB is detected, we emit a future-compat warn-by-default lint. This is not a breaking change, so completely in line with [the const-UB RFC](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3016-const-ub.html), meaning we don't need t-lang FCP here. I made the lint immediately show up for dependencies since it is nearly impossible to even trigger this lint without `const_mut_refs` -- the accidentally stabilized `copy` functions are the only way this can happen, so the crates that popped up in #117905 are the only causes of such UB (in the code that crater covers), and the three cases of UB that we know about have all been fixed in their respective crates already.
The way this is implemented is by making use of the fact that our interpreter is already generic over the notion of provenance. For CTFE we now use the new `CtfeProvenance` type which is conceptually an `AllocId` plus a boolean `immutable` flag (but packed for a more efficient representation). This means we can mark a pointer as immutable when it is created as a shared reference. The flag will be propagated to all pointers derived from this one. We can then check the immutable flag on each write to reject writes through immutable pointers.
I just hope perf works out.
`EvaluatedToUnknown` -> `EvaluatedToAmbigStackDependent`, `EvaluatedToRecur` -> `EvaluatedToErrStackDependent`
Less confusing names, since the only difference between them and their parallel `EvalutedTo..` is that they are stack dependent.
r? lcnr
Remove `PolyGenSig` since it's always a dummy binder
Coroutines are never polymorphic in their signature. This cleans up a FIXME in the code:
```
/// Returns the "coroutine signature", which consists of its yield
/// and return types.
///
/// N.B., some bits of the code prefers to see this wrapped in a
/// binder, but it never contains bound regions. Probably this
/// function should be removed.
```
rustc_arena: add `alloc_str`
Two places called `from_utf8_unchecked` for strings from `alloc_slice`,
and one's SAFETY comment said this was for lack of `alloc_str` -- so
let's just add that instead!
Remove `#[rustc_host]`, use internal desugaring
Also removed a way for users to explicitly specify the host param since that isn't particularly useful. This should eliminate any pain with encoding attributes across crates and etc.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Two places called `from_utf8_unchecked` for strings from `alloc_slice`,
and one's SAFETY comment said this was for lack of `alloc_str` -- so
let's just add that instead!
`DefPathData::(ClosureExpr,ImplTrait)` are renamed to match `DefKind::(Closure,OpaqueTy)`.
`DefPathData::ImplTraitAssocTy` is replaced with `DefPathData::TypeNS(kw::Empty)` because both correspond to `DefKind::AssocTy`.
It's possible that introducing `(DefKind,DefPathData)::AssocOpaqueTy` could be a better solution, but that would be a much more invasive change.
Const generic parameters introduced for effects are moved from `DefPathData::TypeNS` to `DefPathData::ValueNS`, because constants are values.
`DefPathData` is no longer passed to `create_def` functions to avoid redundancy.