We already use `Instance` at declaration sites when available to glean
additional information about possible abstractions of the type in use.
This does the same when possible at callsites as well.
The primary purpose of this change is to allow CFI to alter how it
generates type information for indirect calls through `Virtual`
instances.
Rollup of 11 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #120577 (Stabilize slice_split_at_unchecked)
- #122698 (Cancel `cargo update` job if there's no updates)
- #122780 (Rename `hir::Local` into `hir::LetStmt`)
- #122915 (Delay a bug if no RPITITs were found)
- #122916 (docs(sync): normalize dot in fn summaries)
- #122921 (Enable more mir-opt tests in debug builds)
- #122922 (-Zprint-type-sizes: print the types of awaitees and unnamed coroutine locals.)
- #122927 (Change an ICE regression test to use the original reproducer)
- #122930 (add panic location to 'panicked while processing panic')
- #122931 (Fix some typos in the pin.rs)
- #122933 (tag_for_variant follow-ups)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
-Zprint-type-sizes: print the types of awaitees and unnamed coroutine locals.
This should assist comprehending the size of coroutines. In particular, whenever a future is suspended while awaiting another future, the latter is given the special name `__awaitee`, and now the type of the awaited future will be printed, allowing identifying caller/callee — er, I mean, poller/pollee — relationships.
It would be possible to include the type name in more cases, but I thought that that might be overly verbose (`print-type-sizes` is already a lot of text) and ordinary named fields or variables are easier for readers to discover the types of.
This change will also synergize with my other PR #122923 which changes type printing to print the path of the `async fn` instead of the span.
Implementation note: I'm not sure if `Symbol::intern` is appropriate for this application, but it was the obvious way to not have to remove the `Copy` implementation from `FieldInfo`, or add a `'tcx` lifetime, while avoiding keeping a lot of possibly redundant strings in memory. I don't know what the proper tradeoff to make here is (though presumably it is not too important for a `-Z` debugging option).
Rename `hir::Local` into `hir::LetStmt`
Follow-up of #122776.
As discussed on [zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/131828-t-compiler/topic/Improve.20naming.20of.20.60ExprKind.3A.3ALet.60.3F).
I made this change into a separate PR because I'm less sure about this change as is. For example, we have `visit_local` and `LocalSource` items. Is it fine to keep these two as is (I supposed it is but I prefer to ask) or not? Having `Node::Local(LetStmt)` makes things more explicit but is it going too far?
r? ```@oli-obk```
Let codegen decide when to `mem::swap` with immediates
Making `libcore` decide this is silly; the backend has so much better information about when it's a good idea.
Thus this PR introduces a new `typed_swap` intrinsic with a fallback body, and replaces that fallback implementation when swapping immediates or scalar pairs.
r? oli-obk
Replaces #111744, and means we'll never need more libs PRs like #111803 or #107140
This should assist comprehending the size of coroutines.
In particular, whenever a future is suspended while awaiting another
future, the latter is given the special name `__awaitee`, and now the
type of the awaited future will be printed, allowing identifying
caller/callee — er, I mean, poller/pollee — relationships.
It would be possible to include the type name in more cases, but I
thought that that might be overly verbose (`print-type-sizes` is already
a lot of text) and ordinary named fields or variables are easier for
readers to discover the types of.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #114009 (compiler: allow transmute of ZST arrays with generics)
- #122195 (Note that the caller chooses a type for type param)
- #122651 (Suggest `_` for missing generic arguments in turbofish)
- #122784 (Add `tag_for_variant` query)
- #122839 (Split out `PredicatePolarity` from `ImplPolarity`)
- #122873 (Merge my contributor emails into one using mailmap)
- #122885 (Adjust better spastorino membership to triagebot's adhoc_groups)
- #122888 (add a couple more tests)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove `TypeAndMut` from `ty::RawPtr` variant, make it take `Ty` and `Mutability`
Pretty much mechanically converting `ty::RawPtr(ty::TypeAndMut { ty, mutbl })` to `ty::RawPtr(ty, mutbl)` and its fallout.
r? lcnr
cc rust-lang/types-team#124
Split out `PredicatePolarity` from `ImplPolarity`
Because having to deal with a third `Reservation` level in all the trait solver code is kind of weird.
r? `@lcnr` or `@oli-obk`
Add `tag_for_variant` query
This query allows for sharing code between `rustc_const_eval` and `rustc_transmutability`. It's a precursor to a PR I'm working on to entirely replace the bespoke layout computations in `rustc_transmutability`.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Suggest `_` for missing generic arguments in turbofish
The compiler may suggest unusable generic type names for missing generic arguments in an expression context:
```rust
fn main() {
(0..1).collect::<Vec>()
}
```
> help: add missing generic argument
>
> (0..1).collect::<Vec<T>>()
but `T` is not a valid name in this context, and this suggestion won't compile.
I've changed it to use `_` inside method calls (turbofish), so it will suggest `(0..1).collect::<Vec<_>>()` which _may_ compile.
It's possible that the suggested `_` will be ambiguous, but there is very extensive E0283 that will help resolve that, which is more helpful than a basic "cannot find type `T` in this scope" users would get otherwise.
Out of caution to limit scope of the change I've limited it to just turbofish, but I suspect `_` could be the better choice in more cases. Perhaps in all expressions?
Note that the caller chooses a type for type param
```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> $DIR/return-impl-trait.rs:23:5
|
LL | fn other_bounds<T>() -> T
| - -
| | |
| | expected `T` because of return type
| | help: consider using an impl return type: `impl Trait`
| expected this type parameter
...
LL | ()
| ^^ expected type parameter `T`, found `()`
|
= note: expected type parameter `T`
found unit type `()`
= note: the caller chooses the type of T which can be different from ()
```
Tried to see if "expected this type parameter" can be replaced, but that goes all the way to `rustc_infer` so seems not worth the effort and can affect other diagnostics.
Revives #112088 and #104755.
compiler: allow transmute of ZST arrays with generics
Extend the `SizeSkeleton` evaluator to shortcut zero-sized arrays, thus considering `[T; 0]` to have a compile-time fixed-size of 0.
The existing evaluator already deals with generic arrays under the feature-guard `transmute_const_generics`. However, it merely allows comparing fixed-size types with fixed-size types, and generic types with generic types. For generic types, it merely compares whether their arguments match (ordering them first). Even if their exact sizes are not known at compile time, it can ensure that they will eventually be the same.
This patch extends this by shortcutting the size-evaluation of zero sized arrays and thus allowing size comparisons of `()` with `[T; 0]`, where one contains generics and the other does not.
This code is guarded by `transmute_const_generics` (#109929), even though it is unclear whether it should be. However, this assumes that a separate stabilization PR is required to move this out of the feature guard.
Initially reported in #98104.
"Handle" calls to upstream monomorphizations in compiler_builtins
This is pretty cooked, but I think it works.
compiler-builtins has a long-standing problem that at link time, its rlib cannot contain any calls to `core`. And yet, in codegen we _love_ inserting calls to symbols in `core`, generally from various panic entrypoints.
I intend this PR to attack that problem as completely as possible. When we generate a function call, we now check if we are generating a function call from `compiler_builtins` and whether the callee is a function which was not lowered in the current crate, meaning we will have to link to it.
If those conditions are met, actually generating the call is asking for a linker error. So we don't. If the callee diverges, we lower to an abort with the same behavior as `core::intrinsics::abort`. If the callee does not diverge, we produce an error. This means that compiler-builtins can contain panics, but they'll SIGILL instead of panicking. I made non-diverging calls a compile error because I'm guessing that they'd mostly get into compiler-builtins by someone making a mistake while working on the crate, and compile errors are better than linker errors. We could turn such calls into aborts as well if that's preferred.
Suggest `RUST_MIN_STACK` workaround on overflow
For some Rust crates, like p384, we can't do a whole lot about it even if the stack overflow is reported like in rust-lang/rust#122357 because the problem may be inside LLVM or another codegen backend. We can, however, suggest people set a new `RUST_MIN_STACK` value while handling the SIGSEGV, as that stack-setting will carry forward into the dylib.
As a bonus, this also leads to cleaning up the stack-setting code a bit.
coverage: Clean up marker statements that aren't needed later
Some of the marker statements used by coverage are added during MIR building for use by the InstrumentCoverage pass (during analysis), and are not needed afterwards.
```@rustbot``` label +A-code-coverage
interpret/allocation: fix aliasing issue in interpreter and refactor getters a bit
That new raw getter will be needed to let Miri pass pointers to natively executed FFI code ("extern-so" mode).
While doing that I realized our get_bytes_mut are named less scary than get_bytes_unchecked so I rectified that. Also I realized `mem_copy_repeatedly` would break if we called it for multiple overlapping copies so I made sure this does not happen.
And I realized that we are actually [violating Stacked Borrows in the interpreter](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-opsem/topic/I.20think.20Miri.20violates.20Stacked.20Borrows.20.F0.9F.99.88).^^ That was introduced in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/87777.
r? ```@oli-obk```
Gracefully handle `AnonConst` in `diagnostic_hir_wf_check()`
Instead of running the WF check on the `AnonConst` itself we run it on the `ty` of the generic param of which the `AnonConst` is the default value.
Fixes#122199
Experimental feature postfix match
This has a basic experimental implementation for the RFC postfix match (rust-lang/rfcs#3295, #121618). [Liaison is](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/213817-t-lang/topic/Postfix.20Match.20Liaison/near/423301844) ```@scottmcm``` with the lang team's [experimental feature gate process](https://github.com/rust-lang/lang-team/blob/master/src/how_to/experiment.md).
This feature has had an RFC for a while, and there has been discussion on it for a while. It would probably be valuable to see it out in the field rather than continue discussing it. This feature also allows to see how popular postfix expressions like this are for the postfix macros RFC, as those will take more time to implement.
It is entirely implemented in the parser, so it should be relatively easy to remove if needed.
This PR is split in to 5 commits to ease review.
1. The implementation of the feature & gating.
2. Add a MatchKind field, fix uses, fix pretty.
3. Basic rustfmt impl, as rustfmt crashes upon seeing this syntax without a fix.
4. Add new MatchSource to HIR for Clippy & other HIR consumers
Some of the marker statements used by coverage are added during MIR building
for use by the InstrumentCoverage pass (during analysis), and are not needed
afterwards.
CFI: Skip non-passed arguments
Rust will occasionally rely on fn((), X) -> Y being compatible with fn(X) -> Y, since () is a non-passed argument. Relax CFI by choosing not to encode non-passed arguments.
This PR was split off from #121962 as part of fixing the larger vtable compatibility issues.
r? `@workingjubilee`
This makes it easier to read the trait definition for newcomers:
Sorted from least “complex” to most “complex” followed by trivial “plumbing”
and grouped by area.
* Move `allow_infer` above all `*_infer` methods
* It's the least complex method of those
* Allows the `*_infer` to be placed right next to each other
* Move `probe_ty_param_bounds` further down right next to `lower_assoc_ty` and `probe_adt`
* It's more complex than the `infer` methods, it should come “later”
* Now all required lowering functions are grouped together
* Move the “plumbing” function `set_tainted_by_errors` further down
below any actual lowering methods.
* Provided method should come last
Most of the tracing calls didn't fully leverage the power of `tracing`.
For example, several of them used to hard-code method names / tracing spans
as well as variable names. Use `#[instrument]` and `?var` / `%var` (etc.) instead.
In my opinion, this is the proper way to migrate them from the old
AstConv nomenclature to the new HIR ty lowering one.
Several (doc) comments were super outdated or didn't provide enough context.
Some doc comments shoved everything in a single paragraph without respecting
the fact that the first paragraph should be a single sentence because rustdoc
treats these as item descriptions / synopses on module pages.
Remove SpecOptionPartialEq
With the recent LLVM bump, the specialization for Option::partial_eq on types with niches is no longer necessary. I kept the manual implementation as it still gives us better codegen than the derive (will look at this seperately).
Also implemented PartialOrd/Ord by hand as it _somewhat_ improves codegen for #49892: https://godbolt.org/z/vx5Y6oW4Y