about summary refs log tree commit diff
AgeCommit message (Collapse)AuthorLines
2020-05-21Use `HirId` as key for `ResolverOutputs::trait_map` instead of `NodeId`marmeladema-7/+23
2020-05-21Auto merge of #72422 - RalfJung:rollup-u81z4mw, r=RalfJungbors-12/+318
Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - #71854 (Make `std::char` functions and constants associated to `char`.) - #72111 (rustc-book: Document `-Z strip=val` option) - #72272 (Fix going back in history to a search result page on firefox) - #72296 (Suggest installing VS Build Tools in more situations) - #72365 (Remove unused `StableHashingContext::node_to_hir_id` method) - #72371 (FIX - Char documentation for unexperienced users) - #72397 (llvm: Expose tiny code model to users) Failed merges: r? @ghost
2020-05-21Rollup merge of #72397 - petrochenkov:tiny, r=AmanieuRalf Jung-3/+3
llvm: Expose tiny code model to users This model is relevant to embedded AArch64 targets and was added to LLVM relatively recently (https://reviews.llvm.org/D49673, mid 2018), so rustc frontend didn't provide access to it with `-C code-model`. The gcc analogue is [`-mcmodel=tiny`](https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/AArch64-Options.html). (This is one of the options that are passed directly to LLVM without being interpreted by rustc.) Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72248.
2020-05-21Rollup merge of #72371 - Elrendio:char_documentation, r=steveklabnikRalf Jung-2/+4
FIX - Char documentation for unexperienced users This is my first PR on rust and even if I've read [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#pull-requests) I'm ensure everything is perfect. Sorry if I didn't follow the exact procedure. **What it does:** - Add an example in the char documentation **Explanation** Unexperienced users might not know that punctuation is `Case_Ignorable` and not `Uppercase` and `Lowercase` which mean that when checking if a string is uppercase one might be tempted to write: ```rust my_string.chars().all(char::is_uppercase) ``` However this will return false for `"HELLO WORLD"` which is not intuitive. Since the function `is_case_ignorable` doesn't exists I believe the correct way to check is: ```rust !my_string.chars().any(char::is_lowercase) ``` The aim of this example is to prevent unexperienced users to make an error which punctuation chars.
2020-05-21Rollup merge of #72365 - marmeladema:remove-node_to_hir_id, r=ecstatic-morseRalf Jung-5/+0
Remove unused `StableHashingContext::node_to_hir_id` method cc #50928
2020-05-21Rollup merge of #72296 - ChrisDenton:msvc-link-check, r=petrochenkovRalf Jung-0/+49
Suggest installing VS Build Tools in more situations When MSVC's `link.exe` wasn't found but another `link.exe` was, the error message given can be [impenetrable](https://pastebin.com/MRMCr7HM) to many users. The usual suspect is GNU's `link` tool. In this case, inform the user that they may need to install VS build tools. This only applies when Microsoft's link tool is expected.
2020-05-21Rollup merge of #72272 - ↵Ralf Jung-0/+6
GuillaumeGomez:fix-back-on-page-with-search-behaviour, r=kinnison Fix going back in history to a search result page on firefox This bug was actually firefox not re-running JS script when you go back in history. To trigger it on the current docs: * Make a search * Pick an element (which isn't on the same page as the current element!) * Go back in history Instead of having the search results, you'll see the normal doc page. You can find a small explanation about it [here](http://web.archive.org/web/20100428053932/http://www.firefoxanswer.com/firefox/672-firefoxanswer.html). r? @kinnison cc @ollie27
2020-05-21Rollup merge of #72111 - petrochenkov:docstrip, r=ehussRalf Jung-0/+17
rustc-book: Document `-Z strip=val` option cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72110
2020-05-21Rollup merge of #71854 - eduardosm:assoc-char-funcs-and-consts, r=AmanieuRalf Jung-2/+239
Make `std::char` functions and constants associated to `char`. First step to fix https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/71763.
2020-05-21Auto merge of #72205 - ecstatic-morse:nrvo, r=oli-obkbors-48/+350
Dumb NRVO This is a very simple version of an NRVO pass, which scans backwards from the `return` terminator to see if there is an an assignment like `_0 = _1`. If a basic block with two or more predecessors is encountered during this scan without first seeing an assignment to the return place, we bail out. This avoids running a full "reaching definitions" dataflow analysis. I wanted to see how much `rustc` would benefit from even a very limited version of this optimization. We should be able to use this as a point of comparison for more advanced versions that are based on live ranges. r? @ghost
2020-05-20Bail out if new return place has different type than oldDylan MacKenzie-1/+12
2020-05-21Auto merge of #70705 - lcnr:generic_discriminant, r=nikomatsakisbors-139/+450
Use `T`'s discriminant type in `mem::Discriminant<T>` instead of `u64`. fixes #70509 Adds the lang-item `discriminant_kind`. Updates the function signature of `intrinsics::discriminant_value`. Adds the *probably permanently unstable* trait `DiscriminantKind`. `mem::Discriminant` should now be smaller in some cases. r? @ghost
2020-05-20Auto merge of #67759 - nikic:llvm-10, r=Mark-Simulacrumbors-1/+5
Update to LLVM 10 LLVM 10 is going to be branched soon, so it's a good time to start finding all those tasty new miscompiles and performance regressions ;) Status: * Preparation split off into #67900. * Optimization regressions: * [x] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44419 => https://reviews.llvm.org/D72048 has landed. * [x] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44423 => https://reviews.llvm.org/D72060 has landed. * [x] https://reviews.llvm.org/D72169 submitted. * [ ] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44461 reported. https://reviews.llvm.org/D72420 submitted, but unlikely eligible for LLVM 10. * Compile-time regressions: * [x] GlobalOpt regression identified. ~~fhahn proposed https://reviews.llvm.org/D72214.~~ fhahn has [reverted](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/192cce10f67e4f22be6d9b8c0975f78ad246d1bd) the patch. * [ ] Even with the revert, there are [large regressions](https://perf.rust-lang.org/compare.html?start=760ce94c69ca510d44087291c311296f6d9ccdf5&end=4e84f97d76e694bb9f59039f5bdeb6d8bca46d14). * Assertion failures / infinite loops: * [x] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44600 => https://reviews.llvm.org/D73135, https://reviews.llvm.org/D73854 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D73908 have landed and been cherry-picked to the 10.x branch. * [x] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44835 => https://reviews.llvm.org/D74278 has landed and been cherry-picked.
2020-05-20llvm: Expose tiny code model to usersVadim Petrochenkov-3/+3
2020-05-20Auto merge of #72378 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-m87bp2d, r=Dylan-DPCbors-110/+415
Rollup of 6 pull requests Successful merges: - #71863 (Suggest fixes and add error recovery for `use foo::self`) - #72139 (Make `fold` standalone.) - #72275 (Continue lowering for unsupported async generator instead of returning an error.) - #72361 (split_inclusive: add tracking issue number (72360)) - #72364 (Remove unused dependencies) - #72366 (Adjust the zero check in `RawVec::grow`.) Failed merges: r? @ghost
2020-05-20Set CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD when compiling LLDNikita Popov-0/+4
2020-05-20Update LLVM submoduleNikita Popov-1/+1
2020-05-20Auto merge of #72384 - mati865:ci-fix, r=pietroalbinibors-3/+11
Workaround MSYS2/chocolatey issue again
2020-05-20Workaround MSYS2/chocolatey issue againMateusz Mikuła-3/+11
2020-05-20Suggest installing VS Build Tools in more situationsChris Denton-0/+49
When MSVC's `link.exe` wasn't found but another `link.exe` was, the error message given can be impenetrable to many users. The usual suspect is GNU's `link` tool. In this case, inform the user that they may need to install VS build tools. This only applies when Microsoft's link tool is expected. Not `lld-link` or other MSVC compatible linkers.
2020-05-20Rollup merge of #72366 - nnethercote:tiny-vecs-are-dumb-followup, r=AmanieuDylan DPC-4/+3
Adjust the zero check in `RawVec::grow`. This was supposed to land as part of #72227. (I wish `git push` would abort when you have uncommited changes.) r? @Amanieu
2020-05-20Rollup merge of #72364 - jsgf:remove-unused-deps, r=Mark-SimulacrumDylan DPC-8/+0
Remove unused dependencies Remove some unused dependencies found while while working on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/72342.
2020-05-20Rollup merge of #72361 - golddranks:split_inclusive_add_tracking_issue, ↵Dylan DPC-20/+20
r=shepmaster split_inclusive: add tracking issue number (72360) Adds tracking issue number ( https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/72360 ) to the unstable feature attributes.
2020-05-20Rollup merge of #72275 - marmeladema:fix-issue-71104-2, r=ecstatic-morseDylan DPC-11/+7
Continue lowering for unsupported async generator instead of returning an error. This way the hir is "valid" and we can remove one more call to `opt_node_id_to_hir_id` but an error is still emitted. This is another partial fix for #71104 r? @eddyb
2020-05-20Rollup merge of #72139 - nnethercote:standalone-fold, r=cuviperDylan DPC-44/+199
Make `fold` standalone. `fold` is currently implemented via `try_fold`, but implementing it directly results in slightly less LLVM IR being generated, speeding up compilation of some benchmarks. r? @cuviper
2020-05-20Rollup merge of #71863 - mibac138:self-import, r=estebankDylan DPC-23/+186
Suggest fixes and add error recovery for `use foo::self` Fixes #63741. I have implemented 2 suggestions on how to fix a `use foo::self` import, however I feel like showing them both might be too verbose. Additionally, I have also implemented error recovery as [menitoned](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/63741#issuecomment-602391091) by @comex. I believe r? @estebank deals with diagnostics.
2020-05-20FIX - Char documentation for unexperienced usersElrendio-2/+4
2020-05-20Auto merge of #71923 - csmoe:issue-70818, r=tmandrybors-108/+167
Check non-Send/Sync upvars captured by generator Closes #70818 r? @tmandry
2020-05-20Auto merge of #71769 - petrochenkov:crto, r=cuviperbors-152/+405
linker: More systematic handling of CRT objects Document which kinds of `crt0.o`-like objects we link and in which cases, discovering bugs in process. `src/librustc_target/spec/crt_objects.rs` is the place to start reading from. This PR also automatically contains half of the `-static-pie` support (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/70740), because that's one of the six cases that we need to consider when linking CRT objects. This is a breaking change for custom target specifications that specify CRT objects. Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/30868
2020-05-20Auto merge of #72339 - ehuss:update-cargo, r=ehussbors-6/+6
Update cargo 9 commits in cb06cb2696df2567ce06d1a39b1b40612a29f853..500b2bd01c958f5a33b6aa3f080bea015877b83c 2020-05-08 21:57:44 +0000 to 2020-05-18 17:12:54 +0000 - Handle LTO with an rlib/cdylib crate type (rust-lang/cargo#8254) - Gracefully handle errors during a build. (rust-lang/cargo#8247) - Update `im-rc` to 15.0.0 (rust-lang/cargo#8255) - Fix `cargo update` with unused patch. (rust-lang/cargo#8243) - Rephrased error message for disallowed sections in virtual workspace (rust-lang/cargo#8200) - Ignore broken console output in some situations. (rust-lang/cargo#8236) - Expand error message to explain that a string was found (rust-lang/cargo#8235) - Add context to some fs errors. (rust-lang/cargo#8232) - Move SipHasher to an isolated module. (rust-lang/cargo#8233)
2020-05-20Adjust the zero check in `RawVec::grow`.Nicholas Nethercote-4/+3
This was supposed to land as part of #72227. (I wish `git push` would abort when you have uncommited changes.)
2020-05-20Remove unused `StableHashingContext::node_to_hir_id` methodmarmeladema-5/+0
2020-05-19Remove unused dependenciesJeremy Fitzhardinge-8/+0
2020-05-19Alter wording for `use foo::self` helpmibac138-14/+14
2020-05-20split_inclusive: add tracking issue number (72360)Pyry Kontio-20/+20
2020-05-19Add error recovery for `use foo::self`mibac138-4/+89
2020-05-19Suggest fixes for `use foo::self`mibac138-19/+97
2020-05-19Auto merge of #69171 - Amanieu:new-asm, r=nagisa,nikomatsakisbors-278/+9284
Implement new asm! syntax from RFC 2850 This PR implements the new `asm!` syntax proposed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/2850. # Design A large part of this PR revolves around taking an `asm!` macro invocation and plumbing it through all of the compiler layers down to LLVM codegen. Throughout the various stages, an `InlineAsm` generally consists of 3 components: - The template string, which is stored as an array of `InlineAsmTemplatePiece`. Each piece represents either a literal or a placeholder for an operand (just like format strings). ```rust pub enum InlineAsmTemplatePiece { String(String), Placeholder { operand_idx: usize, modifier: Option<char>, span: Span }, } ``` - The list of operands to the `asm!` (`in`, `[late]out`, `in[late]out`, `sym`, `const`). These are represented differently at each stage of lowering, but follow a common pattern: - `in`, `out` and `inout` all have an associated register class (`reg`) or explicit register (`"eax"`). - `inout` has 2 forms: one with a single expression that is both read from and written to, and one with two separate expressions for the input and output parts. - `out` and `inout` have a `late` flag (`lateout` / `inlateout`) to indicate that the register allocator is allowed to reuse an input register for this output. - `out` and the split variant of `inout` allow `_` to be specified for an output, which means that the output is discarded. This is used to allocate scratch registers for assembly code. - `sym` is a bit special since it only accepts a path expression, which must point to a `static` or a `fn`. - The options set at the end of the `asm!` macro. The only one that is particularly of interest to rustc is `NORETURN` which makes `asm!` return `!` instead of `()`. ```rust bitflags::bitflags! { pub struct InlineAsmOptions: u8 { const PURE = 1 << 0; const NOMEM = 1 << 1; const READONLY = 1 << 2; const PRESERVES_FLAGS = 1 << 3; const NORETURN = 1 << 4; const NOSTACK = 1 << 5; } } ``` ## AST `InlineAsm` is represented as an expression in the AST: ```rust pub struct InlineAsm { pub template: Vec<InlineAsmTemplatePiece>, pub operands: Vec<(InlineAsmOperand, Span)>, pub options: InlineAsmOptions, } pub enum InlineAsmRegOrRegClass { Reg(Symbol), RegClass(Symbol), } pub enum InlineAsmOperand { In { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, expr: P<Expr>, }, Out { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, expr: Option<P<Expr>>, }, InOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, expr: P<Expr>, }, SplitInOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, in_expr: P<Expr>, out_expr: Option<P<Expr>>, }, Const { expr: P<Expr>, }, Sym { expr: P<Expr>, }, } ``` The `asm!` macro is implemented in librustc_builtin_macros and outputs an `InlineAsm` AST node. The template string is parsed using libfmt_macros, positional and named operands are resolved to explicit operand indicies. Since target information is not available to macro invocations, validation of the registers and register classes is deferred to AST lowering. ## HIR `InlineAsm` is represented as an expression in the HIR: ```rust pub struct InlineAsm<'hir> { pub template: &'hir [InlineAsmTemplatePiece], pub operands: &'hir [InlineAsmOperand<'hir>], pub options: InlineAsmOptions, } pub enum InlineAsmRegOrRegClass { Reg(InlineAsmReg), RegClass(InlineAsmRegClass), } pub enum InlineAsmOperand<'hir> { In { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, expr: Expr<'hir>, }, Out { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, expr: Option<Expr<'hir>>, }, InOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, expr: Expr<'hir>, }, SplitInOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, in_expr: Expr<'hir>, out_expr: Option<Expr<'hir>>, }, Const { expr: Expr<'hir>, }, Sym { expr: Expr<'hir>, }, } ``` AST lowering is where `InlineAsmRegOrRegClass` is converted from `Symbol`s to an actual register or register class. If any modifiers are specified for a template string placeholder, these are validated against the set allowed for that operand type. Finally, explicit registers for inputs and outputs are checked for conflicts (same register used for different operands). ## Type checking Each register class has a whitelist of types that it may be used with. After the types of all operands have been determined, the `intrinsicck` pass will check that these types are in the whitelist. It also checks that split `inout` operands have compatible types and that `const` operands are integers or floats. Suggestions are emitted where needed if a template modifier should be used for an operand based on the type that was passed into it. ## HAIR `InlineAsm` is represented as an expression in the HAIR: ```rust crate enum ExprKind<'tcx> { // [..] InlineAsm { template: &'tcx [InlineAsmTemplatePiece], operands: Vec<InlineAsmOperand<'tcx>>, options: InlineAsmOptions, }, } crate enum InlineAsmOperand<'tcx> { In { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, expr: ExprRef<'tcx>, }, Out { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, expr: Option<ExprRef<'tcx>>, }, InOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, expr: ExprRef<'tcx>, }, SplitInOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, in_expr: ExprRef<'tcx>, out_expr: Option<ExprRef<'tcx>>, }, Const { expr: ExprRef<'tcx>, }, SymFn { expr: ExprRef<'tcx>, }, SymStatic { expr: ExprRef<'tcx>, }, } ``` The only significant change compared to HIR is that `Sym` has been lowered to either a `SymFn` whose `expr` is a `Literal` ZST of the `fn`, or a `SymStatic` whose `expr` is a `StaticRef`. ## MIR `InlineAsm` is represented as a `Terminator` in the MIR: ```rust pub enum TerminatorKind<'tcx> { // [..] /// Block ends with an inline assembly block. This is a terminator since /// inline assembly is allowed to diverge. InlineAsm { /// The template for the inline assembly, with placeholders. template: &'tcx [InlineAsmTemplatePiece], /// The operands for the inline assembly, as `Operand`s or `Place`s. operands: Vec<InlineAsmOperand<'tcx>>, /// Miscellaneous options for the inline assembly. options: InlineAsmOptions, /// Destination block after the inline assembly returns, unless it is /// diverging (InlineAsmOptions::NORETURN). destination: Option<BasicBlock>, }, } pub enum InlineAsmOperand<'tcx> { In { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, value: Operand<'tcx>, }, Out { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, place: Option<Place<'tcx>>, }, InOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, in_value: Operand<'tcx>, out_place: Option<Place<'tcx>>, }, Const { value: Operand<'tcx>, }, SymFn { value: Box<Constant<'tcx>>, }, SymStatic { value: Box<Constant<'tcx>>, }, } ``` As part of HAIR lowering, `InOut` and `SplitInOut` operands are lowered to a split form with a separate `in_value` and `out_place`. Semantically, the `InlineAsm` terminator is similar to the `Call` terminator except that it has multiple output places where a `Call` only has a single return place output. The constant promotion pass is used to ensure that `const` operands are actually constants (using the same logic as `#[rustc_args_required_const]`). ## Codegen Operands are lowered one more time before being passed to LLVM codegen: ```rust pub enum InlineAsmOperandRef<'tcx, B: BackendTypes + ?Sized> { In { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, value: OperandRef<'tcx, B::Value>, }, Out { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, place: Option<PlaceRef<'tcx, B::Value>>, }, InOut { reg: InlineAsmRegOrRegClass, late: bool, in_value: OperandRef<'tcx, B::Value>, out_place: Option<PlaceRef<'tcx, B::Value>>, }, Const { string: String, }, SymFn { instance: Instance<'tcx>, }, SymStatic { def_id: DefId, }, } ``` The operands are lowered to LLVM operands and constraint codes as follow: - `out` and the output part of `inout` operands are added first, as required by LLVM. Late output operands have a `=` prefix added to their constraint code, non-late output operands have a `=&` prefix added to their constraint code. - `in` operands are added normally. - `inout` operands are tied to the matching output operand. - `sym` operands are passed as function pointers or pointers, using the `"s"` constraint. - `const` operands are formatted to a string and directly inserted in the template string. The template string is converted to LLVM form: - `$` characters are escaped as `$$`. - `const` operands are converted to strings and inserted directly. - Placeholders are formatted as `${X:M}` where `X` is the operand index and `M` is the modifier character. Modifiers are converted from the Rust form to the LLVM form. The various options are converted to clobber constraints or LLVM attributes, refer to the [RFC](https://github.com/Amanieu/rfcs/blob/inline-asm/text/0000-inline-asm.md#mapping-to-llvm-ir) for more details. Note that LLVM is sometimes rather picky about what types it accepts for certain constraint codes so we sometimes need to insert conversions to/from a supported type. See the target-specific ISelLowering.cpp files in LLVM for details. # Adding support for new architectures Adding inline assembly support to an architecture is mostly a matter of defining the registers and register classes for that architecture. All the definitions for register classes are located in `src/librustc_target/asm/`. Additionally you will need to implement lowering of these register classes to LLVM constraint codes in `src/librustc_codegen_llvm/asm.rs`.
2020-05-19Update dlmalloc dependency to 0.1.4Amanieu d'Antras-2/+2
2020-05-19Auto merge of #72227 - nnethercote:tiny-vecs-are-dumb, r=Amanieubors-5/+141
Tiny Vecs are dumb. Currently, if you repeatedly push to an empty vector, the capacity growth sequence is 0, 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, etc. This commit changes the relevant code (the "amortized" growth strategy) to skip 1 and 2, instead using 0, 4, 8, 16, etc. (You can still get a capacity of 1 or 2 using the "exact" growth strategy, e.g. via `reserve_exact()`.) This idea (along with the phrase "tiny Vecs are dumb") comes from the "doubling" growth strategy that was removed from `RawVec` in #72013. That strategy was barely ever used -- only when a `VecDeque` was grown, oddly enough -- which is why it was removed in #72013. (Fun fact: until just a few days ago, I thought the "doubling" strategy was used for repeated push case. In other words, this commit makes `Vec`s behave the way I always thought they behaved.) This change reduces the number of allocations done by rustc itself by 10% or more. It speeds up rustc, and will also speed up any other Rust program that uses `Vec`s a lot. In theory, the change could increase memory usage, but in practice it doesn't. It would be an unusual program where very small `Vec`s having a capacity of 4 rather than 1 or 2 would make a difference. You'd need a *lot* of very small `Vec`s, and/or some very small `Vec`s with very large elements. r? @Amanieu
2020-05-19Fix going back in history to a search result page on firefoxGuillaume Gomez-0/+6
2020-05-19Auto merge of #72346 - Dylan-DPC:rollup-vp418xs, r=Dylan-DPCbors-16/+154
Rollup of 5 pull requests Successful merges: - #71886 (Stabilize saturating_abs and saturating_neg) - #72066 (correctly handle uninferred consts) - #72068 (Ignore arguments when looking for `IndexMut` for subsequent `mut` obligation) - #72338 (Fix ICE in -Zsave-analysis) - #72344 (Assert doc wording) Failed merges: r? @ghost
2020-05-19Rollup merge of #72344 - kornelski:assertdoc, r=Mark-SimulacrumDylan DPC-1/+1
Assert doc wording The current wording implies unsafe code is dependent on assert: https://users.rust-lang.org/t/are-assert-statements-included-in-unsafe-blocks/42865
2020-05-19Rollup merge of #72338 - doctorn:trait-object-ice, r=ecstatic-morseDylan DPC-1/+27
Fix ICE in -Zsave-analysis Puts a short-circuit in to avoid an ICE in `-Zsave-analysis`. r? @ecstatic-morse Resolves #72267
2020-05-19Rollup merge of #72068 - estebank:mut-deref-hack, r=oli-obkDylan DPC-1/+32
Ignore arguments when looking for `IndexMut` for subsequent `mut` obligation Given code like `v[&field].boo();` where `field: String` and `.boo(&mut self)`, typeck will have decided that `v` is accessed using `Index`, but when `boo` adds a new `mut` obligation, `convert_place_op_to_mutable` is called. When this happens, for *some reason* the arguments' dereference adjustments are completely ignored causing an error saying that `IndexMut` is not satisfied: ``` error[E0596]: cannot borrow data in an index of `Indexable` as mutable --> src/main.rs:30:5 | 30 | v[&field].boo(); | ^^^^^^^^^ cannot borrow as mutable | = help: trait `IndexMut` is required to modify indexed content, but it is not implemented for `Indexable` ``` This is not true, but by changing `try_overloaded_place_op` to retry when given `Needs::MutPlace` without passing the argument types, the example successfully compiles. I believe there might be more appropriate ways to deal with this. Fix #72002.
2020-05-19Rollup merge of #72066 - lcnr:const-type-info-err, r=varkorDylan DPC-5/+90
correctly handle uninferred consts fixes the ICE mentioned in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/70507#issuecomment-615268893 I originally tried to generalize `need_type_info_err` to also work with consts which was not as much fun as I hoped :sweat_smile: It might be easier to have some duplication here and handle consts separately. r? @varkor
2020-05-19Rollup merge of #71886 - t-rapp:tr-saturating-funcs, r=dtolnayDylan DPC-8/+4
Stabilize saturating_abs and saturating_neg Stabilizes the following signed integer functions with saturation mechanics: * saturating_abs() * saturating_neg() Closes #59983
2020-05-19Assert doc wordingKornel-1/+1
2020-05-19add test for repr(128) enum derivesBastian Kauschke-0/+17
2020-05-19add tests for enum discriminantsBastian Kauschke-0/+169