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2025-03-26Rollup merge of #138898 - fmease:decrustify-parser-post-ty-ascr, ↵Stuart Cook-10/+2
r=compiler-errors Mostly parser: Eliminate code that's been dead / semi-dead since the removal of type ascription syntax **Disclaimer**: This PR is intended to mostly clean up code as opposed to bringing about behavioral changes. Therefore it doesn't aim to address any of the 'FIXME: remove after a month [dated: 2023-05-02]: "type ascription syntax has been removed, see issue [#]101728"'. --- By commit: 1. Removes truly dead code: * Since 1.71 (#109128) `let _ = { f: x };` is a syntax error as opposed to a semantic error which allows the parse-time diagnostic (suggestion) "*struct literal body without path // you might have forgotten […]*" to kick in. * The analysis-time diagnostic (suggestion) from <=1.70 "*cannot find value \`f\` in this scope // you might have forgotten […]*" is therefore no longer reachable. 2. Updates `is_certainly_not_a_block` to be in line with the current grammar: * The seq. `{ ident:` is definitely not the start of a block. Before the removal of ty ascr, `{ ident: ty_start` would begin a block expr. * This shouldn't make more code compile IINM, it should *ultimately* only affect diagnostics. * For example, `if T { f: () } {}` will now be interpreted as an `if` with struct lit `T { f: () }` as its *condition* (which is banned in the parser anyway) as opposed to just `T` (with the *consequent* being `f : ()` which is also invalid (since 1.71)). The diagnostics are almost the same because we have two separate parse recovery procedures + diagnostics: `StructLiteralNeedingParens` (*invalid struct lit*) before and `StructLiteralNotAllowedHere` (*struct lits aren't allowed here*) now, as you can see from the diff. * (As an aside, even before this PR, fn `maybe_suggest_struct_literal` should've just used the much older & clearer `StructLiteralNotAllowedHere`) * NB: This does sadly regress the compiler output for `tests/ui/parser/type-ascription-in-pattern.rs` but that can be fixed in follow-up PRs. It's not super important IMO and a natural consequence. 3. Removes code that's become dead due to the prior commit. * Basically reverts #106620 + #112475 (without regressing rustc's output!). * Now the older & more robust parse recovery procedure (cc `StructLiteralNotAllowedHere`) takes care of the cases the removed code used to handle. * This automatically fixes the suggestions for \[[playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2024&gist=7e2030163b11ee96d17adc3325b01780)\]: * `if Ty::<i32> { f: K }.m() {}`: `if Ty::<i32> { SomeStruct { f: K } }.m() {}` (broken) → ` if (Ty::<i32> { f: K }).m() {}` * `if <T as Trait>::Out { f: K::<> }.m() {}`: `if <T as Trait>(::Out { f: K::<> }).m() {}` (broken) → `if (<T as Trait>::Out { f: K::<> }).m() {}` 4. Merge and simplify UI tests pertaining to this issue, so it's easier to add more regression tests like for the two cases mentioned above. 5. Merge UI tests and add the two regression tests. Best reviewed commit by commit (on request I'll partially squash after approval).
2025-03-25Rollup merge of #138911 - compiler-errors:define-opaque, r=oli-obkJacob Pratt-23/+86
Allow defining opaques in statics and consts r? oli-obk Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138902
2025-03-25Rollup merge of #138929 - oli-obk:assoc-ctxt-of-trait, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-3/+10
Visitors track whether an assoc item is in a trait impl or an inherent impl `AssocCtxt::Impl` now contains an `of_trait` field. This allows ast lowering and nameres to not have to track whether we're in a trait impl or an inherent impl.
2025-03-25Allow defining opaques in statics and constsMichael Goulet-23/+86
2025-03-25Track whether an assoc item is in a trait impl or an inherent implOli Scherer-3/+10
2025-03-24Remove fields that are dead since the removal of type ascription syntaxLeón Orell Valerian Liehr-10/+2
Since `{ ident: ident }` is a parse error, these fields are dead.
2025-03-24Remove `is_any_keyword` methods.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+0
They're dodgy, covering all the keywords, including weak ones, and edition-specific ones without considering the edition. They have a single use in rustfmt. This commit changes that use to `is_reserved_ident`, which is a much more widely used alternative and is good enough, judging by the lack of effect on the test suite.
2025-03-21Rollup merge of #138754 - oli-obk:push-vtqtnwluyxop, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-1/+22
Handle spans of `~const`, `const` and `async` trait bounds in macro expansion r? `@compiler-errors` `visit_span` is actually only used in one place (the `transcribe::Marker`), and all of this syntax is unstable, so while it would still be nice to write a test for it, I wager there's lots more interesting things in `transcribe::Marker` to write tests for. And the worst is some diagnostics being weird or incremental being not as incremental as it could be
2025-03-20Handle spans of `~const`, `const` and `async` trait bounds in macro expansionOli Scherer-1/+22
2025-03-18Refactor YieldKind so postfix yield must have an expressionEric Holk-11/+47
2025-03-18Revert "Rollup merge of #136355 - ↵Ralf Jung-1/+1
GuillaumeGomez:proc-macro_add_value_retrieval_methods, r=Amanieu" This reverts commit 08dfbf49e30d917c89e49eb14cb3f1e8b8a1c9ef, reversing changes made to 10bcdad7df0de3cfb95c7bdb7b16908e73cafc09.
2025-03-17Rollup merge of #136355 - ↵Jacob Pratt-1/+1
GuillaumeGomez:proc-macro_add_value_retrieval_methods, r=Amanieu Add `*_value` methods to proc_macro lib This is the implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/459. It allows to get the actual value (unescaped) of the different string literals. Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/136652. r? libs-api
2025-03-14Preserve yield position during pretty printingEric Holk-5/+14
2025-03-12Auto merge of #138414 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-9ablqdb, r=matthiaskrgrbors-1/+0
Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - #137314 (change definitely unproductive cycles to error) - #137701 (Convert `ShardedHashMap` to use `hashbrown::HashTable`) - #138269 (uefi: fs: Implement FileType, FilePermissions and FileAttr) - #138331 (Use `RUSTC_LINT_FLAGS` more) - #138345 (Some autodiff cleanups) - #138387 (intrinsics: remove unnecessary leading underscore from argument names) - #138390 (fix incorrect tracing log) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-12Rollup merge of #138331 - nnethercote:use-RUSTC_LINT_FLAGS-more, ↵Matthias Krüger-1/+0
r=onur-ozkan,jieyouxu Use `RUSTC_LINT_FLAGS` more An alternative to the failed #138084. Fixes #138106. r? ````@jieyouxu````
2025-03-12Auto merge of #138083 - nnethercote:rm-NtItem-NtStmt, r=petrochenkovbors-31/+3
Remove `NtItem` and `NtStmt` Another piece of #124141. r? `@petrochenkov`
2025-03-12Introduce `sym::dummy` and `Ident::dummy`.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+1
The idea is to identify cases of symbols/identifiers that are not expected to be used. There isn't a perfectly sharp line between "dummy" and "not dummy", but I think it's useful nonetheless.
2025-03-11Auto merge of #128440 - oli-obk:defines, r=lcnrbors-4/+27
Add `#[define_opaques]` attribute and require it for all type-alias-impl-trait sites that register a hidden type Instead of relying on the signature of items to decide whether they are constraining an opaque type, the opaque types that the item constrains must be explicitly listed. A previous version of this PR used an actual attribute, but had to keep the resolved `DefId`s in a side table. Now we just lower to fields in the AST that have no surface syntax, instead a builtin attribute macro fills in those fields where applicable. Note that for convenience referencing opaque types in associated types from associated methods on the same impl will not require an attribute. If that causes problems `#[defines()]` can be used to overwrite the default of searching for opaques in the signature. One wart of this design is that closures and static items do not have generics. So since I stored the opaques in the generics of functions, consts and methods, I would need to add a custom field to closures and statics to track this information. During a T-types discussion we decided to just not do this for now. fixes #131298
2025-03-11Implement `#[define_opaque]` attribute for functions.Oli Scherer-4/+27
2025-03-11Auto merge of #136932 - m-ou-se:fmt-width-precision-u16, r=scottmcmbors-1/+1
Reduce formatting `width` and `precision` to 16 bits This is part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99012 This is reduces the `width` and `precision` fields in format strings to 16 bits. They are currently full `usize`s, but it's a bit nonsensical that we need to support the case where someone wants to pad their value to eighteen quintillion spaces and/or have eighteen quintillion digits of precision. By reducing these fields to 16 bit, we can reduce `FormattingOptions` to 64 bits (see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136974) and improve the in memory representation of `format_args!()`. (See additional context below.) This also fixes a bug where the width or precision is silently truncated when cross-compiling to a target with a smaller `usize`. By reducing the width and precision fields to the minimum guaranteed size of `usize`, 16 bits, this bug is eliminated. This is a breaking change, but affects almost no existing code. --- Details of this change: There are three ways to set a width or precision today: 1. Directly a formatting string, e.g. `println!("{a:1234}")` 2. Indirectly in a formatting string, e.g. `println!("{a:width$}", width=1234)` 3. Through the unstable `FormattingOptions::width` method. This PR: - Adds a compiler error for 1. (`println!("{a:9999999}")` no longer compiles and gives a clear error.) - Adds a runtime check for 2. (`println!("{a:width$}, width=9999999)` will panic.) - Changes the signatures of the (unstable) `FormattingOptions::[get_]width` methods to use a `u16` instead. --- Additional context for improving `FormattingOptions` and `fmt::Arguments`: All the formatting flags and options are currently: - The `+` flag (1 bit) - The `-` flag (1 bit) - The `#` flag (1 bit) - The `0` flag (1 bit) - The `x?` flag (1 bit) - The `X?` flag (1 bit) - The alignment (2 bits) - The fill character (21 bits) - Whether a width is specified (1 bit) - Whether a precision is specified (1 bit) - If used, the width (a full usize) - If used, the precision (a full usize) Everything except the last two can simply fit in a `u32` (those add up to 31 bits in total). If we can accept a max width and precision of u16::MAX, we can make a `FormattingOptions` that is exactly 64 bits in size; the same size as a thin reference on most platforms. If, additionally, we also limit the number of formatting arguments, we can also reduce the size of `fmt::Arguments` (that is, of a `format_args!()` expression).
2025-03-11Remove `#![warn(unreachable_pub)]` from all `compiler/` crates.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+0
It's no longer necessary now that `-Wunreachable_pub` is being passed.
2025-03-10Limit formatting width and precision to 16 bits.Mara Bos-1/+1
2025-03-10Revert "Use workspace lints for crates in `compiler/` #138084"许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)-0/+1
Revert <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/138084> to buy time to consider options that avoids breaking downstream usages of cargo on distributed `rustc-src` artifacts, where such cargo invocations fail due to inability to inherit `lints` from workspace root manifest's `workspace.lints` (this is only valid for the source rust-lang/rust workspace, but not really the distributed `rustc-src` artifacts). This breakage was reported in <https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138304>. This reverts commit 48caf81484b50dca5a5cebb614899a3df81ca898, reversing changes made to c6662879b27f5161e95f39395e3c9513a7b97028.
2025-03-09Rollup merge of #138084 - nnethercote:workspace-lints, r=jieyouxuMatthias Krüger-1/+0
Use workspace lints for crates in `compiler/` This is nicer and hopefully less error prone than specifying lints via bootstrap. r? ``@jieyouxu``
2025-03-08Remove `#![warn(unreachable_pub)]` from all `compiler/` crates.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+0
(Except for `rustc_codegen_cranelift`.) It's no longer necessary now that `unreachable_pub` is in the workspace lints.
2025-03-07Rollup merge of #134797 - spastorino:ergonomic-ref-counting-1, r=nikomatsakisMatthias Krüger-1/+23
Ergonomic ref counting This is an experimental first version of ergonomic ref counting. This first version implements most of the RFC but doesn't implement any of the optimizations. This was left for following iterations. RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3680 Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132290 Project goal: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-project-goals/issues/107 r? ```@nikomatsakis```
2025-03-07Increase recursion_limit in numerous crates.Nicholas Nethercote-0/+1
This is temporarily needed for `x doc compiler` to work. They can be removed once the `Nonterminal` is removed (#124141).
2025-03-07Remove `NtItem` and `NtStmt`.Nicholas Nethercote-31/+2
This involves replacing `nt_pretty_printing_compatibility_hack` with `stream_pretty_printing_compatibility_hack`. The handling of statements in `transcribe` is slightly different to other nonterminal kinds, due to the lack of `from_ast` implementation for empty statements. Notable test changes: - `tests/ui/proc-macro/expand-to-derive.rs`: the diff looks large but the only difference is the insertion of a single invisible-delimited group around a metavar.
2025-03-06Add some code commentsSantiago Pastorino-1/+5
2025-03-06Use closure parse codeSantiago Pastorino-0/+8
2025-03-06Implement .use keyword as an alias of cloneSantiago Pastorino-0/+10
2025-03-05Implement `&pin const self` and `&pin mut self` sugarsFrank King-3/+18
2025-03-04Auto merge of #135186 - camelid:const-path-multi, r=BoxyUwUbors-15/+33
mgca: Lower all const paths as `ConstArgKind::Path` When `#![feature(min_generic_const_args)]` is enabled, we now lower all const paths in generic arg position to `hir::ConstArgKind::Path`. We then lower assoc const paths to `ty::ConstKind::Unevaluated` since we can no longer use the anon const expression lowering machinery. In the process of implementing this, I factored out `hir_ty_lowering` code that is now shared between lowering assoc types and assoc consts. This PR also introduces a `#[type_const]` attribute for trait assoc consts that are allowed as const args. However, we still need to implement code to check that assoc const definitions satisfy `#[type_const]` if present (basically is it a const path or a monomorphic anon const). r? `@BoxyUwU`
2025-03-04mgca: Lower all const paths as `ConstArgKind::Path`Noah Lev-15/+33
When `#![feature(min_generic_const_args)]` is enabled, we now lower all const paths in generic arg position to `hir::ConstArgKind::Path`. We then lower assoc const paths to `ty::ConstKind::Unevaluated` since we can no longer use the anon const expression lowering machinery. In the process of implementing this, I factored out `hir_ty_lowering` code that is now shared between lowering assoc types and assoc consts. This PR also introduces a `#[type_const]` attribute for trait assoc consts that are allowed as const args. However, we still need to implement code to check that assoc const definitions satisfy `#[type_const]` if present (basically is it a const path or a monomorphic anon const).
2025-03-04Auto merge of #137959 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-62vjvwr, r=matthiaskrgrbors-148/+192
Rollup of 12 pull requests Successful merges: - #135767 (Future incompatibility warning `unsupported_fn_ptr_calling_conventions`: Also warn in dependencies) - #137852 (Remove layouting dead code for non-array SIMD types.) - #137863 (Fix pretty printing of unsafe binders) - #137882 (do not build additional stage on compiler paths) - #137894 (Revert "store ScalarPair via memset when one side is undef and the other side can be memset") - #137902 (Make `ast::TokenKind` more like `lexer::TokenKind`) - #137921 (Subtree update of `rust-analyzer`) - #137922 (A few cleanups after the removal of `cfg(not(parallel))`) - #137939 (fix order on shl impl) - #137946 (Fix docker run-local docs) - #137955 (Always allow rustdoc-json tests to contain long lines) - #137958 (triagebot.toml: Don't label `test/rustdoc-json` as A-rustdoc-search) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-03-03Rename `ast::TokenKind::Not` as `ast::TokenKind::Bang`.Nicholas Nethercote-8/+8
For consistency with `rustc_lexer::TokenKind::Bang`, and because other `ast::TokenKind` variants generally have syntactic names instead of semantic names (e.g. `Star` and `DotDot` instead of `Mul` and `Range`).
2025-03-03Replace `ast::TokenKind::BinOp{,Eq}` and remove `BinOpToken`.Nicholas Nethercote-144/+188
`BinOpToken` is badly named, because it only covers the assignable binary ops and excludes comparisons and `&&`/`||`. Its use in `ast::TokenKind` does allow a small amount of code sharing, but it's a clumsy factoring. This commit removes `ast::TokenKind::BinOp{,Eq}`, replacing each one with 10 individual variants. This makes `ast::TokenKind` more similar to `rustc_lexer::TokenKind`, which has individual variants for all operators. Although the number of lines of code increases, the number of chars decreases due to the frequent use of shorter names like `token::Plus` instead of `token::BinOp(BinOpToken::Plus)`.
2025-03-01Implment `#[cfg]` and `#[cfg_attr]` in `where` clausesFrank King-8/+30
2025-02-28Auto merge of #137517 - nnethercote:rm-NtPat-NtItem-NtStmt, r=petrochenkovbors-61/+24
Remove `NtPat`, `NtMeta`, and `NtPath` Another part of #124141. r? `@petrochenkov`
2025-02-28Remove `NtPath`.Nicholas Nethercote-33/+9
2025-02-28Remove `NtMeta`.Nicholas Nethercote-20/+16
Note: there was an existing code path involving `Interpolated` in `MetaItem::from_tokens` that was dead. This commit transfers that to the new form, but puts an `unreachable!` call inside it.
2025-02-28Remove `NtPat`.Nicholas Nethercote-9/+0
The one notable test change is `tests/ui/macros/trace_faulty_macros.rs`. This commit removes the complicated `Interpolated` handling in `expected_expression_found` that results in a longer error message. But I think the new, shorter message is actually an improvement. The original complaint was in #71039, when the error message started with "error: expected expression, found `1 + 1`". That was confusing because `1 + 1` is an expression. Other than that, the reporter said "the whole error message is not too bad if you ignore the first line". Subsequently, extra complexity and wording was added to the error message. But I don't think the extra wording actually helps all that much. In particular, it still says of the `1+1` that "this is expected to be expression". This repeats the problem from the original complaint! This commit removes the extra complexity, reverting to a simpler error message. This is primarily because the traversal is a pain without `Interpolated` tokens. Nonetheless, I think the error message is *improved*. It now starts with "expected expression, found `pat` metavariable", which is much clearer and the real problem. It also doesn't say anything specific about `1+1`, which is good, because the `1+1` isn't really relevant to the error -- it's the `$e:pat` that's important.
2025-02-27Rename `AssocOp::As` as `AssocOp::Cast`.Nicholas Nethercote-7/+7
To match `ExprKind::Cast`, and because a semantic name makes more sense here than a syntactic name.
2025-02-27Replace `AssocOp::DotDot{,Eq}` with `AssocOp::Range`.Nicholas Nethercote-12/+18
It makes `AssocOp` more similar to `ExprKind` and makes things a little simpler. And the semantic names make more sense here than the syntactic names.
2025-02-27Introduce `AssocOp::Binary`.Nicholas Nethercote-143/+74
It mirrors `ExprKind::Binary`, and contains a `BinOpKind`. This makes `AssocOp` more like `ExprKind`. Note that the variants removed from `AssocOp` are all named differently to `BinOpToken`, e.g. `Multiply` instead of `Mul`, so that's an inconsistency removed. The commit adds `precedence` and `fixity` methods to `BinOpKind`, and calls them from the corresponding methods in `AssocOp`. This avoids the need to create an `AssocOp` from a `BinOpKind` in a bunch of places, and `AssocOp::from_ast_binop` is removed. `AssocOp::to_ast_binop` is also no longer needed. Overall things are shorter and nicer.
2025-02-27In `AssocOp::AssignOp`, use `BinOpKind` instead of `BinOpToken`Nicholas Nethercote-8/+17
`AssocOp::AssignOp` contains a `BinOpToken`. `ExprKind::AssignOp` contains a `BinOpKind`. Given that `AssocOp` is basically a cut-down version of `ExprKind`, it makes sense to make `AssocOp` more like `ExprKind`. Especially given that `AssocOp` and `BinOpKind` use semantic operation names (e.g. `Mul`, `Div`), but `BinOpToken` uses syntactic names (e.g. `Star`, `Slash`). This results in more concise code, and removes the need for various conversions. (Note that the removed functions `hirbinop2assignop` and `astbinop2assignop` are semantically identical, because `hir::BinOp` is just a synonum for `ast::BinOp`!) The only downside to this is that it allows the possibility of some nonsensical combinations, such as `AssocOp::AssignOp(BinOpKind::Lt)`. But `ExprKind::AssignOp` already has that problem. The problem can be fixed for both types in the future with some effort, by introducing an `AssignOpKind` type.
2025-02-22Auto merge of #137420 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-rr0q37f, r=matthiaskrgrbors-1/+1
Rollup of 9 pull requests Successful merges: - #136910 (Implement feature `isolate_most_least_significant_one` for integer types) - #137183 (Prune dead regionck code) - #137333 (Use `edition = "2024"` in the compiler (redux)) - #137356 (Ferris 🦀 Identifier naming conventions) - #137362 (Add build step log for `run-make-support`) - #137377 (Always allow reusing cratenum in CrateLoader::load) - #137388 (Fix(lib/fs/tests): Disable rename POSIX semantics FS tests under Windows 7) - #137410 (Use StableHasher + Hash64 for dep_tracking_hash) - #137413 (jubilee cleared out the review queue) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-22Rollup merge of #137333 - compiler-errors:edition-2024-fresh, r=NadrierilMatthias Krüger-1/+1
Use `edition = "2024"` in the compiler (redux) Most of this is binding mode changes, which I fixed by running `x.py fix`. Also adds some miscellaneous `unsafe` blocks for new unsafe standard library functions (the setenv ones), and a missing `unsafe extern` block in some enzyme codegen code, and fixes some precise capturing lifetime changes (but only when they led to errors). cc ``@ehuss`` ``@traviscross``
2025-02-22Auto merge of #136428 - EnzymeAD:enable-autodiff, r=oli-obkbors-1/+0
test building enzyme in CI 1) This PR fixes a significant compile-time regression, by only running the expensive autodiff pipeline, if the users pass the newly introduced Enable value to the `-Zautodiff=` flag. It updates the test(s) accordingly. It gives a nice error if users forget that. 2) It fixes macos support by explicitly linking against the Enzyme build folder. This doesn't cover CI macos yet. 3) It fixes the issue that setting ENZYME_RUNPASS was ignored by enzyme and in fact did not schedule enzyme's opt pass. 4) It also re-enables support for various other values for the autodiff flag, which were ignored since the refactor. 5) I merged some improvements to Enzyme core, which means we do not longer depend on LLVM being build with the Plugin Interface enabled. 6) Unrelated to other fixes, this changes `rustc_autodiff` to `EncodeCrossCrate::Yes`. It is not enough on it's own to enable usage of Enzyme in libraries, but it is for sure a piece of the fixes needed to get this to work. try-job: x86_64-gnu r? `@oli-obk` Tracking: - https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/124509
2025-02-21clean up autodiff code/commentsManuel Drehwald-1/+0