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2025-01-01Rollup merge of #135000 - compiler-errors:opaque-captures-dupe, r=lqdMatthias Krüger-9/+11
Fix ICE when opaque captures a duplicated/invalid lifetime See description on test. Fixes #132766 Fixes #133693 Fixes #134780
2025-01-01Fix ICE when opaque captures a duplicated/invalid lifetimeMichael Goulet-9/+11
2024-12-31Convert some Into impls into From implsMichael Goulet-15/+15
2024-12-21Rollup merge of #133782 - dtolnay:closuresjumps, r=spastorino,traviscrossMatthias Krüger-4/+9
Precedence improvements: closures and jumps This PR fixes some cases where rustc's pretty printers would redundantly parenthesize expressions that didn't need it. <table> <tr><th>Before</th><th>After</th></tr> <tr><td><code>return (|x: i32| x)</code></td><td><code>return |x: i32| x</code></td></tr> <tr><td><code>(|| -> &mut () { std::process::abort() }).clone()</code></td><td><code>|| -> &mut () { std::process::abort() }.clone()</code></td></tr> <tr><td><code>(continue) + 1</code></td><td><code>continue + 1</code></td></tr> </table> Tested by `echo "fn main() { let _ = $AFTER; }" | rustc -Zunpretty=expanded /dev/stdin`. The pretty-printer aims to render the syntax tree as it actually exists in rustc, as faithfully as possible, in Rust syntax. It can insert parentheses where forced by Rust's grammar in order to preserve the meaning of a macro-generated syntax tree, for example in the case of `a * $rhs` where $rhs is `b + c`. But for any expression parsed from source code, without a macro involved, there should never be a reason for inserting additional parentheses not present in the original. For closures and jumps (return, break, continue, yield, do yeet, become) the unneeded parentheses came from the precedence of some of these expressions being misidentified. In the same order as the table above: - Jumps and closures are supposed to have equal precedence. The [Rust Reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.83.0/reference/expressions.html#expression-precedence) says so, and in Syn they do. There is no Rust syntax that would require making a precedence distinction between jumps and closures. But in rustc these were previously 2 distinct levels with the closure being lower, hence the parentheses around a closure inside a jump (but not a jump inside a closure). - When a closure is written with an explicit return type, the grammar [requires](https://doc.rust-lang.org/1.83.0/reference/expressions/closure-expr.html) that the closure body consists of exactly one block expression, not any other arbitrary expression as usual for closures. Parsing of the closure body does not continue after the block expression. So in `|| { 0 }.clone()` the clone is inside the closure body and applies to `{ 0 }`, whereas in `|| -> _ { 0 }.clone()` the clone is outside and applies to the closure as a whole. - Continue never needs parentheses. It was previously marked as having the lowest possible precedence but it should have been the highest, next to paths and loops and function calls, not next to jumps.
2024-12-18Re-export more `rustc_span::symbol` things from `rustc_span`.Nicholas Nethercote-10/+6
`rustc_span::symbol` defines some things that are re-exported from `rustc_span`, such as `Symbol` and `sym`. But it doesn't re-export some closely related things such as `Ident` and `kw`. So you can do `use rustc_span::{Symbol, sym}` but you have to do `use rustc_span::symbol::{Ident, kw}`, which is inconsistent for no good reason. This commit re-exports `Ident`, `kw`, and `MacroRulesNormalizedIdent`, and changes many `rustc_span::symbol::` qualifiers in `compiler/` to `rustc_span::`. This is a 200+ net line of code reduction, mostly because many files with two `use rustc_span` items can be reduced to one.
2024-12-15Add hir::AttributeJonathan Dönszelmann-9/+265
2024-12-15Rollup merge of #134285 - oli-obk:push-vwrqsqlwnuxo, r=UrgauStuart Cook-1/+14
Add some convenience helper methods on `hir::Safety` Makes a lot of call sites simpler and should make any refactorings needed for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134090#issuecomment-2541332415 simpler, as fewer sites have to be touched in case we end up storing some information in the variants of `hir::Safety`
2024-12-14Rollup merge of #132939 - uellenberg:suggest-deref, r=oli-obkMatthias Krüger-0/+16
Suggest using deref in patterns Fixes #132784 This changes the following code: ```rs use std::sync::Arc; fn main() { let mut x = Arc::new(Some(1)); match x { Some(_) => {} None => {} } } ``` to output ```rs error[E0308]: mismatched types --> src/main.rs:5:9 | LL | match x { | - this expression has type `Arc<Option<{integer}>>` ... LL | Some(_) => {} | ^^^^^^^ expected `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`, found `Option<_>` | = note: expected struct `Arc<Option<{integer}>>` found enum `Option<_>` help: consider dereferencing to access the inner value using the Deref trait | LL | match *x { | ~~ ``` instead of ```rs error[E0308]: mismatched types --> src/main.rs:5:9 | 4 | match x { | - this expression has type `Arc<Option<{integer}>>` 5 | Some(_) => {} | ^^^^^^^ expected `Arc<Option<{integer}>>`, found `Option<_>` | = note: expected struct `Arc<Option<{integer}>>` found enum `Option<_>` ``` This makes it more obvious that a Deref is available, and gives a suggestion on how to use it in order to fix the issue at hand.
2024-12-14Add some convenience helper methods on `hir::Safety`Oli Scherer-1/+14
2024-12-14(Re-)Implement impl_trait_in_bindingsMichael Goulet-0/+5
2024-12-13Auto merge of #134269 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-fkshwux, r=matthiaskrgrbors-2/+27
Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - #133900 (Advent of `tests/ui` (misc cleanups and improvements) [1/N]) - #133937 (Keep track of parse errors in `mod`s and don't emit resolve errors for paths involving them) - #133938 (`rustc_mir_dataflow` cleanups, including some renamings) - #134058 (interpret: reduce usage of TypingEnv::fully_monomorphized) - #134130 (Stop using driver queries in the public API) - #134140 (Add AST support for unsafe binders) - #134229 (Fix typos in docs on provenance) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-12-13Suggest using deref in patternsuellenberg-0/+16
Fixes #132784
2024-12-13Auto merge of #134122 - oli-obk:push-zqnyznxtpnll, r=petrochenkovbors-3/+1
Move impl constness into impl trait header This PR is kind of the opposite of the rejected https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134114 Instead of moving more things into the `constness` query, we want to keep them where their corresponding hir nodes are lowered. So I gave this a spin for impls, which have an obvious place to be (the impl trait header). And surprisingly it's also a perf improvement (likely just slightly better query & cache usage). The issue was that removing anything from the `constness` query makes it just return `NotConst`, which is wrong. So I had to change it to `bug!` out if used wrongly, and only then remove the impl blocks from the `constness` query. I think this change is good in general, because it makes using `constness` more robust (as can be seen by how few sites that had to be changed, so it was almost solely used specifically for the purpose of asking for functions' constness). The main thing where this change was not great was in clippy, which was using the `constness` query as a general DefId -> constness map. I added a `DefKind` filter in front of that. If it becomes a more common pattern we can always move that helper into rustc.
2024-12-12Fix toolsMichael Goulet-1/+1
2024-12-12Add unwrap_unsafe_binder and wrap_unsafe_binder macro operatorsMichael Goulet-2/+15
2024-12-12Lower AST and resolve lifetimes for unsafe binder typesMichael Goulet-0/+12
2024-12-12Rollup merge of #134173 - onur-ozkan:allow-symbol-intern-string-literal, ↵Matthias Krüger-0/+2
r=jieyouxu allow `symbol_intern_string_literal` lint in test modules Since #133545, `x check compiler --stage 1` no longer works because compiler test modules trigger `symbol_intern_string_literal` lint errors. Bootstrap shouldn't control when to ignore or enable this lint in the compiler tree (using `Kind != Test` was ineffective for obvious reasons). Also, conditionally adding this rustflag invalidates the build cache between `x test` and other commands. This PR removes the `Kind` check from bootstrap and handles it directly in the compiler tree in a more natural way.
2024-12-11allow `symbol_intern_string_literal` lint in test modulesonur-ozkan-0/+2
Signed-off-by: onur-ozkan <work@onurozkan.dev>
2024-12-11Require the `constness` query to only be invoked on things that can have ↵Oli Scherer-3/+1
constness
2024-12-10Remove more traces of anonymous ADTsMichael Goulet-11/+1
2024-12-09Introduce `default_field_values` featureEsteban Küber-15/+73
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.
2024-12-02Never parenthesize `continue`David Tolnay-1/+1
2024-12-02Raise precedence of closure that has explicit return typeDavid Tolnay-3/+9
2024-12-02Squash closures and jumps into a single precedence levelDavid Tolnay-2/+1
2024-12-02Rollup merge of #133603 - dtolnay:precedence, r=lcnrGuillaume Gomez-9/+9
Eliminate magic numbers from expression precedence Context: see https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133140. This PR continues on backporting Syn's expression precedence design into rustc. Rustc's design used mysterious integer quantities represented variously as `i8` or `usize` (e.g. `PREC_CLOSURE = -40i8`), a special significance around `0` that is never named, and an extra `PREC_FORCE_PAREN` precedence level that does not correspond to any expression. Syn's design uses a C-like enum with variants that clearly correspond to specific sets of expression kinds. This PR is a refactoring that has no intended behavior change on its own, but it unblocks other precedence work that rustc's precedence design was poorly suited to accommodate. - Asymmetrical precedence, so that a pretty-printer can tell `(return 1) + 1` needs parens but `1 + return 1` does not. - Squashing the `Closure` and `Jump` cases into a single precedence level. - Numerous remaining false positives and false negatives in rustc pretty-printer's parenthesization of macro metavariables, for example in `$e < rhs` where $e is `lhs as Thing<T>`. FYI `@fmease` &mdash; you don't need to review if rustbot picks someone else, but you mentioned being interested in the followup PRs.
2024-12-01Rollup merge of #133589 - voidc:remove-array-len, r=boxyuwuJacob Pratt-42/+21
Remove `hir::ArrayLen` This refactoring removes `hir::ArrayLen`, replacing it with `hir::ConstArg`. To represent inferred array lengths (previously `hir::ArrayLen::Infer`), a new variant `ConstArgKind::Infer` is added. r? `@BoxyUwU`
2024-11-30Eliminate magic numbers from expression precedenceDavid Tolnay-9/+9
2024-11-30Remove hir::ArrayLen, introduce ConstArgKind::InferDominik Stolz-42/+21
Remove Node::ArrayLenInfer
2024-11-28update commentlcnr-1/+10
2024-11-26Auto merge of #133505 - compiler-errors:rollup-xjp8hdi, r=compiler-errorsbors-34/+47
Rollup of 12 pull requests Successful merges: - #133042 (btree: add `{Entry,VacantEntry}::insert_entry`) - #133070 (Lexer tweaks) - #133136 (Support ranges in `<[T]>::get_many_mut()`) - #133140 (Inline ExprPrecedence::order into Expr::precedence) - #133155 (Yet more `rustc_mir_dataflow` cleanups) - #133282 (Shorten the `MaybeUninit` `Debug` implementation) - #133326 (Remove the `DefinitelyInitializedPlaces` analysis.) - #133362 (No need to re-sort existential preds in relate impl) - #133367 (Simplify array length mismatch error reporting (to not try to turn consts into target usizes)) - #133394 (Bail on more errors in dyn ty lowering) - #133410 (target check_consistency: ensure target feature string makes some basic sense) - #133435 (miri: disable test_downgrade_observe test on macOS) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-11-26Rollup merge of #133140 - dtolnay:precedence, r=fmeaseMichael Goulet-34/+47
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.
2024-11-26Rollup merge of #133443 - fmease:rm-dead-eff-code-ii, r=compiler-errorsGuillaume Gomez-10/+1
Remove dead code stemming from the old effects desugaring (II) Follow-up to #132374. r? project-const-traits
2024-11-25Remove dead code stemming from the old effects desugaring (II)León Orell Valerian Liehr-10/+1
2024-11-25Refactor `where` predicates, and reserve for attributes supportFrank King-43/+39
2024-11-21Implement the unsafe-fields RFC.Luca Versari-0/+1
Co-Authored-By: Jacob Pratt <jacob@jhpratt.dev>
2024-11-17Inline ExprPrecedence::order into Expr::precedenceDavid Tolnay-34/+47
2024-11-11Rollup merge of #132144 - adetaylor:receiver-trait-itself, r=wesleywiserMatthias Krüger-0/+2
Arbitrary self types v2: (unused) Receiver trait This commit contains a new `Receiver` trait, which is the basis for the Arbitrary Self Types v2 RFC. This allows smart pointers to be method receivers even if they're not Deref. This is currently unused by the compiler - a subsequent PR will start to use this for method resolution if the `arbitrary_self_types` feature gate is enabled. This is being landed first simply to make review simpler: if people feel this should all be in an atomic PR let me know. This is a part of the arbitrary self types v2 project, https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3519 https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44874 r? `@wesleywiser`
2024-11-03Rollup merge of #132423 - RalfJung:const-eval-align-offset, r=dtolnayJubilee-3/+0
remove const-support for align_offset and is_aligned As part of the recent discussion to stabilize `ptr.is_null()` in const context, the general vibe was that it's okay for a const function to panic when the same operation would work at runtime (that's just a case of "dynamically detecting that something is not supported as a const operation"), but it is *not* okay for a const function to just return a different result. Following that, `is_aligned` and `is_aligned_to` have their const status revoked in this PR, since they do return actively wrong results at const time. In the future we can consider having a new intrinsic or so that can check whether a pointer is "guaranteed to be aligned", but the current implementation based on `align_offset` does not have the behavior we want. In fact `align_offset` itself behaves quite strangely in const, and that support needs a bunch of special hacks. That doesn't seem worth it. Instead, the users that can fall back to a different implementation should just use const_eval_select directly, and everything else should not be made const-callable. So this PR does exactly that, and entirely removes const support for align_offset. Closes some tracking issues by removing the associated features: Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/90962 Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/104203 Cc `@rust-lang/wg-const-eval` `@rust-lang/libs-api`
2024-11-03remove const-support for align_offsetRalf Jung-3/+0
Operations like is_aligned would return actively wrong results at compile-time, i.e. calling it on the same pointer at compiletime and runtime could yield different results. That's no good. Instead of having hacks to make align_offset kind-of work in const-eval, just use const_eval_select in the few places where it makes sense, which also ensures those places are all aware they need to make sure the fallback behavior is consistent.
2024-11-02compiler: Replace rustc_target with _abi in _hirJubilee Young-5/+5
2024-10-31Encode cross-crate opaque type originMichael Goulet-7/+9
2024-10-30Review comments.Camille GILLOT-5/+0
2024-10-30Remap impl-trait lifetimes on HIR instead of AST lowering.Camille GILLOT-19/+3
2024-10-25Arbitrary self types v2: (unused) Receiver traitAdrian Taylor-0/+2
This commit contains a new Receiver trait, which is the basis for the Arbitrary Self Types v2 RFC. This allows smart pointers to be method receivers even if they're not Deref. This is currently unused by the compiler - a subsequent PR will start to use this for method resolution if the arbitrary_self_types feature gate is enabled. This is being landed first simply to make review simpler: if people feel this should all be in an atomic PR let me know. This is a part of the arbitrary self types v2 project, https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3519 https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44874 r? @wesleywiser
2024-10-24Remove associated type based effects logicMichael Goulet-10/+1
2024-10-24Rollup merge of #130225 - adetaylor:rename-old-receiver, r=wesleywiserStuart Cook-1/+1
Rename Receiver -> LegacyReceiver As part of the "arbitrary self types v2" project, we are going to replace the current `Receiver` trait with a new mechanism based on a new, different `Receiver` trait. This PR renames the old trait to get it out the way. Naming is hard. Options considered included: * HardCodedReceiver (because it should only be used for things in the standard library, and hence is sort-of hard coded) * LegacyReceiver * TargetLessReceiver * OldReceiver These are all bad names, but fortunately this will be temporary. Assuming the new mechanism proceeds to stabilization as intended, the legacy trait will be removed altogether. Although we expect this trait to be used only in the standard library, we suspect it may be in use elsehwere, so we're landing this change separately to identify any surprising breakages. It's known that this trait is used within the Rust for Linux project; a patch is in progress to remove their dependency. This is a part of the arbitrary self types v2 project, https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3519 https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44874 r? `@wesleywiser`
2024-10-22Represent TraitBoundModifiers as distinct parts in HIRMichael Goulet-16/+13
2024-10-22Rename Receiver -> LegacyReceiverAdrian Taylor-1/+1
As part of the "arbitrary self types v2" project, we are going to replace the current `Receiver` trait with a new mechanism based on a new, different `Receiver` trait. This PR renames the old trait to get it out the way. Naming is hard. Options considered included: * HardCodedReceiver (because it should only be used for things in the standard library, and hence is sort-of hard coded) * LegacyReceiver * TargetLessReceiver * OldReceiver These are all bad names, but fortunately this will be temporary. Assuming the new mechanism proceeds to stabilization as intended, the legacy trait will be removed altogether. Although we expect this trait to be used only in the standard library, we suspect it may be in use elsehwere, so we're landing this change separately to identify any surprising breakages. It's known that this trait is used within the Rust for Linux project; a patch is in progress to remove their dependency. This is a part of the arbitrary self types v2 project, https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3519 https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/44874 r? @wesleywiser
2024-10-15Auto merge of #131723 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-krcslig, r=matthiaskrgrbors-9/+10
Rollup of 9 pull requests Successful merges: - #122670 (Fix bug where `option_env!` would return `None` when env var is present but not valid Unicode) - #131095 (Use environment variables instead of command line arguments for merged doctests) - #131339 (Expand set_ptr_value / with_metadata_of docs) - #131652 (Move polarity into `PolyTraitRef` rather than storing it on the side) - #131675 (Update lint message for ABI not supported) - #131681 (Fix up-to-date checking for run-make tests) - #131702 (Suppress import errors for traits that couldve applied for method lookup error) - #131703 (Resolved python deprecation warning in publish_toolstate.py) - #131710 (Remove `'apostrophes'` from `rustc_parse_format`) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2024-10-15Rollup merge of #130635 - eholk:pin-reborrow-sugar, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-3/+2
Add `&pin (mut|const) T` type position sugar This adds parser support for `&pin mut T` and `&pin const T` references. These are desugared to `Pin<&mut T>` and `Pin<&T>` in the AST lowering phases. This PR currently includes #130526 since that one is in the commit queue. Only the most recent commits (bd450027eb4a94b814a7dd9c0fa29102e6361149 and following) are new. Tracking: - #130494 r? `@compiler-errors`