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2025-07-06compiler: rename {ast,hir}::BareFn* to FnPtr*Jubilee Young-6/+6
Fix some comments and related types and locals where it is obvious, e.g. - bare_fn -> fn_ptr - LifetimeBinderKind::BareFnType -> LifetimeBinderKind::FnPtrType Co-authored-by: León Orell Valerian Liehr <me@fmease.dev>
2025-07-05Port `#[ignore]` to the new attribute parsing infrastructureJonathan Brouwer-0/+1
Signed-off-by: Jonathan Brouwer <jonathantbrouwer@gmail.com>
2025-07-03Remove PointerLike traitMichael Goulet-2/+0
2025-07-03setup CI and tidy to use typos for spellchecking and fix few typosklensy-4/+4
2025-07-01Auto merge of #143036 - compiler-errors:no-dyn-star, r=oli-obkbors-2/+1
Remove support for `dyn*` from the compiler This PR removes support for `dyn*` (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102425), which are a currently un-RFC'd experiment that was opened a few years ago to explore a component that we thought was necessary for AFIDT (async fn in dyn trait). It doesn't seem like we are going to need `dyn*` types -- even in an not-exposed-to-the-user way[^1] -- for us to implement AFIDT. Given that AFIDT was the original motivating purpose of `dyn*` types, I don't really see a compelling reason to have to maintain their implementation in the compiler. [^1]: Compared to, e.g., generators whih are an unstable building block we use to implement stable syntax like `async {}`. We've learned quite a lot from `dyn*`, but I think at this point its current behavior leads to more questions than answers. For example, `dyn*` support today remains somewhat fragile; it ICEs in many cases where the current "normal" `dyn Trait` types rely on their unsizedness for their vtable-based implementation to be sound I wouldn't be surprised if it's unsound in other ways, though I didn't play around with it too much. See the examples below. ```rust #![feature(dyn_star)] trait Foo { fn hello(self); } impl Foo for usize { fn hello(self) { println!("hello, world"); } } fn main() { let x: dyn* Foo = 1usize; x.hello(); } ``` And: ```rust #![feature(dyn_star)] trait Trait { type Out where Self: Sized; } fn main() { let x: <dyn* Trait as Trait>::Out; } ``` ...and probably many more problems having to do with the intersection of dyn-compatibility and `Self: Sized` bounds that I was too lazy to look into like: * GATs * Methods with invalid signatures * Associated consts Generally, `dyn*` types also end up getting in the way of working with [normal `dyn` types](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/102425#issuecomment-1712604409) to an extent that IMO outweighs the benefit of experimentation. I recognize that there are probably other, more creative usages of `dyn*` that are orthogonal to AFIDT. However, I think any work along those lines should first have to think through some of the more fundamental interactions between `dyn*` and dyn-compatibility before we think about reimplementing them in the type system. --- I'm planning on removing the `DynKind` enum and the `PointerLike` built-in trait from the compiler after this PR lands. Closes rust-lang/rust#102425. cc `@eholk` `@rust-lang/lang` `@rust-lang/types` Closes rust-lang/rust#116979. Closes rust-lang/rust#119694. Closes rust-lang/rust#134591. Closes rust-lang/rust#104800.
2025-07-01Remove support for dyn*Michael Goulet-2/+1
2025-07-01Auto merge of #143287 - GuillaumeGomez:rollup-fdjcti9, r=GuillaumeGomezbors-21/+0
Rollup of 12 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang/rust#136801 (Implement `Random` for tuple) - rust-lang/rust#141867 (Describe Future invariants more precisely) - rust-lang/rust#142760 (docs(fs): Touch up grammar on lock api) - rust-lang/rust#143181 (Improve testing and error messages for malformed attributes) - rust-lang/rust#143210 (`tests/ui`: A New Order [19/N] ) - rust-lang/rust#143212 (`tests/ui`: A New Order [20/N]) - rust-lang/rust#143230 ([COMPILETEST-UNTANGLE 2/N] Make some compiletest errors/warnings/help more visually obvious) - rust-lang/rust#143240 (Port `#[rustc_object_lifetime_default]` to the new attribute parsing …) - rust-lang/rust#143255 (Do not enable LLD by default in the dist profile) - rust-lang/rust#143262 (mir: Mark `Statement` and `BasicBlockData` as `#[non_exhaustive]`) - rust-lang/rust#143269 (bootstrap: make comment more clear) - rust-lang/rust#143279 (Remove `ItemKind::descr` method) Failed merges: - rust-lang/rust#143237 (Port `#[no_implicit_prelude]` to the new attribute parsing infrastructure) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-07-01Auto merge of #142030 - oli-obk:wfck-less-hir, r=compiler-errorsbors-0/+4
Start moving wf checking away from HIR I'm trying to only access the HIR in the error path. My hope is that once we move significant portions of wfcheck off HIR that incremental will be able to cache wfcheck queries significantly better. I think I am reaching a blocker because we normally need to provide good spans to `ObligationCause`, so that the trait solver can report good errors. In some cases I have been able to use bad spans and improve them depending on the `ObligationCauseCode` (by loading HIR in the case where we actually want to error). To scale that further we'll likely need to remove spans from the `ObligationCause` entirely (leaving it to some variants of `ObligationCauseCode` to have a span when they can't recompute the information later). Unsure this is the right approach, but we've already been using it. I will create an MCP about it, but that should not affect this PR, which is fairly limited in where it does those kind of tricks. Especially https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/commit/b862d8828e375ab8c128a9d9e93bf98b77cb5928 is interesting here, because I think it improves spans in all cases
2025-07-01Remove `ItemKind::descr` methodGuillaume Gomez-21/+0
2025-07-01Auto merge of #143267 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-suvzar6, r=matthiaskrgrbors-28/+0
Rollup of 8 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang/rust#143125 (Disable f16 on Aarch64 without neon for llvm < 20.1.1) - rust-lang/rust#143156 (inherit `#[align]` from trait method prototypes) - rust-lang/rust#143178 (rustdoc default faviocon) - rust-lang/rust#143234 (Replace `ItemCtxt::report_placeholder_type_error` match with a call to `TyCtxt::def_descr`) - rust-lang/rust#143245 (mbe: Add tests and restructure metavariable expressions) - rust-lang/rust#143257 (Upgrade dependencies in run-make-support) - rust-lang/rust#143263 (linkify CodeSuggestion in doc comments) - rust-lang/rust#143264 (fix: Emit suggestion filename if primary diagnostic span is dummy) Failed merges: - rust-lang/rust#143251 (bootstrap: add build.tidy-extra-checks option) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-06-30Remove unused `descr` methodsGuillaume Gomez-28/+0
2025-06-30Introduce `ByteSymbol`.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+4
It's like `Symbol` but for byte strings. The interner is now used for both `Symbol` and `ByteSymbol`. E.g. if you intern `"dog"` and `b"dog"` you'll get a `Symbol` and a `ByteSymbol` with the same index and the characters will only be stored once. The motivation for this is to eliminate the `Arc`s in `ast::LitKind`, to make `ast::LitKind` impl `Copy`, and to avoid the need to arena-allocate `ast::LitKind` in HIR. The latter change reduces peak memory by a non-trivial amount on literal-heavy benchmarks such as `deep-vector` and `tuple-stress`. `Encoder`, `Decoder`, `SpanEncoder`, and `SpanDecoder` all get some changes so that they can handle normal strings and byte strings. This change does slow down compilation of programs that use `include_bytes!` on large files, because the contents of those files are now interned (hashed). This makes `include_bytes!` more similar to `include_str!`, though `include_bytes!` contents still aren't escaped, and hashing is still much cheaper than escaping.
2025-06-30Don't look at static items' HIR for wfcheckOli Scherer-0/+4
2025-06-28Auto merge of #141759 - 1c3t3a:discriminants-query, r=saethlinbors-0/+1
Insert checks for enum discriminants when debug assertions are enabled Similar to the existing null-pointer and alignment checks, this checks for valid enum discriminants on creation of enums through unsafe transmutes. Essentially this sanitizes patterns like the following: ```rust let val: MyEnum = unsafe { std::mem::transmute<u32, MyEnum>(42) }; ``` An extension of this check will be done in a follow-up that explicitly sanitizes for extern enum values that come into Rust from e.g. C/C++. This check is similar to Miri's capabilities of checking for valid construction of enum values. This PR is inspired by saethlin@'s PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104862. Thank you so much for keeping this code up and the detailed comments! I also pair-programmed large parts of this together with vabr-g@. r? `@saethlin`
2025-06-27Insert checks for enum discriminants when debug assertions are enabledBastian Kersting-0/+1
Similar to the existing nullpointer and alignment checks, this checks for valid enum discriminants on creation of enums through unsafe transmutes. Essentially this sanitizes patterns like the following: ```rust let val: MyEnum = unsafe { std::mem::transmute<u32, MyEnum>(42) }; ``` An extension of this check will be done in a follow-up that explicitly sanitizes for extern enum values that come into Rust from e.g. C/C++. This check is similar to Miri's capabilities of checking for valid construction of enum values. This PR is inspired by saethlin@'s PR https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/104862. Thank you so much for keeping this code up and the detailed comments! I also pair-programmed large parts of this together with vabr-g@.
2025-06-27Report infer ty errors during hir ty loweringOli Scherer-0/+28
This centralizes the placeholder type error reporting in one location, but it also exposes the granularity at which we convert things from hir to ty more. E.g. previously infer types in where bounds were errored together with the function signature, but now they are independent.
2025-06-25make `tidy-alphabetical` use a natural sortFolkert de Vries-1/+1
2025-06-21All HIR attributes are outerDavid Tolnay-18/+3
2025-06-21Remove style() from AttributeExt traitDavid Tolnay-14/+8
2025-06-21Add AttributeExt::doc_resolution_scopeDavid Tolnay-0/+10
2025-06-20Port `#[may_dangle]` to the new attribute systemPavel Grigorenko-0/+1
2025-06-16trait_sel: `{Meta,Pointee}Sized` on `Sized` typesDavid Wood-0/+2
Introduce the `MetaSized` and `PointeeSized` traits as supertraits of `Sized` and initially implement it on everything that currently implements `Sized` to isolate any changes that simply adding the traits introduces.
2025-06-15Rollup merge of #134661 - dtolnay:prefixattr, r=fmeaseLeón Orell Valerian Liehr-5/+16
Reduce precedence of expressions that have an outer attr Previously, `-Zunpretty=expanded` would expand this program as follows: ```rust #![feature(stmt_expr_attributes)] macro_rules! repro { ($e:expr) => { #[allow(deprecated)] $e }; } #[derive(Default)] struct Thing { #[deprecated] field: i32, } fn main() { let thing = Thing::default(); let _ = repro!(thing).field; } ``` ```rs #![feature(prelude_import)] #![feature(stmt_expr_attributes)] #[prelude_import] use std::prelude::rust_2021::*; #[macro_use] extern crate std; struct Thing { #[deprecated] field: i32, } #[automatically_derived] impl ::core::default::Default for Thing { #[inline] fn default() -> Thing { Thing { field: ::core::default::Default::default() } } } fn main() { let thing = Thing::default(); let _ = #[allow(deprecated)] thing.field; } ``` This is not the correct expansion. The correct output would have `(#[allow(deprecated)] thing).field` with the attribute applying only to `thing`, not to `thing.field`.
2025-06-13Reduce precedence of expressions that have an outer attrDavid Tolnay-5/+16
2025-06-13collect delayed lints in hir_crate_itemsJana Dönszelmann-4/+18
2025-06-12introduce new lint infraJana Dönszelmann-0/+37
lint on duplicates during attribute parsing To do this we stuff them in the diagnostic context to be emitted after hir is constructed
2025-06-08Remove all unused feature gates from the compilerbjorn3-1/+0
2025-06-05Auto merge of #138677 - shepmaster:consistent-elided-lifetime-syntax, ↵bors-46/+37
r=traviscross,jieyouxu Add a new `mismatched-lifetime-syntaxes` lint The lang-team [discussed this](https://hackmd.io/nf4ZUYd7Rp6rq-1svJZSaQ) and I attempted to [summarize](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/120808#issuecomment-2701863833) their decision. The summary-of-the-summary is: - Using two different kinds of syntax for elided lifetimes is confusing. In rare cases, it may even [lead to unsound code](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48686)! Some examples: ```rust // Lint will warn about these fn(v: ContainsLifetime) -> ContainsLifetime<'_>; fn(&'static u8) -> &u8; ``` - Matching up references with no lifetime syntax, references with anonymous lifetime syntax, and paths with anonymous lifetime syntax is an exception to the simplest possible rule: ```rust // Lint will not warn about these fn(&u8) -> &'_ u8; fn(&'_ u8) -> &u8; fn(&u8) -> ContainsLifetime<'_>; ``` - Having a lint for consistent syntax of elided lifetimes will make the [future goal](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/91639) of warning-by-default for paths participating in elision much simpler. --- This new lint attempts to accomplish the goal of enforcing consistent syntax. In the process, it supersedes and replaces the existing `elided-named-lifetimes` lint, which means it starts out life as warn-by-default.
2025-06-05Auto merge of #142033 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-99lvg0j, r=matthiaskrgrbors-2/+3
Rollup of 11 pull requests Successful merges: - rust-lang/rust#141890 (Add link to correct documentation in htmldocck.py) - rust-lang/rust#141932 (Fix for async drop inside async gen fn) - rust-lang/rust#141960 (Use non-2015 edition paths in tests that do not test for their resolution) - rust-lang/rust#141968 (Run wfcheck in one big loop instead of per module) - rust-lang/rust#141969 (Triagebot: Remove `assign.users_on_vacation`) - rust-lang/rust#141985 (Ensure query keys are printed with reduced queries) - rust-lang/rust#141999 (Visit the ident in `PreciseCapturingNonLifetimeArg`.) - rust-lang/rust#142005 (Change `tag_field` to `FieldIdx` in `Variants::Multiple`) - rust-lang/rust#142017 (Fix incorrect use of "recommend" over "recommended") - rust-lang/rust#142024 (Don't refer to 'this tail expression' in expansion.) - rust-lang/rust#142025 (Don't refer to 'local binding' in extern macro.) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-06-04Rollup merge of #141999 - nnethercote:precise-ident, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-2/+3
Visit the ident in `PreciseCapturingNonLifetimeArg`. It's currently skipped, presumably by accident. r? `@BoxyUwU`
2025-06-04Replace `elided_named_lifetimes` with `mismatched_lifetime_syntaxes`Jake Goulding-6/+1
2025-06-04Introduce the `mismatched_lifetime_syntaxes` lintJake Goulding-1/+1
2025-06-04Rollup merge of #142007 - nnethercote:visitor-comments, r=chenyukangMatthias Krüger-5/+4
Improve some `Visitor` comments. For AST/HIR/THIR visitors, explain the use of deconstruction. r? ``@BoxyUwU``
2025-06-04Improve some `Visitor` comments.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+4
For AST/HIR/THIR visitors, explain the use of deconstruction.
2025-06-04Visit the ident in `PreciseCapturingNonLifetimeArg`.Nicholas Nethercote-2/+3
It's currently skipped, presumably by accident.
2025-06-03Rollup merge of #137725 - oli-obk:i-want-to-move-it-move-it, ↵Matthias Krüger-2/+9
r=compiler-errors,traviscross Add `iter` macro See related discussion in https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/channel/481571-t-lang.2Fgen/topic/iter!.20macro/near/500784563 very little error case testing so far, but the success path works. There is also no `IterFn` trait yet, as T-lang didn't consider it something urgently needed I think we can implement it in follow-up PRs. r? lang for the tests, `@compiler-errors` for the impl
2025-06-03Add `iter` macroOli Scherer-2/+9
This adds an `iter!` macro that can be used to create movable generators. This also adds a yield_expr feature so the `yield` keyword can be used within iter! macro bodies. This was needed because several unstable features each need `yield` expressions, so this allows us to stabilize them separately from any individual feature. Co-authored-by: Oli Scherer <github35764891676564198441@oli-obk.de> Co-authored-by: Jieyou Xu <jieyouxu@outlook.com> Co-authored-by: Travis Cross <tc@traviscross.com>
2025-06-03Rename `LifetimeSyntax` variants to lang-team-approved namesJake Goulding-39/+35
2025-06-03Rollup merge of #141931 - ArtemIsmagilov:issue-141849_2, r=nnethercoteMatthias Krüger-90/+147
Deconstruct values in the THIR visitor I continue to add deconstruction for task rust-lang/rust#141849 The changes concern a more complex part of the task `compiler/rustc_hir/src/intravisit.rs` r? `@nnethercote`
2025-06-03Deconstruct values in the THIR visitorArtemIsmagilov-90/+147
2025-06-03Rollup merge of #141876 - compiler-errors:missing-let-ty, r=SparrowLiiMatthias Krüger-2/+5
Don't declare variables in `ExprKind::Let` in invalid positions Handle `let` expressions in invalid positions specially during resolve in order to avoid making destructuring-assignment expressions that reference (invalid) variables that have not yet been delcared yet. See further explanation in test and comment in the source. Fixes rust-lang/rust#141844
2025-06-03Overhaul `UsePath`.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+14
`UsePath` contains a `SmallVec<[Res; 3]>`. This holds up to three `Res` results, one per namespace (type, value, or macro). `lower_import_res` takes a `PerNS<Option<Res<NodeId>>>` result and lowers it into the `SmallVec`. This is pretty weird. The input `PerNS` makes it clear which `Res` belongs to which namespace, but the `SmallVec` throws that information away. And code that operates on the `SmallVec` tends to use iteration (or even just grabbing the first entry!) without knowing which namespace the `Res` belongs to. Even weirder! Also, `SmallVec` is an overly flexible type to use here, because it can contain any number of elements (even though it's optimized for 3 in this case). This commit changes `UsePath` so it also contains a `PerNS<Option<Res<HirId>>>`. This type preserves more information and is more self-documenting. The commit also changes a lot of the use sites to access the result for a particular namespace. E.g. if you're looking up a trait, it will be in the `Res` for the type namespace if it's present; it's silly to look in the `Res` for the value namespace or macro namespace. Overall I find the new code much easier to understand. However, some use sites still iterate. These now use `present_items` because that filters out the `None` results. Also, `redundant_pub_crate.rs` gets a bigger change. A `UseKind:ListStem` item gets no `Res` results, which means the old `all` call in `is_not_macro_export` would succeed (because `all` succeeds on an empty iterator) and the `ListStem` would be ignored. This is what we want, but was more by luck than design. The new code detects `ListStem` explicitly. The commit generalizes the name of that function accordingly. Finally, the commit also removes the `use_path` arena, because `PerNS<Option<Res>>` impls `Copy` (unlike `SmallVec`) and it can be allocated in the arena shared by all `Copy` types.
2025-06-02Suppress redundant errorMichael Goulet-2/+5
2025-05-30Reorder hir fn stuff.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+1
In `Fn`, put `ident` next to `generics` as is common in many other types. In `print_fn`, make the argument order match the printing order.
2025-05-30Reorder fields in `hir::ItemKind` variants.Nicholas Nethercote-36/+36
Specifically `TyAlias`, `Enum`, `Struct`, `Union`. So the fields match the textual order in the source code. The interesting part of the change is in `compiler/rustc_hir/src/hir.rs`. The rest is extremely mechanical refactoring.
2025-05-22Rename `kw::Empty` as `sym::empty`.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+1
Because the empty string is not a keyword.
2025-05-15HIR: explain in comment why `ExprKind::If` "then" is an `Expr`Samuel Tardieu-0/+2
One could be tempted to replace the "then" `hir::Expr` with kind `hir::ExprKind::Block` by a `hir::Block`. Explain why this would not be a good idea.
2025-05-12update cfg(bootstrap)Pietro Albini-1/+0
2025-05-09Remove `Ident::empty`.Nicholas Nethercote-15/+8
All uses have been removed. And it's nonsensical: an identifier by definition has at least one char. The commits adds an is-non-empty assertion to `Ident::new` to enforce this, and converts some `Ident` constructions to use `Ident::new`. Adding the assertion requires making `Ident::new` and `Ident::with_dummy_span` non-const, which is no great loss. The commit amends a couple of places that do path splitting to ensure no empty identifiers are created.
2025-05-07Add `DefPathData::OpaqueLifetime` to avoid conflicts for remapped opaque ↵John Kåre Alsaker-7/+8
lifetimes