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2025-03-14Revert "Rollup merge of #136274 - compiler-errors:sized-wf, r=lcnr"Michael Goulet-33/+2
This reverts commit a8ecb79d19e1bad732dae7f34f2481499db12f7c, reversing changes made to 40c4e05013c1805044ae2611ba0b95c0acecd331. (cherry picked from commit 9ea587e023dfa4458c5003ba74ae02bd146ec2df)
2025-02-13Auto merge of #136965 - jhpratt:rollup-bsnqvmf, r=jhprattbors-64/+52
Rollup of 8 pull requests Successful merges: - #134999 (Add cygwin target.) - #136559 (Resolve named regions when reporting type test failures in NLL) - #136660 (Use a trait to enforce field validity for union fields + `unsafe` fields + `unsafe<>` binder types) - #136858 (Parallel-compiler-related cleanup) - #136881 (cg_llvm: Reduce visibility of all functions in the llvm module) - #136888 (Always perform discr read for never pattern in EUV) - #136948 (Split out the `extern_system_varargs` feature) - #136949 (Fix import in bench for wasm) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-13Implement lint for definition site item shadowing tooMichael Goulet-0/+45
2025-02-13Implement and use BikeshedGuaranteedNoDrop for union/unsafe field validityMichael Goulet-64/+52
2025-02-08Rustfmtbjorn3-63/+105
2025-02-05Eagerly detect coroutine recursion pre-mono when possibleMichael Goulet-25/+4
2025-02-05Rollup merge of #128045 - pnkfelix:rustc-contracts, r=oli-obkLeón Orell Valerian Liehr-0/+18
#[contracts::requires(...)] + #[contracts::ensures(...)] cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/128044 Updated contract support: attribute syntax for preconditions and postconditions, implemented via a series of desugarings that culminates in: 1. a compile-time flag (`-Z contract-checks`) that, similar to `-Z ub-checks`, attempts to ensure that the decision of enabling/disabling contract checks is delayed until the end user program is compiled, 2. invocations of lang-items that handle invoking the precondition, building a checker for the post-condition, and invoking that post-condition checker at the return sites for the function, and 3. intrinsics for the actual evaluation of pre- and post-condition predicates that third-party verification tools can intercept and reinterpret for their own purposes (e.g. creating shims of behavior that abstract away the function body and replace it solely with the pre- and post-conditions). Known issues: * My original intent, as described in the MCP (https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/759) was to have a rustc-prefixed attribute namespace (like rustc_contracts::requires). But I could not get things working when I tried to do rewriting via a rustc-prefixed builtin attribute-macro. So for now it is called `contracts::requires`. * Our attribute macro machinery does not provide direct support for attribute arguments that are parsed like rust expressions. I spent some time trying to add that (e.g. something that would parse the attribute arguments as an AST while treating the remainder of the items as a token-tree), but its too big a lift for me to undertake. So instead I hacked in something approximating that goal, by semi-trivially desugaring the token-tree attribute contents into internal AST constucts. This may be too fragile for the long-term. * (In particular, it *definitely* breaks when you try to add a contract to a function like this: `fn foo1(x: i32) -> S<{ 23 }> { ... }`, because its token-tree based search for where to inject the internal AST constructs cannot immediately see that the `{ 23 }` is within a generics list. I think we can live for this for the short-term, i.e. land the work, and continue working on it while in parallel adding a new attribute variant that takes a token-tree attribute alongside an AST annotation, which would completely resolve the issue here.) * the *intent* of `-Z contract-checks` is that it behaves like `-Z ub-checks`, in that we do not prematurely commit to including or excluding the contract evaluation in upstream crates (most notably, `core` and `std`). But the current test suite does not actually *check* that this is the case. Ideally the test suite would be extended with a multi-crate test that explores the matrix of enabling/disabling contracts on both the upstream lib and final ("leaf") bin crates.
2025-02-04Auto merge of #136549 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-sqbpgtd, r=matthiaskrgrbors-2/+28
Rollup of 7 pull requests Successful merges: - #136242 (Remove `LateContext::match_def_path()`) - #136274 (Check Sizedness of return type in WF) - #136284 (Allow using named consts in pattern types) - #136477 (Fix a couple NLL TLS spans ) - #136497 (Report generic mismatches when calling bodyless trait functions) - #136520 (Remove unnecessary layout assertions for object-safe receivers) - #136526 (mir_build: Rename `thir::cx::Cx` to `ThirBuildCx` and remove `UserAnnotatedTyHelpers`) Failed merges: - #136304 (Reject negative literals for unsigned or char types in pattern ranges and literals) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-04Rollup merge of #136274 - compiler-errors:sized-wf, r=lcnrMatthias Krüger-2/+28
Check Sizedness of return type in WF Still need to clean this up a bit. This should fix https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/150. r? lcnr
2025-02-04Auto merge of #135760 - scottmcm:disjoint-bitor, r=WaffleLapkinbors-1/+1
Add `unchecked_disjoint_bitor` per ACP373 Following the names from libs-api in https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/373#issuecomment-2085686057 Includes a fallback implementation so this doesn't have to update cg_clif or cg_gcc, and overrides it in cg_llvm to use `or disjoint`, which [is available in LLVM 18](https://releases.llvm.org/18.1.0/docs/LangRef.html#or-instruction) so hopefully we don't need any version checks.
2025-02-03Improve contracts intrisics and remove wrapper functionCelina G. Val-6/+4
1. Document the new intrinsics. 2. Make the intrinsics actually check the contract if enabled, and remove `contract::check_requires` function. 3. Use panic with no unwind in case contract is using to check for safety, we probably don't want to unwind. Following the same reasoning as UB checks.
2025-02-03Contracts core intrinsics.Felix S. Klock II-0/+20
These are hooks to: 1. control whether contract checks are run 2. allow 3rd party tools to intercept and reintepret the results of running contracts.
2025-02-03Check Sizedness of return type in WFMichael Goulet-2/+28
2025-02-03Rollup merge of #136432 - fmease:lta-fix-def-site-checks, r=compiler-errors许杰友 Jieyou Xu (Joe)-11/+13
LTA: Actually check where-clauses for well-formedness at the def site All of the added tests used to wrongfully pass. r? oli-obk or types/compiler or reassign
2025-02-03LTA: Check where-clauses for well-formedness at the def siteLeón Orell Valerian Liehr-11/+13
2025-01-31Add `unchecked_disjoint_bitor` with fallback intrinsic implementationScott McMurray-1/+1
2025-02-01Rename `tcx.ensure()` to `tcx.ensure_ok()`Zalathar-13/+15
2025-01-31Rollup merge of #136281 - nnethercote:rustc_hir_analysis, r=lcnrJacob Pratt-28/+21
`rustc_hir_analysis` cleanups Just some improvements I found while looking through this code. r? `@lcnr`
2025-01-31Use `.and` chaining to improve readability.Nicholas Nethercote-8/+6
2025-01-31Remove an unnecessary lifetime from `RemapLateParam`.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+4
2025-01-31Remove an out-of-date `FIXME` comment.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+4
This comment made sense when this crate was called `rustc_typeck`, but makes less sense now that it's called `rustc_hir_analysis`. Especially given that `check_drop_impl` is only called within the crate.
2025-01-31Avoid a duplicated error case in `fn_sig_suggestion`.Nicholas Nethercote-9/+5
2025-01-31Clarify a comment.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+2
I was confused here for a bit.
2025-01-30review comment: change `span` argumentEsteban Küber-4/+4
2025-01-30When encountering unexpected closure return type, point at return ↵Esteban Küber-0/+4
type/expression ``` error[E0271]: expected `{closure@fallback-closure-wrap.rs:18:40}` to be a closure that returns `()`, but it returns `!` --> $DIR/fallback-closure-wrap.rs:19:9 | LL | let error = Closure::wrap(Box::new(move || { | ------- LL | panic!("Can't connect to server."); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `()`, found `!` | = note: expected unit type `()` found type `!` = note: required for the cast from `Box<{closure@$DIR/fallback-closure-wrap.rs:18:40: 18:47}>` to `Box<dyn FnMut()>` ``` ``` error[E0271]: expected `{closure@dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:6:10}` to be a closure that returns `bool`, but it returns `Option<()>` --> $DIR/dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:6:16 | LL | call(|| -> Option<()> { | ---- ------^^^^^^^^^^ | | | | | expected `bool`, found `Option<()>` | required by a bound introduced by this call | = note: expected type `bool` found enum `Option<()>` note: required by a bound in `call` --> $DIR/dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:3:25 | LL | fn call(_: impl Fn() -> bool) {} | ^^^^ required by this bound in `call` ``` ``` error[E0271]: expected `{closure@f670.rs:28:13}` to be a closure that returns `Result<(), _>`, but it returns `!` --> f670.rs:28:20 | 28 | let c = |e| -> ! { | -------^ | | | expected `Result<(), _>`, found `!` ... 32 | f().or_else(c); | ------- required by a bound introduced by this call -Ztrack-diagnostics: created at compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/error_reporting/traits/fulfillment_errors.rs:1433:28 | = note: expected enum `Result<(), _>` found type `!` note: required by a bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else` --> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/result.rs:1406:39 | 1406 | pub fn or_else<F, O: FnOnce(E) -> Result<T, F>>(self, op: O) -> Result<T, F> { | ^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else` ```
2025-01-30Auto merge of #136038 - compiler-errors:outlives, r=lcnrbors-51/+27
Simplify and consolidate the way we handle construct `OutlivesEnvironment` for lexical region resolution This is best reviewed commit-by-commit. I tried to consolidate the API for lexical region resolution *first*, then change the API when it was finally behind a single surface. r? lcnr or reassign
2025-01-29Eliminate PatKind::PathOli Scherer-1/+0
2025-01-28Make item self/non-self bound naming less whackMichael Goulet-1/+1
2025-01-28Move outlives env computation into methodsMichael Goulet-7/+10
2025-01-28Consolidate OutlivesEnv construction with resolve_regionsMichael Goulet-46/+19
2025-01-27Use identifiers in diagnostics more oftenMichael Goulet-3/+3
2025-01-23`visit_x_unambig`Boxy-1/+1
2025-01-23Split hir `TyKind` and `ConstArgKind` in two and update `hir::Visitor`Boxy-8/+8
2025-01-21Auto merge of #134299 - RalfJung:remove-start, r=compiler-errorsbors-82/+1
remove support for the (unstable) #[start] attribute As explained by `@Noratrieb:` `#[start]` should be deleted. It's nothing but an accidentally leaked implementation detail that's a not very useful mix between "portable" entrypoint logic and bad abstraction. I think the way the stable user-facing entrypoint should work (and works today on stable) is pretty simple: - `std`-using cross-platform programs should use `fn main()`. the compiler, together with `std`, will then ensure that code ends up at `main` (by having a platform-specific entrypoint that gets directed through `lang_start` in `std` to `main` - but that's just an implementation detail) - `no_std` platform-specific programs should use `#![no_main]` and define their own platform-specific entrypoint symbol with `#[no_mangle]`, like `main`, `_start`, `WinMain` or `my_embedded_platform_wants_to_start_here`. most of them only support a single platform anyways, and need cfg for the different platform's ways of passing arguments or other things *anyways* `#[start]` is in a super weird position of being neither of those two. It tries to pretend that it's cross-platform, but its signature is a total lie. Those arguments are just stubbed out to zero on ~~Windows~~ wasm, for example. It also only handles the platform-specific entrypoints for a few platforms that are supported by `std`, like Windows or Unix-likes. `my_embedded_platform_wants_to_start_here` can't use it, and neither could a libc-less Linux program. So we have an attribute that only works in some cases anyways, that has a signature that's a total lie (and a signature that, as I might want to add, has changed recently, and that I definitely would not be comfortable giving *any* stability guarantees on), and where there's a pretty easy way to get things working without it in the first place. Note that this feature has **not** been RFCed in the first place. *This comment was posted [in May](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29633#issuecomment-2088596042) and so far nobody spoke up in that issue with a usecase that would require keeping the attribute.* Closes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/29633 try-job: x86_64-gnu-nopt try-job: x86_64-msvc-1 try-job: x86_64-msvc-2 try-job: test-various
2025-01-21remove support for the #[start] attributeRalf Jung-82/+1
2025-01-17remove unnecessary assertion for reference erroryukang-1/+0
2025-01-13rm unnecessary `OpaqueTypeDecl` wrapperlcnr-3/+3
2025-01-12Rollup merge of #135378 - compiler-errors:unnecessary-stashing, r=chenyukangMatthias Krüger-1/+1
Remove a bunch of diagnostic stashing that doesn't do anything #121669 removed a bunch of conditional diagnostic stashing/canceling, but left around the `steal` calls which just emitted the error eagerly instead of canceling the diagnostic. I think that these no-op `steal` calls don't do much and are confusing to encounter, so let's remove them. The net effect is: 1. We emit more duplicated errors, since stashing has the side effect of duplicating diagnostics. This is not a big deal, since outside of `-Zdeduplicate-diagnostics=no`, the errors are already being deduplicated by the compiler. 2. It changes the order of diagnostics, since we're no longer stashing and then later stealing the errors. I don't think this matters much for the changes that the UI test suite manifests, and it makes these errors less order dependent.
2025-01-11Remove a bunch of diagnostic stashing that doesn't do anythingMichael Goulet-1/+1
2025-01-11rename `BitSet` to `DenseBitSet`Rémy Rakic-2/+2
This should make it clearer that this bitset is dense, with the advantages and disadvantages that it entails.
2025-01-09Rename RegionResolutionVisitor to ScopeResolutionVisitorMichael Goulet-12/+12
2025-01-09Make sure to walk into nested const blocks in RegionResolutionVisitorMichael Goulet-4/+8
2025-01-09Rollup merge of #135269 - estebank:unneeded-into, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-1/+1
Remove some unnecessary `.into()` calls
2025-01-08Remove some unnecessary `.into()` callsEsteban Küber-1/+1
2025-01-08Rename PatKind::Lit to ExprOli Scherer-1/+1
2025-01-07Rollup merge of #134989 - max-niederman:guard-patterns-hir, r=oli-obkMatthias Krüger-1/+4
Lower Guard Patterns to HIR. Implements lowering of [guard patterns](https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/3637-guard-patterns.html) (see the [tracking issue](#129967)) to HIR.
2025-01-06Rollup merge of #134742 - compiler-errors:post-borrowck-analysis, r=lcnrMatthias Krüger-8/+15
Use `PostBorrowckAnalysis` in `check_coroutine_obligations` This currently errors with: ``` error: concrete type differs from previous defining opaque type use --> tests/ui/coroutine/issue-52304.rs:10:21 | 10 | pub fn example() -> impl Coroutine { | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `{example::{closure#0} upvar_tys=() resume_ty=() yield_ty=&'{erased} i32 return_ty=() witness={example::{closure#0}}}`, got `{example::{closure#0} upvar_tys=() resume_ty=() yield_ty=&'static i32 return_ty=() witness={example::{closure#0}}}` | = note: previous use here ``` This is because we end up redefining the opaque in `check_coroutine_obligations` but with the `yield_ty = &'erased i32` from hir typeck, which causes the *equality* check for opaques to fail. The coroutine obligtions in question (when `-Znext-solver` is enabled) are: ``` Binder { value: TraitPredicate(<Opaque(DefId(0:5 ~ issue_52304[4c6d]::example::{opaque#0}), []) as std::marker::Sized>, polarity:Positive), bound_vars: [] } Binder { value: AliasRelate(Term::Ty(Alias(Opaque, AliasTy { args: [], def_id: DefId(0:5 ~ issue_52304[4c6d]::example::{opaque#0}), .. })), Equate, Term::Ty(Coroutine(DefId(0:6 ~ issue_52304[4c6d]::example::{closure#0}), [(), (), &'{erased} i32, (), CoroutineWitness(DefId(0:6 ~ issue_52304[4c6d]::example::{closure#0}), []), ()]))), bound_vars: [] } Binder { value: AliasRelate(Term::Ty(Coroutine(DefId(0:6 ~ issue_52304[4c6d]::example::{closure#0}), [(), (), &'{erased} i32, (), CoroutineWitness(DefId(0:6 ~ issue_52304[4c6d]::example::{closure#0}), []), ()])), Subtype, Term::Ty(Alias(Opaque, AliasTy { args: [], def_id: DefId(0:5 ~ issue_52304[4c6d]::example::{opaque#0}), .. }))), bound_vars: [] } ``` Ignoring the fact that we end up stalling some really dumb obligations here (lol), I think it makes more sense for us to be using post borrowck analysis for this check anyways. r? lcnr
2025-01-04Rollup merge of #135046 - RalfJung:rustc_box_intrinsic, r=compiler-errorsJubilee-0/+3
turn rustc_box into an intrinsic I am not entirely sure why this was made a special magic attribute, but an intrinsic seems like a more natural way to add magic expressions to the language.
2025-01-04Auto merge of #135031 - RalfJung:intrinsics-without-body, r=oli-obkbors-6/+6
rustc_intrinsic: support functions without body We synthesize a HIR body `loop {}` but such bodyless intrinsics. Most of the diff is due to turning `ItemKind::Fn` into a brace (named-field) enum variant, because it carries a `bool`-typed field now. This is to remember whether the function has a body. MIR building panics to avoid ever translating the fake `loop {}` body, and the intrinsic logic uses the lack of a body to implicitly mark that intrinsic as must-be-overridden. I first tried actually having no body rather than generating the fake body, but there's a *lot* of code that assumes that all function items have HIR and MIR, so this didn't work very well. Then I noticed that even `rustc_intrinsic_must_be_overridden` intrinsics have MIR generated (they are filled with an `Unreachable` terminator) so I guess I am not the first to discover this. ;) r? `@oli-obk`
2025-01-04turn hir::ItemKind::Fn into a named-field variantRalf Jung-6/+6