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2025-01-31Remove unnecessary builders.Nicholas Nethercote-193/+139
`delegation.rs` has three builders: `GenericsBuilder`, `PredicatesBuilder`, and `GenericArgsBuilder`. The first two builders have just two optional parameters, and the third one has zero. Each builder is used within a single function. The code is over-engineered. This commit removes the builders, replacing each with with a single `build_*` function. This makes the code shorter and simpler.
2025-01-31Format `delegation.rs` better.Nicholas Nethercote-22/+15
There is a comment `Delegation to inherent methods is not yet supported.` that appears three times mid-pattern and somehow inhibits rustfmt from formatting the enclosing `match` statement. This commit moves them to the top of the pattern, which enables more formatting.
2025-01-31Merge two identical match arms.Nicholas Nethercote-7/+2
Note: `inherit_predicates_for_delegation_item` already has these cases merged.
2025-01-31Remove an out-of-date `FIXME` comment.Nicholas Nethercote-5/+4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.
2025-01-31Merge two `match` arms that are identical.Nicholas Nethercote-11/+6
Also rewrite the merged arm slightly to more closely match the arm above it.
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.
2025-01-30Filter out RPITITs when suggesting unconstrained assoc type on too many genericsMichael Goulet-0/+1
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` ```
2025-01-30Do not treat vtable supertraits as distinct when bound with different bound varsMichael Goulet-2/+2
2025-01-30Rework rustc_dump_vtableMichael Goulet-6/+89
2025-01-30Auto merge of #136038 - compiler-errors:outlives, r=lcnrbors-62/+31
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
2025-01-30Remove `NamedVarMap`.Nicholas Nethercote-68/+26
`NamedVarMap` is extremely similar to `ResolveBoundVars`. The former contains two `UnordMap<ItemLocalId, T>` fields (obscured behind `ItemLocalMap` typedefs). The latter contains two `SortedMap<ItemLocalId, T>` fields. We construct a `NamedVarMap` and then convert it into a `ResolveBoundVars` by sorting the `UnordMap`s, which is unnecessary busywork. This commit removes `NamedVarMap` and constructs a `ResolveBoundVars` directly. `SortedMap` and `NamedVarMap` have slightly different perf characteristics during construction (e.g. speed of insertion) but this code isn't hot enough for that to matter. A few details to note. - A `FIXME` comment is removed. - The detailed comments on the fields of `NamedVarMap` are copied to `ResolveBoundVars` (which has a single, incorrect comment). - `BoundVarContext::map` is renamed. - `ResolveBoundVars` gets a derived `Default` impl.
2025-01-29Eliminate PatKind::PathOli Scherer-3/+2
2025-01-28Make item self/non-self bound naming less whackMichael Goulet-14/+13
2025-01-28Move outlives env computation into methodsMichael Goulet-7/+10
2025-01-28Consolidate OutlivesEnv construction with resolve_regionsMichael Goulet-57/+23
2025-01-27Rollup merge of #136114 - compiler-errors:more-idents, r=jieyouxuGuillaume Gomez-34/+33
Use identifiers more in diagnostics code This should make the diagnostics code slightly more correct when rendering idents in mixed crate edition situations. Kinda a no-op, but a cleanup regardless. r? oli-obk or reassign
2025-01-27Remove redundant to_ident_string callsMichael Goulet-1/+1
2025-01-27Use identifiers in diagnostics more oftenMichael Goulet-33/+32
2025-01-27Add `TooGeneric` variant to `LayoutError` and emit `Unknown` oneFedericoBruzzone-2/+6
- `check-pass` test for a MRE of #135020 - fail test for #135138 - switch to `TooGeneric` for checking CMSE fn signatures - switch to `TooGeneric` for compute `SizeSkeleton` (for transmute) - fix broken tests
2025-01-26Compiler: Finalize dyn compatibility renamingLeón Orell Valerian Liehr-2/+1
2025-01-25Rollup merge of #135951 - yotamofek:use-debug-helpers, r=SparrowLiiJacob Pratt-32/+31
Use `fmt::from_fn` in more places in the compiler Use the unstable functions from #117729 in more places in the compiler, follow up to #135494
2025-01-25Rollup merge of #135971 - compiler-errors:self-projection, r=fmeaseMatthias Krüger-7/+1
Properly report error when object type param default references self I accidentally broke this error for cases where a type parameter references `Self` via a projection (i.e. `trait Foo<Arg = Self::Bar> {}`). This PR fixes that, and also makes the error a bit easier to understand. Fixes #135918
2025-01-24use `fmt::from_fn` in more places, instead of using structs that impl ↵Yotam Ofek-32/+31
formatting traits
2025-01-24Auto merge of #135272 - BoxyUwU:generic_arg_infer_reliability_2, ↵bors-103/+107
r=compiler-errors Forbid usage of `hir` `Infer` const/ty variants in ambiguous contexts The feature `generic_arg_infer` allows providing `_` as an argument to const generics in order to infer them. This introduces a syntactic ambiguity as to whether generic arguments are type or const arguments. In order to get around this we introduced a fourth `GenericArg` variant, `Infer` used to represent `_` as an argument to generic parameters when we don't know if its a type or a const argument. This made hir visitors that care about `TyKind::Infer` or `ConstArgKind::Infer` very error prone as checking for `TyKind::Infer`s in `visit_ty` would find *some* type infer arguments but not *all* of them as they would sometimes be lowered to `GenericArg::Infer` instead. Additionally the `visit_infer` method would previously only visit `GenericArg::Infer` not *all* infers (e.g. `TyKind::Infer`), this made it very easy to override `visit_infer` and expect it to visit all infers when in reality it would only visit *some* infers. --- This PR aims to fix those issues by making the `TyKind` and `ConstArgKind` types generic over whether the infer types/consts are represented by `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` or out of line (e.g. by a `GenericArg::Infer` or accessible by overiding `visit_infer`). We then make HIR Visitors convert all const args and types to the versions where infer vars are stored out of line and call `visit_infer` in cases where a `Ty`/`Const` would previously have had a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` variant: API Summary ```rust enum AmbigArg {} enum Ty/ConstArgKind<Unambig = ()> { ... Infer(Unambig), } impl Ty/ConstArg { fn try_as_ambig_ty/ct(self) -> Option<Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>>; } impl Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg> { fn as_unambig_ty/ct(self) -> Ty/ConstArg; } enum InferKind { Ty(Ty), Const(ConstArg), Ambig(InferArg), } trait Visitor { ... fn visit_ty/const_arg(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result; fn visit_infer(&mut self, id: HirId, sp: Span, kind: InferKind) -> Self::Result; } // blanket impl'd, not meant to be overriden trait VisitorExt { fn visit_ty/const_arg_unambig(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result; } fn walk_unambig_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result; fn walk_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result; ``` The end result is that `visit_infer` visits *all* infer args and is also the *only* way to visit an infer arg, `visit_ty` and `visit_const_arg` can now no longer encounter a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer`. Representing this in the type system means that it is now very difficult to mess things up, either accessing `TyKind::Infer` "just works" and you won't miss *some* type infers- or it doesn't work and you have to look at `visit_infer` or some `GenericArg::Infer` which forces you to think about the full complexity involved. Unfortunately there is no lint right now about explicitly matching on uninhabited variants, I can't find the context for why this is the case :woman_shrugging: I'm not convinced the framing of un/ambig ty/consts is necessarily the right one but I'm not sure what would be better. I somewhat like calling them full/partial types based on the fact that `Ty<Partial>`/`Ty<Full>` directly specifies how many of the type kinds are actually represented compared to `Ty<Ambig>` which which leaves that to the reader to figure out based on the logical consequences of it the type being in an ambiguous position. --- tool changes have been modified in their own commits for easier reviewing by anyone getting cc'd from subtree changes. I also attempted to split out "bug fixes arising from the refactoring" into their own commit so they arent lumped in with a big general refactor commit Fixes #112110
2025-01-24Rollup merge of #135865 - zachs18:maybe_report_similar_assoc_fn_more, ↵Matthias Krüger-6/+14
r=compiler-errors For E0223, suggest associated functions that are similar to the path, even if the base type has multiple inherent impl blocks. Currently, the "help: there is an associated function with a similar name `from_utf8`" suggestion for `String::from::utf8` is only given if `String` has exactly one inherent `impl` item. This PR makes the suggestion be emitted even if the base type has multiple inherent `impl` items. Example: ```rust struct Foo; impl Foo { fn bar_baz() {} } impl Foo {} // load-bearing fn main() { Foo::bar::baz; } ``` Nightly/stable output: ```rust error[E0223]: ambiguous associated type --> f.rs:7:5 | 7 | Foo::bar::baz; | ^^^^^^^^ | help: if there were a trait named `Example` with associated type `bar` implemented for `Foo`, you could use the fully-qualified path | 7 | <Foo as Example>::bar::baz; | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ error: aborting due to 1 previous error For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0223`. ``` Output with this PR, or without the load-bearing empty impl on nightly/stable: ```rust error[E0223]: ambiguous associated type --> f.rs:7:5 | 7 | Foo::bar::baz; | ^^^^^^^^ | help: there is an associated function with a similar name: `bar_baz` | 7 | Foo::bar_baz; | ~~~~~~~ error: aborting due to 1 previous error For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0223`. ``` Ideally, this suggestion would also work for non-ADT types like ~~`str::char::indices`~~ (edit: latest commit makes this work with primitives) or `<dyn Any>::downcast::mut_unchecked`, but that seemed to be a harder change. `@rustbot` label +A-diagnostics
2025-01-24Properly report error when object type param default references selfMichael Goulet-7/+1
2025-01-23`visit_x_unambig`Boxy-22/+22
2025-01-23Semantic changes from new hir representationBoxy-39/+28
Always lower to `GenericArg::Infer` Update `PlaceholderCollector` Update closure lifetime binder infer var visitor Fallback visitor handle ambig infer args Ensure type infer args have their type recorded
2025-01-23Split hir `TyKind` and `ConstArgKind` in two and update `hir::Visitor`Boxy-57/+64
2025-01-23Make `hir::TyKind::TraitObject` use tagged ptrBoxy-7/+15
2025-01-22Rollup merge of #135816 - BoxyUwU:root_normalizes_to_goal_ice, r=lcnrMatthias Krüger-5/+5
Use `structurally_normalize` instead of manual `normalizes-to` goals in alias relate errors r? `@lcnr` I added `structurally_normalize_term` so that code that is generic over ty or const can use the structurally normalize helpers. See `tests/ui/traits/next-solver/diagnostics/alias_relate_error_uses_structurally_normalize.rs` for a description of the reason for the (now fixed) ICEs
2025-01-22Refactor dyn-compatibility error and suggestionsTaylor Cramer-1/+1
This CL makes a number of small changes to dyn compatibility errors: - "object safety" has been renamed to "dyn-compatibility" throughout - "Convert to enum" suggestions are no longer generated when there exists a type-generic impl of the trait or an impl for `dyn OtherTrait` - Several error messages are reorganized for user readability Additionally, the dyn compatibility error creation code has been split out into functions. cc #132713 cc #133267
2025-01-22Also check for associated fns on primitives in E0223 similar-path check.Zachary S-3/+9
2025-01-22For E0223, suggest associated functions that are similar to the path, even ↵Zachary S-4/+6
if there are multiple inherent impls to check.
2025-01-22Rename `structurally_normalize` to `structurally_normalize_ty`Boxy-5/+5
2025-01-21Rollup merge of #135706 - compiler-errors:elaborate, r=lcnrMatthias Krüger-1/+2
Move `supertrait_def_ids` into the elaborate module like all other fns It's strange that this is the only elaborate-like fn on tcx. r? lcnr
2025-01-21Auto merge of #134299 - RalfJung:remove-start, r=compiler-errorsbors-124/+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
2025-01-21Move supertrait_def_ids into the elaborate module like all other fnsMichael Goulet-1/+2
2025-01-21remove support for the #[start] attributeRalf Jung-124/+1
2025-01-21Auto merge of #133830 - compiler-errors:span-key, r=lcnrbors-138/+115
Rework dyn trait lowering to stop being so intertwined with trait alias expansion This PR reworks the trait object lowering code to stop handling trait aliases so funky, and removes the `TraitAliasExpander` in favor of a much simpler design. This refactoring is important for making the code that I'm writing in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133397 understandable and easy to maintain, so the diagnostics regressions are IMO inevitable. In the old trait object lowering code, we used to be a bit sloppy with the lists of traits in their unexpanded and expanded forms. This PR largely rewrites this logic to expand the trait aliases *once* and handle them more responsibly throughout afterwards. Please review this with whitespace disabled. r? lcnr
2025-01-17remove unnecessary assertion for reference erroryukang-1/+0
2025-01-16Auto merge of #134504 - oli-obk:push-rltsvnyttwll, r=compiler-errorsbors-1/+1
Use trait definition cycle detection for trait alias definitions, too fixes #133901 In general doing this for `All` is not right, but this code path is specifically for traits and trait aliases, and there we only ever use `All` for trait aliases.
2025-01-15Auto merge of #134353 - oli-obk:safe-target-feature-unsafe-by-default, ↵bors-6/+11
r=wesleywiser Treat safe target_feature functions as unsafe by default [less invasive variant] This unblocks * #134090 As I stated in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134090#issuecomment-2541332415 I think the previous impl was too easy to get wrong, as by default it treated safe target feature functions as safe and had to add additional checks for when they weren't. Now the logic is inverted. By default they are unsafe and you have to explicitly handle safe target feature functions. This is the less (imo) invasive variant of #134317, as it doesn't require changing the Safety enum, so it only affects FnDefs and nothing else, as it should.
2025-01-14Rollup merge of #135228 - compiler-errors:normalizes-ur-dispatch, r=BoxyUwUJubilee-8/+34
Improve `DispatchFromDyn` and `CoerceUnsized` impl validation * Disallow arbitrary 1-ZST fields in `DispatchFromDyn` -- only `PhantomData`, and 1-ZSTs that mention no params (which is needed to support, e.g., the `Global` alloctor in `Box<T, U = Global>`). * Don't allow coercing between non-ZSTs to ZSTs (since the previous check wasn't actually checking the field tys were the same before checking the layout...) * Normalize the field before checking it's `PhantomData`. Fixes #135215 Fixes #135214 Fixes #135220 r? ```@BoxyUwU``` or reassign
2025-01-15Rework trait expansion to happen once explicitlyMichael Goulet-138/+115
2025-01-14Normalize field before checking PhantomData in coerce/dispatch impl validationMichael Goulet-3/+20
2025-01-14Auto merge of #135278 - tgross35:ignore-std-dep-crates, r=SparrowLiibors-1/+1
Exclude dependencies of `std` for diagnostics Currently crates in the sysroot can show up in diagnostic suggestions, such as in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135232. To prevent this, duplicate `all_traits` into `visible_traits` which only shows traits in non-private crates. Setting `#![feature(rustc_private)]` overrides this and makes items in private crates visible as well, since `rustc_private` enables use of `std`'s private dependencies. This may be reviewed per-commit. Fixes: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/135232