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2025-02-12Auto merge of #135994 - 1c3t3a:rename-unsafe-ptr, r=oli-obkbors-2/+2
Rename rustc_middle::Ty::is_unsafe_ptr to is_raw_ptr The wording unsafe pointer is less common and not mentioned in a lot of places, instead this is usually called a "raw pointer". For the sake of uniformity, we rename this method. This came up during the review of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134424. r? `@Noratrieb`
2025-02-10compiler: die immediately instead of handling unknown target codegenJubilee Young-7/+0
We cannot produce anything useful if asked to compile unknown targets. We should handle the error immediately at the point of discovery instead of propagating it upward, and preferably in the simplest way: Die. This allows cleaning up our "error-handling" spread across 5 crates.
2025-02-10Rename rustc_middle::Ty::is_unsafe_ptr to is_raw_ptrBastian Kersting-2/+2
The wording unsafe pointer is less common and not mentioned in a lot of places, instead this is usually called a "raw pointer". For the sake of uniformity, we rename this method. This came up during the review of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134424.
2025-02-08Rustfmtbjorn3-4/+5
2025-01-31Auto merge of #135318 - compiler-errors:vtable-fixes, r=lcnrbors-1/+6
Fix deduplication mismatches in vtables leading to upcasting unsoundness We currently have two cases where subtleties in supertraits can trigger disagreements in the vtable layout, e.g. leading to a different vtable layout being accessed at a callsite compared to what was prepared during unsizing. Namely: ### #135315 In this example, we were not normalizing supertraits when preparing vtables. In the example, ``` trait Supertrait<T> { fn _print_numbers(&self, mem: &[usize; 100]) { println!("{mem:?}"); } } impl<T> Supertrait<T> for () {} trait Identity { type Selff; } impl<Selff> Identity for Selff { type Selff = Selff; } trait Middle<T>: Supertrait<()> + Supertrait<T> { fn say_hello(&self, _: &usize) { println!("Hello!"); } } impl<T> Middle<T> for () {} trait Trait: Middle<<() as Identity>::Selff> {} impl Trait for () {} fn main() { (&() as &dyn Trait as &dyn Middle<()>).say_hello(&0); } ``` When we prepare `dyn Trait`, we see a supertrait of `Middle<<() as Identity>::Selff>`, which itself has two supertraits `Supertrait<()>` and `Supertrait<<() as Identity>::Selff>`. These two supertraits are identical, but they are not duplicated because we were using structural equality and *not* considering normalization. This leads to a vtable layout with two trait pointers. When we upcast to `dyn Middle<()>`, those two supertraits are now the same, leading to a vtable layout with only one trait pointer. This leads to an offset error, and we call the wrong method. ### #135316 This one is a bit more interesting, and is the bulk of the changes in this PR. It's a bit similar, except it uses binder equality instead of normalization to make the compiler get confused about two vtable layouts. In the example, ``` trait Supertrait<T> { fn _print_numbers(&self, mem: &[usize; 100]) { println!("{mem:?}"); } } impl<T> Supertrait<T> for () {} trait Trait<T, U>: Supertrait<T> + Supertrait<U> { fn say_hello(&self, _: &usize) { println!("Hello!"); } } impl<T, U> Trait<T, U> for () {} fn main() { (&() as &'static dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()> as &'static dyn Trait<&'static (), &'static ()>) .say_hello(&0); } ``` When we prepare the vtable for `dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>`, we currently consider the PolyTraitRef of the vtable as the key for a supertrait. This leads two two supertraits -- `Supertrait<&'static ()>` and `for<'a> Supertrait<&'a ()>`. However, we can upcast[^up] without offsetting the vtable from `dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>` to `dyn Trait<&'static (), &'static ()>`. This is just instantiating the principal trait ref for a specific `'a = 'static`. However, when considering those supertraits, we now have only one distinct supertrait -- `Supertrait<&'static ()>` (which is deduplicated since there are two supertraits with the same substitutions). This leads to similar offsetting issues, leading to the wrong method being called. [^up]: I say upcast but this is a cast that is allowed on stable, since it's not changing the vtable at all, just instantiating the binder of the principal trait ref for some lifetime. The solution here is to recognize that a vtable isn't really meaningfully higher ranked, and to just treat a vtable as corresponding to a `TraitRef` so we can do this deduplication more faithfully. That is to say, the vtable for `dyn for<'a> Tr<'a>` and `dyn Tr<'x>` are always identical, since they both would correspond to a set of free regions on an impl... Do note that `Tr<for<'a> fn(&'a ())>` and `Tr<fn(&'static ())>` are still distinct. ---- There's a bit more that can be cleaned up. In codegen, we can stop using `PolyExistentialTraitRef` basically everywhere. We can also fix SMIR to stop storing `PolyExistentialTraitRef` in its vtable allocations. As for testing, it's difficult to actually turn this into something that can be tested with `rustc_dump_vtable`, since having multiple supertraits that are identical is a recipe for ambiguity errors. Maybe someone else is more creative with getting that attr to work, since the tests I added being run-pass tests is a bit unsatisfying. Miri also doesn't help here, since it doesn't really generate vtables that are offset by an index in the same way as codegen. r? `@lcnr` for the vibe check? Or reassign, idk. Maybe let's talk about whether this makes sense. <sup>(I guess an alternative would also be to not do any deduplication of vtable supertraits (or only a really conservative subset) rather than trying to normalize and deduplicate more faithfully here. Not sure if that works and is sufficient tho.)</sup> cc `@steffahn` -- ty for the minimizations cc `@WaffleLapkin` -- since you're overseeing the feature stabilization :3 Fixes #135315 Fixes #135316
2025-01-30Do not treat vtable supertraits as distinct when bound with different bound varsMichael Goulet-1/+6
2025-01-29Allow transmuting generic pattern types to and from their baseOli Scherer-0/+3
2025-01-27Add `TooGeneric` variant to `LayoutError` and emit `Unknown` oneFedericoBruzzone-4/+10
- `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
2025-01-17Auto merge of #135047 - Flakebi:amdgpu-kernel-cc, r=workingjubileebors-0/+1
Add gpu-kernel calling convention The amdgpu-kernel calling convention was reverted in commit f6b21e90d1ec01081bc2619efb68af6788a63d65 (#120495 and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/pull/16463) due to inactivity in the amdgpu target. Introduce a `gpu-kernel` calling convention that translates to `ptx_kernel` or `amdgpu_kernel`, depending on the target that rust compiles for. Tracking issue: #135467 amdgpu target tracking issue: #135024
2025-01-16Add gpu-kernel calling conventionFlakebi-0/+1
The amdgpu-kernel calling convention was reverted in commit f6b21e90d1ec01081bc2619efb68af6788a63d65 due to inactivity in the amdgpu target. Introduce a `gpu-kernel` calling convention that translates to `ptx_kernel` or `amdgpu_kernel`, depending on the target that rust compiles for.
2025-01-10Foo<T> != Foo<U> under layout randomizationThe 8472-0/+1
previously field ordering was using the same seed for all instances of Foo, now we pass seed values through the layout tree so that not only the struct itself affects layout but also its fields
2024-12-22Begin to implement type system layer of unsafe bindersMichael Goulet-0/+5
2024-12-18make no-variant types a dedicated Variants variantRalf Jung-12/+12
2024-12-18Variants::Single: do not use invalid VariantIdx for uninhabited enumsRalf Jung-5/+8
2024-12-18Re-export more `rustc_span::symbol` things from `rustc_span`.Nicholas Nethercote-2/+1
`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.
2024-12-02rust_for_linux: -Zreg-struct-return commandline flag for X86 (#116973)Andrew Zhogin-1/+4
2024-11-23remove remaining references to `Reveal`lcnr-2/+2
2024-11-19move `fn is_item_raw` to `TypingEnv`lcnr-7/+7
2024-11-18use `TypingEnv` when no `infcx` is availablelcnr-52/+63
the behavior of the type system not only depends on the current assumptions, but also the currentnphase of the compiler. This is mostly necessary as we need to decide whether and how to reveal opaque types. We track this via the `TypingMode`.
2024-11-08pointee_info_at: fix logic for recursing into enumsRalf Jung-11/+27
2024-11-03compiler: Directly use rustc_abi in metadata and middleJubilee Young-29/+25
Stop reexporting ReprOptions from middle::ty
2024-10-29compiler: `rustc_abi::Abi` => `BackendRepr`Jubilee Young-3/+4
The initial naming of "Abi" was an awful mistake, conveying wrong ideas about how psABIs worked and even more about what the enum meant. It was only meant to represent the way the value would be described to a codegen backend as it was lowered to that intermediate representation. It was never meant to mean anything about the actual psABI handling! The conflation is because LLVM typically will associate a certain form with a certain ABI, but even that does not hold when the special cases that actually exist arise, plus the IR annotations that modify the ABI. Reframe `rustc_abi::Abi` as the `BackendRepr` of the type, and rename `BackendRepr::Aggregate` as `BackendRepr::Memory`. Unfortunately, due to the persistent misunderstandings, this too is now incorrect: - Scattered ABI-relevant code is entangled with BackendRepr - We do not always pre-compute a correct BackendRepr that reflects how we "actually" want this value to be handled, so we leave the backend interface to also inject various special-cases here - In some cases `BackendRepr::Memory` is a "real" aggregate, but in others it is in fact using memory, and in some cases it is a scalar! Our rustc-to-backend lowering code handles this sort of thing right now. That will eventually be addressed by lifting duplicated lowering code to either rustc_codegen_ssa or rustc_target as appropriate.
2024-10-28Rollup merge of #132255 - workingjubilee:layout-is-🏚️, r=compiler-errorsJubilee-1/+1
Add `LayoutS::is_uninhabited` and use it Use accessors for the things that accessors are good at: reducing everyone's need to be nosy and peek at the internals of every data structure.
2024-10-28compiler: Add `is_uninhabited` and use LayoutS accessorsJubilee Young-1/+1
This reduces the need of the compiler to peek on the fields of LayoutS.
2024-10-27compiler: Rename LayoutS to LayoutDataJubilee Young-3/+3
The last {UninternedType}S is in captivity. The galaxy is at peace.
2024-10-23nightly feature tracking: get rid of the per-feature bool fieldsRalf Jung-1/+1
2024-10-21Rollup merge of #130432 - azhogin:azhogin/regparm, r=workingjubilee,pnkfelixJubilee-1/+15
rust_for_linux: -Zregparm=<N> commandline flag for X86 (#116972) Command line flag `-Zregparm=<N>` for X86 (32-bit) for rust-for-linux: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/116972 Implemented in the similar way as fastcall/vectorcall support (args are marked InReg if fit).
2024-10-19Get rid of const eval_* and try_eval_* helpersMichael Goulet-1/+1
2024-10-18rust_for_linux: -Zregparm=<N> commandline flag for X86 (#116972)Andrew Zhogin-1/+15
2024-10-08compiler: Factor rustc_target::abi::* out of middle::ty::layoutJubilee Young-7/+17
2024-10-04Use wide pointers consistenly across the compilerUrgau-7/+7
2024-09-22Reformat using the new identifier sorting from rustfmtMichael Goulet-9/+8
2024-09-21Rollup merge of #127766 - folkertdev:c-cmse-nonsecure-entry, r=jackh726Michael Goulet-0/+1
add `extern "C-cmse-nonsecure-entry" fn` tracking issue #75835 in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/75835#issuecomment-1183517255 it was decided that using an abi, rather than an attribute, was the right way to go for this feature. This PR adds that ABI and removes the `#[cmse_nonsecure_entry]` attribute. All relevant tests have been updated, some are now obsolete and have been removed. Error 0775 is no longer generated. It contains the list of targets that support the CMSE feature, and maybe we want to still use this? right now a generic "this abi is not supported on this platform" error is returned when this abi is used on an unsupported platform. On the other hand, users of this abi are likely to be experienced rust users, so maybe the generic error is good enough.
2024-09-21add `C-cmse-nonsecure-entry` ABIFolkert de Vries-0/+1
2024-09-20TL note: current means targetJubilee Young-1/+1
2024-09-18Rollup merge of #130457 - nnethercote:cleanup-codegen-traits, r=bjorn3Matthias Krüger-2/+2
Cleanup codegen traits The traits governing codegen are quite complicated and hard to follow. This PR cleans them up a bit. r? `@bjorn3`
2024-09-17Use associative type defaults in `{Layout,FnAbi}OfHelpers`.Nicholas Nethercote-2/+2
This avoids some repetitive boilerplate code.
2024-09-16layout computation: eagerly error for unexpected unsized fieldsLukas Markeffsky-17/+10
2024-09-16make `LayoutCx` not genericLukas Markeffsky-28/+9
2024-09-11Simplify some nested if statementsMichael Goulet-4/+4
2024-09-06Make `Ty::boxed_ty` return an `Option`Pavel Grigorenko-2/+4
2024-08-25Avoid taking reference of &TyKindMichael Goulet-1/+1
2024-08-14Auto merge of #128812 - nnethercote:shrink-TyKind-FnPtr, r=compiler-errorsbors-4/+6
Shrink `TyKind::FnPtr`. By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and `FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms. This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI. r? `@compiler-errors`
2024-08-12Avoid a `FnPtr` deconstruct-and-recreate.Nicholas Nethercote-4/+5
2024-08-11Rename normalization functions to rawMichael Goulet-1/+1
2024-08-09Shrink `TyKind::FnPtr`.Nicholas Nethercote-2/+3
By splitting the `FnSig` within `TyKind::FnPtr` into `FnSigTys` and `FnHeader`, which can be packed more efficiently. This reduces the size of the hot `TyKind` type from 32 bytes to 24 bytes on 64-bit platforms. This reduces peak memory usage by a few percent on some benchmarks. It also reduces cache misses and page faults similarly, though this doesn't translate to clear cycles or wall-time improvements on CI.
2024-08-08Rename struct_tail_erasing_lifetimes to struct_tail_for_codegenMichael Goulet-2/+2
2024-07-29Reformat `use` declarations.Nicholas Nethercote-15/+16
The previous commit updated `rustfmt.toml` appropriately. This commit is the outcome of running `x fmt --all` with the new formatting options.
2024-07-11Remove extern "wasm" ABINikita Popov-1/+0
Remove the unstable `extern "wasm"` ABI (`wasm_abi` feature tracked in #83788). As discussed in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127513#issuecomment-2220410679 and following, this ABI is a failed experiment that did not end up being used for anything. Keeping support for this ABI in LLVM 19 would require us to switch wasm targets to the `experimental-mv` ABI, which we do not want to do. It should be noted that `Abi::Wasm` was internally used for two things: The `-Z wasm-c-abi=legacy` ABI that is still used by default on some wasm targets, and the `extern "wasm"` ABI. Despite both being `Abi::Wasm` internally, they were not the same. An explicit `extern "wasm"` additionally enabled the `+multivalue` feature. I've opted to remove `Abi::Wasm` in this patch entirely, instead of keeping it as an ABI with only internal usage. Both `-Z wasm-c-abi` variants are now treated as part of the normal C ABI, just with different different treatment in adjust_for_foreign_abi.
2024-06-25Auto merge of #125740 - RalfJung:transmute-size-check, r=oli-obkbors-8/+17
transmute size check: properly account for alignment Fixes another place where ZST alignment was ignored when checking whether something is a newtype. I wonder how many more of these there are... Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101084