about summary refs log tree commit diff
path: root/compiler/rustc_mir_build/src
AgeCommit message (Collapse)AuthorLines
2025-03-10Allow int literals for pattern types with int base typesOli Scherer-1/+6
2025-03-09Explain weird quirk in user type annotation loweringMichael Goulet-3/+23
2025-03-09Rollup merge of #138084 - nnethercote:workspace-lints, r=jieyouxuMatthias Krüger-1/+0
Use workspace lints for crates in `compiler/` This is nicer and hopefully less error prone than specifying lints via bootstrap. r? ``@jieyouxu``
2025-03-08Auto merge of #137502 - compiler-errors:global-asm-aint-mir-body, r=oli-obkbors-1/+2
Don't include global asm in `mir_keys`, fix error body synthesis r? oli-obk Fixes #137470 Fixes #137471 Fixes #137472 Fixes #137473 try-job: test-various try-job: x86_64-apple-2
2025-03-08Remove `#![warn(unreachable_pub)]` from all `compiler/` crates.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+0
(Except for `rustc_codegen_cranelift`.) It's no longer necessary now that `unreachable_pub` is in the workspace lints.
2025-03-07Rollup merge of #134797 - spastorino:ergonomic-ref-counting-1, r=nikomatsakisMatthias Krüger-4/+92
Ergonomic ref counting This is an experimental first version of ergonomic ref counting. This first version implements most of the RFC but doesn't implement any of the optimizations. This was left for following iterations. RFC: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/3680 Tracking issue: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/132290 Project goal: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-project-goals/issues/107 r? ```@nikomatsakis```
2025-03-07mir_build: consider privacy when checking for irrefutable patternsMaja Kądziołka-4/+5
2025-03-07Add helper methods checking for "#[non_exhaustive] that's active"Maja Kądziołka-5/+4
A check for `#[non_exhaustive]` is often done in combination with checking whether the type is local to the crate, in a variety of ways. Create a helper method and standardize on it as the way to check for this.
2025-03-07Increase recursion_limit in numerous crates.Nicholas Nethercote-0/+1
This is temporarily needed for `x doc compiler` to work. They can be removed once the `Nonterminal` is removed (#124141).
2025-03-06Add UseCloned trait related codeSantiago Pastorino-26/+46
2025-03-06Generate the right MIR for by use closuresSantiago Pastorino-3/+14
2025-03-06Implement .use keyword as an alias of cloneSantiago Pastorino-1/+58
2025-03-06Construct MIR error body for global_asm correctlyMichael Goulet-1/+2
2025-03-05Make `MatchPairTree::place` non-optionalZalathar-23/+9
As the invariant indicated, this place could only be none for `TestCase::Irrefutable` nodes, which no longer exist.
2025-03-05Remove the separate simplify step for match-pair treesZalathar-71/+14
What remained of this simplification process has been integrated into construction of the match-pair trees.
2025-03-05Remove `TestCase::Irrefutable`Zalathar-58/+38
2025-03-05Populate pattern bindings/ascriptions while building `MatchPairTree`Zalathar-46/+100
2025-03-05Make `MatchPairTree::for_pattern` push its output node to a vectorZalathar-19/+23
2025-03-05Make `field_match_pairs` push its output nodes to a vectorZalathar-12/+9
2025-03-01Rollup merge of #137686 - nbdd0121:asm_const, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-6/+14
Handle asm const similar to inline const Previously, asm consts are handled similar to anon consts rather than inline consts. Anon consts are not good at dealing with lifetimes, because `type_of` has lifetimes erased already. Inline consts can deal with lifetimes because they live in an outer typeck context. And since `global_asm!` lacks an outer typeck context, we have implemented asm consts with anon consts while they're in fact more similar to inline consts. This was changed in #137180, and this means that handling asm consts as inline consts are possible. While as `@compiler-errors` pointed out, `const` currently can't be used with any types with lifetime, this is about to change if #128464 is implemented. This PR is a preparatory PR for that feature. As an unintentional side effect, fix #117877. cc `@Amanieu` r? `@compiler-errors`
2025-02-26Handle asm const similar to inline constGary Guo-6/+14
2025-02-25Teach structured errors to display short `Ty`Esteban Küber-7/+3
Make it so that every structured error annotated with `#[derive(Diagnostic)]` that has a field of type `Ty<'_>`, the printing of that value into a `String` will look at the thread-local storage `TyCtxt` in order to shorten to a length appropriate with the terminal width. When this happen, the resulting error will have a note with the file where the full type name was written to. ``` error[E0618]: expected function, found `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`` --> long.rs:7:5 | 6 | fn foo(x: D) { //~ `x` has type `(... | - `x` has type `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)` 7 | x(); //~ ERROR expected function, found `(... | ^-- | | | call expression requires function | = note: the full name for the type has been written to 'long.long-type-14182675702747116984.txt' = note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console ```
2025-02-24Fix some `use` items that import more than necessary.Nicholas Nethercote-2/+2
2025-02-23Rollup merge of #137334 - compiler-errors:edition-2024-fresh-2, ↵Jacob Pratt-6/+6
r=saethlin,traviscross Greatly simplify lifetime captures in edition 2024 Remove most of the `+ Captures` and `+ '_` from the compiler, since they are now unnecessary with the new edition 2021 lifetime capture rules. Use some `+ 'tcx` and `+ 'static` rather than being overly verbose with precise capturing syntax.
2025-02-23Rollup merge of #137180 - compiler-errors:sym-regions, r=oli-obkMatthias Krüger-43/+39
Give `global_asm` a fake body to store typeck results, represent `sym fn` as a hir expr to fix `sym fn` operands with lifetimes There are a few intertwined problems with `sym fn` operands in both inline and global asm macros. Specifically, unlike other anon consts, they may evaluate to a type with free regions in them without actually having an item-level type annotation to give them a "proper" type. This is in contrast to named constants, which always have an item-level type annotation, or unnamed constants which are constrained by their position (e.g. a const arg in a turbofish, or a const array length). Today, we infer the type of the operand by looking at the HIR typeck results; however, those results are region-erased, so during borrowck we ICE since we don't expect to encounter erased regions. We can't just fill this type with something like `'static`, since we may want to use real (free) regions: ```rust fn foo<'a>() { asm!("/* ... */", sym bar::<&'a ()>); } ``` The first idea may be to represent `sym fn` operands using *inline* consts instead of anon consts. This makes sense, since inline consts can reference regions from the parent body (like the `'a` in the example above). However, this introduces a problem with `global_asm!`, which doesn't *have* a parent body; inline consts *must* be associated with a parent body since they are not a body owner of their own. In #116087, I attempted to fix this by using two separate `sym` operands for global and inline asm. However, this led to a lot of confusion and also some unattractive code duplication. In this PR, I adjust the lowering of `global_asm!` so that it's lowered in a "fake" HIR body. This body contains a single expression which is `ExprKind::InlineAsm`; we don't *use* this HIR body, but it's used in typeck and borrowck so that we can properly infer and validate the the lifetimes of `sym fn` operands. I then adjust the lowering of `sym fn` to instead be represented with a HIR expression. This is both because it's no longer necessary to represent this operand as an anon const, since it's *just* a path expression, and also more importantly to sidestep yet another ICE (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137179), which has to do with the existing code breaking an invariant of def-id creation and anon consts. Specifically, we are not allowed to synthesize a def-id for an anon const when that anon const contains expressions with def-ids whose parent is *not* that anon const. This is somewhat related to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/130443#issuecomment-2445678945, which is also a place in the compiler where synthesizing anon consts leads to def-id parenting issue. As a side-effect, this consolidates the type checking for inline and global asm, so it allows us to simplify `InlineAsmCtxt` a bit. It also allows us to delete a bit of hacky code from anon const `type_of` which was there to detect `sym fn` operands specifically. This also could be generalized to support `const` asm operands with types with lifetimes in them. Since we specifically reject these consts today, I'm not going to change the representation of those consts (but they'd just be turned into inline consts). r? oli-obk -- mostly b/c you're patient and also understand the breadth of the code that this touches, please reassign if you don't want to review this. Fixes #111709 Fixes #96304 Fixes #137179
2025-02-22Greatly simplify lifetime captures in edition 2024Michael Goulet-6/+6
2025-02-22Fix binding mode problemsMichael Goulet-7/+5
2025-02-22Make a fake body to store typeck results for global_asmMichael Goulet-43/+39
2025-02-21Auto merge of #137397 - matthiaskrgr:rollup-ls2pilo, r=matthiaskrgrbors-4/+4
Rollup of 10 pull requests Successful merges: - #132876 (rustdoc book: acknowledge --document-hidden-items) - #136148 (Optionally add type names to `TypeId`s.) - #136609 (libcore/net: `IpAddr::as_octets()`) - #137336 (Stabilise `os_str_display`) - #137350 (Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 3.) - #137353 (Implement `read_buf` for WASI stdin) - #137361 (Refactor `OperandRef::extract_field` to prep for MCP838) - #137367 (Do not exempt nonexistent platforms from platform policy) - #137374 (Stacker now handles miri using a noop impl itself) - #137392 (remove few unused fields) r? `@ghost` `@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-02-21Rollup merge of #137305 - nnethercote:rustc_middle-2, r=lcnrMatthias Krüger-27/+16
Tweaks in and around `rustc_middle` A bunch of tiny improvements I found while working on bigger things. r? ```@lcnr```
2025-02-21Move methods from Map to TyCtxt, part 3.Nicholas Nethercote-4/+4
Continuing the work from #137162. Every method gains a `hir_` prefix.
2025-02-21Put a `BlockTailInfo` in `BlockFrame::TailExpr`.Nicholas Nethercote-20/+9
Because it has the same fields, and avoids the need to deconstruct the latter to construct the former.
2025-02-21Rename `ClearCrossCrate::assert_crate_local`.Nicholas Nethercote-7/+7
As `unwrap_crate_local`, because it follows exactly the standard form of an `unwrap` function.
2025-02-20Don't store a redundant span in user-type projectionsZalathar-2/+1
This span is already present in the corresponding `CanonicalUserTypeAnnotation`, and can be retrieved via the annotation's ID.
2025-02-20Avoid a useless clone of `UserTypeProjection`Zalathar-5/+2
2025-02-19Rollup merge of #137213 - nnethercote:rm-rustc_middle-mir-tcx, r=compiler-errorsMatthias Krüger-1/+0
Remove `rustc_middle::mir::tcx` module. This is a really weird module. For example, what does `tcx` in `rustc_middle::mir::tcx::PlaceTy` mean? The answer is "not much". The top-level module comment says: > Methods for the various MIR types. These are intended for use after > building is complete. Awfully broad for a module that has a handful of impl blocks for some MIR types, none of which really relates to `TyCtxt`. `git blame` indicates the comment is ancient, from 2015, and made sense then. This module is now vestigial. This commit removes it and moves all the code within into `rustc_middle::mir::statement`. Some specifics: - `Place`, `PlaceRef`, `Rvalue`, `Operand`, `BorrowKind`: they all have `impl` blocks in both the `tcx` and `statement` modules. The commit merges the former into the latter. - `BinOp`, `UnOp`: they only have `impl` blocks in `tcx`. The commit moves these into `statement`. - `PlaceTy`, `RvalueInitializationState`: they are defined in `tcx`. This commit moves them into `statement` *and* makes them available in `mir::*`, like many other MIR types. r? `@tmandry`
2025-02-19Remove `rustc_middle::mir::tcx` module.Nicholas Nethercote-1/+0
This is a really weird module. For example, what does `tcx` in `rustc_middle::mir::tcx::PlaceTy` mean? The answer is "not much". The top-level module comment says: > Methods for the various MIR types. These are intended for use after > building is complete. Awfully broad for a module that has a handful of impl blocks for some MIR types, none of which really relates to `TyCtxt`. `git blame` indicates the comment is ancient, from 2015, and made sense then. This module is now vestigial. This commit removes it and moves all the code within into `rustc_middle::mir::statement`. Some specifics: - `Place`, `PlaceRef`, `Rvalue`, `Operand`, `BorrowKind`: they all have `impl` blocks in both the `tcx` and `statement` modules. The commit merges the former into the latter. - `BinOp`, `UnOp`: they only have `impl` blocks in `tcx`. The commit moves these into `statement`. - `PlaceTy`, `RvalueInitializationState`: they are defined in `tcx`. This commit moves them into `statement` *and* makes them available in `mir::*`, like many other MIR types.
2025-02-18Remove scrutinee_hir_id from ExprKind::Matchbjorn3-2/+1
It is unused
2025-02-18Move methods from `Map` to `TyCtxt`, part 2.Nicholas Nethercote-11/+9
Continuing the work started in #136466. Every method gains a `hir_` prefix, though for the ones that already have a `par_` or `try_par_` prefix I added the `hir_` after that.
2025-02-17Rollup merge of #136817 - dianne:clean-and-comment-pat-migration, r=NadrierilMatthias Krüger-114/+205
Pattern Migration 2024: clean up and comment This follows up on #136577 by moving the pattern migration logic to its own module, removing a bit of unnecessary complexity, and adding comments. Since there's quite a bit of pattern migration logic now (and potentially more in #136496), I think it makes sense to keep it separate from THIR construction, at least as much as is convenient. r? ``@Nadrieril``
2025-02-17Rollup merge of #136671 - nnethercote:middle-limits, r=NadrierilMatthias Krüger-14/+6
Overhaul `rustc_middle::limits` In particular, to make `pattern_complexity` work more like other limits, which then enables some other simplifications. r? ``@Nadrieril``
2025-02-17Move some `Map` methods onto `TyCtxt`.Nicholas Nethercote-4/+3
The end goal is to eliminate `Map` altogether. I added a `hir_` prefix to all of them, that seemed simplest. The exceptions are `module_items` which became `hir_module_free_items` because there was already a `hir_module_items`, and `items` which became `hir_free_items` for consistency with `hir_module_free_items`.
2025-02-17Add `pattern_complexity_limit` to `Limits`.Nicholas Nethercote-14/+6
It's similar to the other limits, e.g. obtained via `get_limit`. So it makes sense to handle it consistently with the other limits. We now use `Limit`/`usize` in most places instead of `Option<usize>`, so we use `Limit::new(usize::MAX)`/`usize::MAX` to emulate how `None` used to work. The commit also adds `Limit::unlimited`.
2025-02-14More comments for `lower_inline_const`Zalathar-1/+4
2025-02-14Clarify control-flow in `lower_path`Zalathar-30/+33
2025-02-14Rename `PatCtxt::lower_lit` to `lower_pat_expr`Zalathar-7/+7
This matches the HIR changes in #134228, which introduced `PatExpr` to hold the subset of "expressions" that can appear in a pattern.
2025-02-13Auto merge of #136593 - lukas-code:ty-value-perf, r=oli-obkbors-6/+6
valtree performance tuning Summary: This PR makes type checking of code with many type-level constants faster. After https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136180 was merged, we observed a small perf regression (https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136318#issuecomment-2635562821). This happened because that PR introduced additional copies in the fast reject code path for consts, which is very hot for certain crates: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/6c1d960d88dd3755548b3818630acb63fa98187e/compiler/rustc_type_ir/src/fast_reject.rs#L486-L487 This PR improves the performance again by properly interning the valtrees so that copying and comparing them becomes faster. This will become especially useful with `feature(adt_const_params)`, so the fast reject code doesn't have to do a deep compare of the valtrees. Note that we can't just compare the interned consts themselves in the fast reject, because sometimes `'static` lifetimes in the type are be replaced with inference variables (due to canonicalization) on one side but not the other. A less invasive alternative that I considered is simply avoiding copies introduced by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136180 and comparing the valtrees it in-place (see commit: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/commit/9e91e50ac5920f0b9b4a3b1e0880c85336ba5c64 / perf results: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/136593#issuecomment-2642303245), however that was still measurably slower than interning. There are some minor regressions in secondary benchmarks: These happen due to changes in memory allocations and seem acceptable to me. The crates that make heavy use of valtrees show no significant changes in memory usage.
2025-02-13intern valtreesLukas Markeffsky-6/+6
2025-02-10Rename rustc_middle::Ty::is_unsafe_ptr to is_raw_ptrBastian Kersting-1/+1
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.
2025-02-10move pattern migration internals to the `migration` moduledianne-66/+114