// Copyright 2012-2013 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license // , at your // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed // except according to those terms. //! Generalized type folding mechanism. The setup is a bit convoluted //! but allows for convenient usage. Let T be an instance of some //! "foldable type" (one which implements `TypeFoldable`) and F be an //! instance of a "folder" (a type which implements `TypeFolder`). Then //! the setup is intended to be: //! //! T.fold_with(F) --calls--> F.fold_T(T) --calls--> T.super_fold_with(F) //! //! This way, when you define a new folder F, you can override //! `fold_T()` to customize the behavior, and invoke `T.super_fold_with()` //! to get the original behavior. Meanwhile, to actually fold //! something, you can just write `T.fold_with(F)`, which is //! convenient. (Note that `fold_with` will also transparently handle //! things like a `Vec` where T is foldable and so on.) //! //! In this ideal setup, the only function that actually *does* //! anything is `T.super_fold_with()`, which traverses the type `T`. //! Moreover, `T.super_fold_with()` should only ever call `T.fold_with()`. //! //! In some cases, we follow a degenerate pattern where we do not have //! a `fold_T` method. Instead, `T.fold_with` traverses the structure directly. //! This is suboptimal because the behavior cannot be overridden, but it's //! much less work to implement. If you ever *do* need an override that //! doesn't exist, it's not hard to convert the degenerate pattern into the //! proper thing. //! //! A `TypeFoldable` T can also be visited by a `TypeVisitor` V using similar setup: //! T.visit_with(V) --calls--> V.visit_T(T) --calls--> T.super_visit_with(V). //! These methods return true to indicate that the visitor has found what it is looking for //! and does not need to visit anything else. use middle::const_val::ConstVal; use hir::def_id::DefId; use ty::{self, Binder, Ty, TyCtxt, TypeFlags}; use std::collections::BTreeMap; use std::fmt; use util::nodemap::FxHashSet; /// The TypeFoldable trait is implemented for every type that can be folded. /// Basically, every type that has a corresponding method in TypeFolder. /// /// To implement this conveniently, use the /// `BraceStructTypeFoldableImpl` etc macros found in `macros.rs`. pub trait TypeFoldable<'tcx>: fmt::Debug + Clone { fn super_fold_with<'gcx: 'tcx, F: TypeFolder<'gcx, 'tcx>>(&self, folder: &mut F) -> Self; fn fold_with<'gcx: 'tcx, F: TypeFolder<'gcx, 'tcx>>(&self, folder: &mut F) -> Self { self.super_fold_with(folder) } fn super_visit_with>(&self, visitor: &mut V) -> bool; fn visit_with>(&self, visitor: &mut V) -> bool { self.super_visit_with(visitor) } /// True if `self` has any late-bound regions that are either /// bound by `binder` or bound by some binder outside of `binder`. /// If `binder` is `ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST`, this indicates whether /// there are any late-bound regions that appear free. fn has_regions_bound_at_or_above(&self, binder: ty::DebruijnIndex) -> bool { self.visit_with(&mut HasEscapingRegionsVisitor { outer_index: binder }) } /// True if this `self` has any regions that escape `binder` (and /// hence are not bound by it). fn has_regions_bound_above(&self, binder: ty::DebruijnIndex) -> bool { self.has_regions_bound_at_or_above(binder.shifted_in(1)) } fn has_escaping_regions(&self) -> bool { self.has_regions_bound_at_or_above(ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST) } fn has_type_flags(&self, flags: TypeFlags) -> bool { self.visit_with(&mut HasTypeFlagsVisitor { flags: flags }) } fn has_projections(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_PROJECTION) } fn references_error(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_TY_ERR) } fn has_param_types(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_PARAMS) } fn has_self_ty(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_SELF) } fn has_infer_types(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_TY_INFER) } fn needs_infer(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_TY_INFER | TypeFlags::HAS_RE_INFER) } fn has_skol(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_RE_SKOL) } fn needs_subst(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::NEEDS_SUBST) } fn has_re_skol(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_RE_SKOL) } fn has_closure_types(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_TY_CLOSURE) } /// "Free" regions in this context means that it has any region /// that is not (a) erased or (b) late-bound. fn has_free_regions(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_FREE_REGIONS) } /// True if there any any un-erased free regions. fn has_erasable_regions(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_FREE_REGIONS) } /// Indicates whether this value references only 'global' /// types/lifetimes that are the same regardless of what fn we are /// in. This is used for caching. fn is_global(&self) -> bool { !self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_FREE_LOCAL_NAMES) } /// True if there are any late-bound regions fn has_late_bound_regions(&self) -> bool { self.has_type_flags(TypeFlags::HAS_RE_LATE_BOUND) } } /// The TypeFolder trait defines the actual *folding*. There is a /// method defined for every foldable type. Each of these has a /// default implementation that does an "identity" fold. Within each /// identity fold, it should invoke `foo.fold_with(self)` to fold each /// sub-item. pub trait TypeFolder<'gcx: 'tcx, 'tcx> : Sized { fn tcx<'a>(&'a self) -> TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>; fn fold_binder(&mut self, t: &Binder) -> Binder where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx> { t.super_fold_with(self) } fn fold_ty(&mut self, t: Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { t.super_fold_with(self) } fn fold_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> ty::Region<'tcx> { r.super_fold_with(self) } fn fold_const(&mut self, c: &'tcx ty::Const<'tcx>) -> &'tcx ty::Const<'tcx> { c.super_fold_with(self) } } pub trait TypeVisitor<'tcx> : Sized { fn visit_binder>(&mut self, t: &Binder) -> bool { t.super_visit_with(self) } fn visit_ty(&mut self, t: Ty<'tcx>) -> bool { t.super_visit_with(self) } fn visit_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> bool { r.super_visit_with(self) } fn visit_const(&mut self, c: &'tcx ty::Const<'tcx>) -> bool { c.super_visit_with(self) } } /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Some sample folders pub struct BottomUpFolder<'a, 'gcx: 'a+'tcx, 'tcx: 'a, F> where F: FnMut(Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { pub tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>, pub fldop: F, } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx, F> TypeFolder<'gcx, 'tcx> for BottomUpFolder<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx, F> where F: FnMut(Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx>, { fn tcx<'b>(&'b self) -> TyCtxt<'b, 'gcx, 'tcx> { self.tcx } fn fold_ty(&mut self, ty: Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { let t1 = ty.super_fold_with(self); (self.fldop)(t1) } } /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Region folder impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { /// Collects the free and escaping regions in `value` into `region_set`. Returns /// whether any late-bound regions were skipped pub fn collect_regions(self, value: &T, region_set: &mut FxHashSet>) -> bool where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx> { let mut have_bound_regions = false; self.fold_regions(value, &mut have_bound_regions, |r, d| { region_set.insert(self.mk_region(r.shifted_out_to_binder(d))); r }); have_bound_regions } /// Folds the escaping and free regions in `value` using `f`, and /// sets `skipped_regions` to true if any late-bound region was found /// and skipped. pub fn fold_regions( self, value: &T, skipped_regions: &mut bool, mut f: impl FnMut(ty::Region<'tcx>, ty::DebruijnIndex) -> ty::Region<'tcx>, ) -> T where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx>, { value.fold_with(&mut RegionFolder::new(self, skipped_regions, &mut f)) } pub fn for_each_free_region(self, value: &T, callback: F) where F: FnMut(ty::Region<'tcx>), T: TypeFoldable<'tcx>, { value.visit_with(&mut RegionVisitor { outer_index: ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST, callback }); struct RegionVisitor { /// The index of a binder *just outside* the things we have /// traversed. If we encounter a bound region bound by this /// binder or one outer to it, it appears free. Example: /// /// ``` /// for<'a> fn(for<'b> fn(), T) /// ^ ^ ^ ^ /// | | | | here, would be shifted in 1 /// | | | here, would be shifted in 2 /// | | here, would be INNTERMOST shifted in by 1 /// | here, initially, binder would be INNERMOST /// ``` /// /// You see that, initially, *any* bound value is free, /// because we've not traversed any binders. As we pass /// through a binder, we shift the `outer_index` by 1 to /// account for the new binder that encloses us. outer_index: ty::DebruijnIndex, callback: F, } impl<'tcx, F> TypeVisitor<'tcx> for RegionVisitor where F : FnMut(ty::Region<'tcx>) { fn visit_binder>(&mut self, t: &Binder) -> bool { self.outer_index.shift_in(1); t.skip_binder().visit_with(self); self.outer_index.shift_out(1); false // keep visiting } fn visit_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> bool { match *r { ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, _) if debruijn < self.outer_index => { /* ignore bound regions */ } _ => (self.callback)(r), } false // keep visiting } } } } /// Folds over the substructure of a type, visiting its component /// types and all regions that occur *free* within it. /// /// That is, `Ty` can contain function or method types that bind /// regions at the call site (`ReLateBound`), and occurrences of /// regions (aka "lifetimes") that are bound within a type are not /// visited by this folder; only regions that occur free will be /// visited by `fld_r`. pub struct RegionFolder<'a, 'gcx: 'a+'tcx, 'tcx: 'a> { tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>, skipped_regions: &'a mut bool, /// Stores the index of a binder *just outside* the stuff we have /// visited. So this begins as INNERMOST; when we pass through a /// binder, it is incremented (via `shift_in`). current_index: ty::DebruijnIndex, /// Callback invokes for each free region. The `DebruijnIndex` /// points to the binder *just outside* the ones we have passed /// through. fold_region_fn: &'a mut (dyn FnMut( ty::Region<'tcx>, ty::DebruijnIndex, ) -> ty::Region<'tcx> + 'a), } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> RegionFolder<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { pub fn new( tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>, skipped_regions: &'a mut bool, fold_region_fn: &'a mut dyn FnMut(ty::Region<'tcx>, ty::DebruijnIndex) -> ty::Region<'tcx>, ) -> RegionFolder<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { RegionFolder { tcx, skipped_regions, current_index: ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST, fold_region_fn, } } } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> TypeFolder<'gcx, 'tcx> for RegionFolder<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { fn tcx<'b>(&'b self) -> TyCtxt<'b, 'gcx, 'tcx> { self.tcx } fn fold_binder>(&mut self, t: &ty::Binder) -> ty::Binder { self.current_index.shift_in(1); let t = t.super_fold_with(self); self.current_index.shift_out(1); t } fn fold_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> ty::Region<'tcx> { match *r { ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, _) if debruijn < self.current_index => { debug!("RegionFolder.fold_region({:?}) skipped bound region (current index={:?})", r, self.current_index); *self.skipped_regions = true; r } _ => { debug!("RegionFolder.fold_region({:?}) folding free region (current_index={:?})", r, self.current_index); (self.fold_region_fn)(r, self.current_index) } } } } /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Late-bound region replacer // Replaces the escaping regions in a type. struct RegionReplacer<'a, 'gcx: 'a+'tcx, 'tcx: 'a> { tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>, /// As with `RegionFolder`, represents the index of a binder *just outside* /// the ones we have visited. current_index: ty::DebruijnIndex, fld_r: &'a mut (dyn FnMut(ty::BoundRegion) -> ty::Region<'tcx> + 'a), map: BTreeMap> } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { /// Replace all regions bound by the given `Binder` with the /// results returned by the closure; the closure is expected to /// return a free region (relative to this binder), and hence the /// binder is removed in the return type. The closure is invoked /// once for each unique `BoundRegion`; multiple references to the /// same `BoundRegion` will reuse the previous result. A map is /// returned at the end with each bound region and the free region /// that replaced it. pub fn replace_late_bound_regions(self, value: &Binder, mut f: F) -> (T, BTreeMap>) where F : FnMut(ty::BoundRegion) -> ty::Region<'tcx>, T : TypeFoldable<'tcx>, { let mut replacer = RegionReplacer::new(self, &mut f); let result = value.skip_binder().fold_with(&mut replacer); (result, replacer.map) } /// Replace any late-bound regions bound in `value` with /// free variants attached to `all_outlive_scope`. pub fn liberate_late_bound_regions( &self, all_outlive_scope: DefId, value: &ty::Binder ) -> T where T: TypeFoldable<'tcx> { self.replace_late_bound_regions(value, |br| { self.mk_region(ty::ReFree(ty::FreeRegion { scope: all_outlive_scope, bound_region: br })) }).0 } /// Flattens multiple binding levels into one. So `for<'a> for<'b> Foo` /// becomes `for<'a,'b> Foo`. pub fn flatten_late_bound_regions(self, bound2_value: &Binder>) -> Binder where T: TypeFoldable<'tcx> { let bound0_value = bound2_value.skip_binder().skip_binder(); let value = self.fold_regions(bound0_value, &mut false, |region, current_depth| { match *region { ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, br) => { // We assume no regions bound *outside* of the // binders in `bound2_value` (nmatsakis added in // the course of this PR; seems like a reasonable // sanity check though). assert!(debruijn == current_depth); self.mk_region(ty::ReLateBound(current_depth, br)) } _ => { region } } }); Binder::bind(value) } /// Returns a set of all late-bound regions that are constrained /// by `value`, meaning that if we instantiate those LBR with /// variables and equate `value` with something else, those /// variables will also be equated. pub fn collect_constrained_late_bound_regions(&self, value: &Binder) -> FxHashSet where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx> { self.collect_late_bound_regions(value, true) } /// Returns a set of all late-bound regions that appear in `value` anywhere. pub fn collect_referenced_late_bound_regions(&self, value: &Binder) -> FxHashSet where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx> { self.collect_late_bound_regions(value, false) } fn collect_late_bound_regions(&self, value: &Binder, just_constraint: bool) -> FxHashSet where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx> { let mut collector = LateBoundRegionsCollector::new(just_constraint); let result = value.skip_binder().visit_with(&mut collector); assert!(!result); // should never have stopped early collector.regions } /// Replace any late-bound regions bound in `value` with `'erased`. Useful in codegen but also /// method lookup and a few other places where precise region relationships are not required. pub fn erase_late_bound_regions(self, value: &Binder) -> T where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx> { self.replace_late_bound_regions(value, |_| self.types.re_erased).0 } /// Rewrite any late-bound regions so that they are anonymous. Region numbers are /// assigned starting at 1 and increasing monotonically in the order traversed /// by the fold operation. /// /// The chief purpose of this function is to canonicalize regions so that two /// `FnSig`s or `TraitRef`s which are equivalent up to region naming will become /// structurally identical. For example, `for<'a, 'b> fn(&'a isize, &'b isize)` and /// `for<'a, 'b> fn(&'b isize, &'a isize)` will become identical after anonymization. pub fn anonymize_late_bound_regions(self, sig: &Binder) -> Binder where T : TypeFoldable<'tcx>, { let mut counter = 0; Binder::bind(self.replace_late_bound_regions(sig, |_| { counter += 1; self.mk_region(ty::ReLateBound(ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST, ty::BrAnon(counter))) }).0) } } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> RegionReplacer<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { fn new(tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>, fld_r: &'a mut F) -> RegionReplacer<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> where F : FnMut(ty::BoundRegion) -> ty::Region<'tcx> { RegionReplacer { tcx, current_index: ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST, fld_r, map: BTreeMap::default() } } } impl<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> TypeFolder<'gcx, 'tcx> for RegionReplacer<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx> { fn tcx<'b>(&'b self) -> TyCtxt<'b, 'gcx, 'tcx> { self.tcx } fn fold_binder>(&mut self, t: &ty::Binder) -> ty::Binder { self.current_index.shift_in(1); let t = t.super_fold_with(self); self.current_index.shift_out(1); t } fn fold_ty(&mut self, t: Ty<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> { if !t.has_regions_bound_at_or_above(self.current_index) { return t; } t.super_fold_with(self) } fn fold_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> ty::Region<'tcx> { match *r { ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, br) if debruijn == self.current_index => { let fld_r = &mut self.fld_r; let region = *self.map.entry(br).or_insert_with(|| fld_r(br)); if let ty::ReLateBound(debruijn1, br) = *region { // If the callback returns a late-bound region, // that region should always use the INNERMOST // debruijn index. Then we adjust it to the // correct depth. assert_eq!(debruijn1, ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST); self.tcx.mk_region(ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, br)) } else { region } } _ => r } } } /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Region shifter // // Shifts the De Bruijn indices on all escaping bound regions by a // fixed amount. Useful in substitution or when otherwise introducing // a binding level that is not intended to capture the existing bound // regions. See comment on `shift_regions_through_binders` method in // `subst.rs` for more details. pub fn shift_region(region: ty::RegionKind, amount: u32) -> ty::RegionKind { match region { ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, br) => { ty::ReLateBound(debruijn.shifted_in(amount), br) } _ => { region } } } pub fn shift_region_ref<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>( tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>, region: ty::Region<'tcx>, amount: u32) -> ty::Region<'tcx> { match region { &ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, br) if amount > 0 => { tcx.mk_region(ty::ReLateBound(debruijn.shifted_in(amount), br)) } _ => { region } } } pub fn shift_regions<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx, T>(tcx: TyCtxt<'a, 'gcx, 'tcx>, amount: u32, value: &T) -> T where T: TypeFoldable<'tcx> { debug!("shift_regions(value={:?}, amount={})", value, amount); value.fold_with(&mut RegionFolder::new(tcx, &mut false, &mut |region, _current_depth| { shift_region_ref(tcx, region, amount) })) } /// An "escaping region" is a bound region whose binder is not part of `t`. /// /// So, for example, consider a type like the following, which has two binders: /// /// for<'a> fn(x: for<'b> fn(&'a isize, &'b isize)) /// ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ outer scope /// ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ inner scope /// /// This type has *bound regions* (`'a`, `'b`), but it does not have escaping regions, because the /// binders of both `'a` and `'b` are part of the type itself. However, if we consider the *inner /// fn type*, that type has an escaping region: `'a`. /// /// Note that what I'm calling an "escaping region" is often just called a "free region". However, /// we already use the term "free region". It refers to the regions that we use to represent bound /// regions on a fn definition while we are typechecking its body. /// /// To clarify, conceptually there is no particular difference between an "escaping" region and a /// "free" region. However, there is a big difference in practice. Basically, when "entering" a /// binding level, one is generally required to do some sort of processing to a bound region, such /// as replacing it with a fresh/skolemized region, or making an entry in the environment to /// represent the scope to which it is attached, etc. An escaping region represents a bound region /// for which this processing has not yet been done. struct HasEscapingRegionsVisitor { /// Anything bound by `outer_index` or "above" is escaping outer_index: ty::DebruijnIndex, } impl<'tcx> TypeVisitor<'tcx> for HasEscapingRegionsVisitor { fn visit_binder>(&mut self, t: &Binder) -> bool { self.outer_index.shift_in(1); let result = t.super_visit_with(self); self.outer_index.shift_out(1); result } fn visit_ty(&mut self, t: Ty<'tcx>) -> bool { // If the outer-exclusive-binder is *strictly greater* than // `outer_index`, that means that `t` contains some content // bound at `outer_index` or above (because // `outer_exclusive_binder` is always 1 higher than the // content in `t`). Therefore, `t` has some escaping regions. t.outer_exclusive_binder > self.outer_index } fn visit_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> bool { // If the region is bound by `outer_index` or anything outside // of outer index, then it escapes the binders we have // visited. r.bound_at_or_above_binder(self.outer_index) } } struct HasTypeFlagsVisitor { flags: ty::TypeFlags, } impl<'tcx> TypeVisitor<'tcx> for HasTypeFlagsVisitor { fn visit_ty(&mut self, t: Ty) -> bool { debug!("HasTypeFlagsVisitor: t={:?} t.flags={:?} self.flags={:?}", t, t.flags, self.flags); t.flags.intersects(self.flags) } fn visit_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> bool { let flags = r.type_flags(); debug!("HasTypeFlagsVisitor: r={:?} r.flags={:?} self.flags={:?}", r, flags, self.flags); flags.intersects(self.flags) } fn visit_const(&mut self, c: &'tcx ty::Const<'tcx>) -> bool { if let ConstVal::Unevaluated(..) = c.val { let projection_flags = TypeFlags::HAS_NORMALIZABLE_PROJECTION | TypeFlags::HAS_PROJECTION; if projection_flags.intersects(self.flags) { return true; } } c.super_visit_with(self) } } /// Collects all the late-bound regions at the innermost binding level /// into a hash set. struct LateBoundRegionsCollector { current_index: ty::DebruijnIndex, regions: FxHashSet, /// If true, we only want regions that are known to be /// "constrained" when you equate this type with another type. In /// partcular, if you have e.g. `&'a u32` and `&'b u32`, equating /// them constraints `'a == 'b`. But if you have `<&'a u32 as /// Trait>::Foo` and `<&'b u32 as Trait>::Foo`, normalizing those /// types may mean that `'a` and `'b` don't appear in the results, /// so they are not considered *constrained*. just_constrained: bool, } impl LateBoundRegionsCollector { fn new(just_constrained: bool) -> Self { LateBoundRegionsCollector { current_index: ty::DebruijnIndex::INNERMOST, regions: FxHashSet(), just_constrained, } } } impl<'tcx> TypeVisitor<'tcx> for LateBoundRegionsCollector { fn visit_binder>(&mut self, t: &Binder) -> bool { self.current_index.shift_in(1); let result = t.super_visit_with(self); self.current_index.shift_out(1); result } fn visit_ty(&mut self, t: Ty<'tcx>) -> bool { // if we are only looking for "constrained" region, we have to // ignore the inputs to a projection, as they may not appear // in the normalized form if self.just_constrained { match t.sty { ty::TyProjection(..) | ty::TyAnon(..) => { return false; } _ => { } } } t.super_visit_with(self) } fn visit_region(&mut self, r: ty::Region<'tcx>) -> bool { match *r { ty::ReLateBound(debruijn, br) if debruijn == self.current_index => { self.regions.insert(br); } _ => { } } false } }