Auto merge of #122792 - Nadrieril:stabilize-min-exh-pats2, r=fee1-dead

Stabilize `min_exhaustive_patterns`

## Stabilisation report

I propose we stabilize the [`min_exhaustive_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/119612) language feature.

With this feature, patterns of empty types are considered unreachable when matched by-value. This allows:
```rust
enum Void {}
fn foo() -> Result<u32, Void>;

fn main() {
  let Ok(x) = foo();
  // also
  match foo() {
    Ok(x) => ...,
  }
}
```

This is a subset of the long-unstable [`exhaustive_patterns`](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/51085) feature. That feature is blocked because omitting empty patterns is tricky when *not* matched by-value. This PR stabilizes the by-value case, which is not tricky.

The not-by-value cases (behind references, pointers, and unions) stay as they are today, e.g.
```rust
enum Void {}
fn foo() -> Result<u32, &Void>;

fn main() {
  let Ok(x) = foo(); // ERROR: missing `Err(_)`
}
```

The consequence on existing code is some extra "unreachable pattern" warnings. This is fully backwards-compatible.

### Comparison with today's rust

This proposal only affects match checking of empty types (i.e. types with no valid values). Non-empty types behave the same with or without this feature. Note that everything below is phrased in terms of `match` but applies equallly to `if let` and other pattern-matching expressions.

To be precise, a visibly empty type is:
- an enum with no variants;
- the never type `!`;
- a struct with a *visible* field of a visibly empty type (and no #[non_exhaustive] annotation);
- a tuple where one of the types is visibly empty;
- en enum with all variants visibly empty (and no `#[non_exhaustive]` annotation);
- a `[T; N]` with `N != 0` and `T` visibly empty;
- all other types are nonempty.

(An extra change was proposed below: that we ignore #[non_exhaustive] for structs since adding fields cannot turn an empty struct into a non-empty one)

For normal types, exhaustiveness checking requires that we list all variants (or use a wildcard). For empty types it's more subtle: in some cases we require a `_` pattern even though there are no valid values that can match it. This is where the difference lies regarding this feature.

#### Today's rust

Under today's rust, a `_` is required for all empty types, except specifically: if the matched expression is of type `!` (the never type) or `EmptyEnum` (where `EmptyEnum` is an enum with no variants), then the `_` is not required.

```rust
let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ...,
    Err(_) => ..., // required
}
let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ...,
    Err(_) => ..., // required
}
let foo: &! = ...;
match foo {
    _ => ..., // required
}
fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) {
    match foo {
        _ => ..., // required
    }
}
unsafe {
    let ptr: *const ! = ...;
    match *ptr {} // allowed
    let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...;
    match *ptr {
        (x, _) => { ... } // required
    }
    let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...;
    match *ptr {
        Ok(x) => { ... }
        Err(_) => { ... } // required
    }
}
```

#### After this PR

After this PR, a pattern of an empty type can be omitted if (and only if):
- the match scrutinee expression has type  `!` or `EmptyEnum` (like before);
- *or* the empty type is matched by value (that's the new behavior).

In all other cases, a `_` is required to match on an empty type.

```rust
let foo: Result<u32, !> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ..., // `Err` not required
}
let foo: Result<u32, &!> = ...;
match foo {
    Ok(x) => ...,
    Err(_) => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference
}
let foo: &! = ...;
match foo {
    _ => ..., // required because `!` is under a dereference
}
fn blah(foo: (u32, !)) {
    match foo {} // allowed
}
unsafe {
    let ptr: *const ! = ...;
    match *ptr {} // allowed
    let ptr: *const (u32, !) = ...;
    match *ptr {
        (x, _) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference
    }
    let ptr: *const Result<u32, !> = ...;
    match *ptr {
        Ok(x) => { ... }
        Err(_) => { ... } // required because the matched place is under a (pointer) dereference
    }
}
```

### Documentation

The reference does not say anything specific about exhaustiveness checking, hence there is nothing to update there. The nomicon does, I opened https://github.com/rust-lang/nomicon/pull/445 to reflect the changes.

### Tests

The relevant tests are in `tests/ui/pattern/usefulness/empty-types.rs`.

### Unresolved Questions

None that I know of.

try-job: dist-aarch64-apple
This commit is contained in:
bors 2024-08-10 12:48:29 +00:00
commit 2f4bf25b14
2 changed files with 2 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -27,6 +27,7 @@ macro_rules! from_bytes {
($ty:tt, $value:expr) => { ($ty:tt, $value:expr) => {
($ty::from_le_bytes(match ($value).try_into() { ($ty::from_le_bytes(match ($value).try_into() {
Ok(it) => it, Ok(it) => it,
#[allow(unreachable_patterns)]
Err(_) => return Err(MirEvalError::InternalError("mismatched size".into())), Err(_) => return Err(MirEvalError::InternalError("mismatched size".into())),
})) }))
}; };

View file

@ -1161,6 +1161,7 @@ impl<'ctx> MirLowerCtx<'ctx> {
ProjectionElem::OpaqueCast(it) => { ProjectionElem::OpaqueCast(it) => {
ProjectionElem::OpaqueCast(it) ProjectionElem::OpaqueCast(it)
} }
#[allow(unreachable_patterns)]
ProjectionElem::Index(it) => match it {}, ProjectionElem::Index(it) => match it {},
}) })
.collect(), .collect(),