Improve invalid let expression handling
- Move all of the checks for valid let expression positions to parsing.
- Add a field to ExprKind::Let in AST/HIR to mark whether it's in a valid location.
- Suppress some later errors and MIR construction for invalid let expressions.
- Fix a (drop) scope issue that was also responsible for #104172.
Fixes#104172Fixes#104868
treat host effect params as erased in codegen
This fixes the changes brought to codegen tests when effect params are added to libcore, by not attempting to monomorphize functions that get the host param by being `const fn`.
r? `@oli-obk`
some inspect improvements
split from #114810 because I still want to experiment a bunch with that PR and these changes are self-contained.
r? `@compiler-errors`
Rework `no_coverage` to `coverage(off)`
As discussed at the tail of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/84605 this replaces the `no_coverage` attribute with a `coverage` attribute that takes sub-parameters (currently `off` and `on`) to control the coverage instrumentation.
Allows future-proofing for things like `coverage(off, reason="Tested live", issue="#12345")` or similar.
Bubble up opaque <eq> opaque operations instead of picking an order
In case we are in `Bubble` mode (meaning every opaque type that is defined in the current crate is treated as if it were in its defining scope), we don't try to register an opaque type as the hidden type of another opaque type, but instead bubble up an obligation to equate them at the query caller site. Usually that means we have a `DefiningAnchor::Bind` and thus can reliably figure out whether an opaque type is in its defining scope. Where we can't, we'll error out, so the default is sound.
With this change we start using `AliasTyEq` predicates in the old solver, too.
fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/108498
But also regresses `tests/ui/impl-trait/anon_scope_creep.rs`. Our use of `Bubble` for `check_opaque_type_well_formed` is going to keep biting us.
r? `@lcnr` `@compiler-errors`
Allow redirecting subprocess stdout to our stderr etc. (redux)
This is the code from #88561, tidied up, including review suggestions, and with the for-testing-only CI commit removed. FCP for the API completed in #88561.
I have made a new MR to facilitate review. The discussion there is very cluttered and the branch is full of changes (in many cases as a result of changes to other Rust stdlib APIs since then). Assuming this MR is approvedl we should close that one.
### Reviewer doing a de novo review
Just code review these four commits.. FCP discussion starts here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88561#issuecomment-1640527595
Portability tests: you can see that this branch works on Windows too by looking at the CI results in #88561, which has the same code changes as this branch but with an additional "DO NOT MERGE" commit to make the Windows tests run.
### Reviewer doing an incremental review from some version of #88561
Review the new commits since your last review. I haven't force pushed the branch there.
git diff the two branches (eg `git diff 176886197d6..0842b69c219`). You'll see that the only difference is in gitlab CI files. You can also see that *this* MR doesn't touch those files.
Implement Step for ascii::Char
This allows iterating over ranges of `ascii::Char`, similarly to ranges of `char`.
Note that `ascii::Char` is still unstable, tracked in #110998.
docs: improve std::fs::read doc
#### What does this PR do
1. Rephrase a confusing sentence in the document of `std::fs::read()`
-----
Closes#114432
cc `@Dexus0` `@saethlin`
Inline functions called from `add_coverage`
This removes quite a bit of indirection and duplicated code related to getting the `FunctionCoverage`.
CC `@Zalathar`
Adapt table sizes to the contents
This is an implementation of https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/666
The objective of this PR is to permit the rmeta format to accommodate larger crates that need offsets larger than a `u32` can store without compromising performance for crates that do not need such range. The second commit is a number of tiny optimization opportunities I noticed while looking at perf recordings of the first commit.
The rmeta tables need to have fixed-size elements to permit lazy random access. But the size only needs to be fixed _per table_, not per element type. This PR adds another `usize` to the table header which indicates the table element size. As each element of a table is set, we keep track of the widest encoded table value, then don't bother encoding all the unused trailing bytes on each value. When decoding table elements, we copy them to a full-width array if they are not already full-width.
`LazyArray` needs some special treatment. Most other values that are encoded in tables are indexes or offsets, and those tend to be small so we get to drop a lot of zero bytes off the end. But `LazyArray` encodes _two_ small values in a fixed-width table element: A position of the table and the length of the table. The treatment described above could trim zero bytes off the table length, but any nonzero length shields the position bytes from the optimization. To improve this, we interleave the bytes of position and length. This change is responsible for about half of the crate metadata win on many crates.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/112934 (probably)
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/103607
Always add LC_BUILD_VERSION for metadata object files
As of Xcode 15 Apple's linker has become a bit more strict about the warnings it produces. One of those new warnings requires all valid Mach-O object files in an archive to have a LC_BUILD_VERSION load command:
```
ld: warning: no platform load command found in 'ARCHIVE[arm64][2106](lib.rmeta)', assuming: iOS-simulator
```
This was already being done for Mac Catalyst so this change expands this logic to include it for all Apple platforms. I filed this behavior change as FB12546320 and was told it was the new intentional behavior.
Add note that Vec::as_mut_ptr() does not materialize a reference to the internal buffer
See discussion on https://github.com/thomcc/rust-typed-arena/issues/62 and [t-opsem](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/136281-t-opsem/topic/is.20this.20typed_arena.20code.20sound.20under.20stacked.2Ftree.20borrows.3F)
This method already does the correct thing here, but it is worth guaranteeing that it does so it can be used more freely in unsafe code without having to worry about potential Stacked/Tree Borrows violations. This moves one more unsafe usage pattern from the "very likely sound but technically not fully defined" box into "definitely sound", and currently our surface area of the latter is woefully small.
I'm not sure how best to word this, opening this PR as a way to start discussion.
Avoid duplicate `large_assignments` lints
By checking for overlapping spans.
This PR does the "reduce noisiness" task in #83518.
r? `@oli-obk` who added E-mentor and E-help-wanted and wrote the initial code.
(The fix itself is in dc82736677. The two commits before that are just small refactorings.)
Move a local to the `#if` block where it is used
For other cases (LLVM < 17), this was complaining under `-Wall`:
```
warning: llvm-wrapper/PassWrapper.cpp: In function ‘void LLVMRustPrintTargetCPUs(LLVMTargetMachineRef, const char*)’:
warning: llvm-wrapper/PassWrapper.cpp:311:26: warning: unused variable ‘MCInfo’ [-Wunused-variable]
warning: 311 | const MCSubtargetInfo *MCInfo = Target->getMCSubtargetInfo();
warning: | ^~~~~~
```
Go into more detail about panicking in drop.
This patch was sitting around in my drafts. I don't recall the motivation, but I think it was someone expressing confusion over “will likely abort” (since, in fact, a panicking drop _not_ caused by dropping while panicking will predictably _not_ abort).
I hope that the new text will leave people well-informed about why not to panic and when it is reasonable to panic.
Treat `StatementKind::Coverage` as completely opaque for SMIR purposes
Coverage statements in MIR are heavily tied to internal details of the coverage implementation that are likely to change, and are unlikely to be useful to third-party tools for the foreseeable future.
Allow explicit `#[repr(Rust)]`
This is identical to no `repr()` at all. For `Rust, packed` and `Rust, align(x)`, it should be the same as no `Rust` at all (as, afaik, `#[repr(align(16))]` uses the Rust ABI.)
The main use case for this is being able to explicitly say "I want to use the Rust ABI" in very very rare circumstances where the first obvious choice would be the C ABI yet is undesirable, which is already possible with functions as `extern "Rust"`. This would be useful for silencing https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/11253. It's also more consistent with `extern`.
The lack of this also tripped me up a bit when I was new to Rust, as I expected this to be possible.
Fix races conditions with `SyntaxContext` decoding
This changes `SyntaxContext` decoding to work with concurrent decoding. The `remapped_ctxts` field now only stores `SyntaxContext` which have completed decoding, while the new `decoding` and `local_in_progress` keeps track of `SyntaxContext`s which are in process of being decoding and on which threads.
This fixes 2 issues with the current implementation. It can return an `SyntaxContext` which contains dummy data if another thread starts decoding before the first one has completely finished. Multiple threads could also allocate multiple `SyntaxContext`s for the same `raw_id`.
Suggest mutable borrow on read only for-loop that should be mutable
```
error[E0596]: cannot borrow `*test` as mutable, as it is behind a `&` reference
--> $DIR/suggest-mut-iterator.rs:22:9
|
LL | for test in &tests {
| ------ this iterator yields `&` references
LL | test.add(2);
| ^^^^ `test` is a `&` reference, so the data it refers to cannot be borrowed as mutable
|
help: use a mutable iterator instead
|
LL | for test in &mut tests {
| +++
```
Fix#114311.
Parse unnamed fields and anonymous structs or unions (no-recovery)
It is part of #114782 which implements #49804. Only parse anonymous structs or unions in struct field definition positions.
r? `@petrochenkov`
Make `Sharded` an enum and specialize it for the single thread case
This changes `Sharded` to use a single shard by an enum, reducing the size of `Sharded` for greater cache efficiency.
Performance improvement with 1 thread and `cfg(parallel_compiler)`:
<table><tr><td rowspan="2">Benchmark</td><td colspan="1"><b>Before</b></th><td colspan="2"><b>After</b></th></tr><tr><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">Time</td><td align="right">%</th></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>clap</b>:check</td><td align="right">1.7009s</td><td align="right">1.6748s</td><td align="right">💚 -1.53%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>hyper</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.2525s</td><td align="right">0.2451s</td><td align="right">💚 -2.90%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>regex</b>:check</td><td align="right">0.9519s</td><td align="right">0.9353s</td><td align="right">💚 -1.74%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syn</b>:check</td><td align="right">1.5504s</td><td align="right">1.5280s</td><td align="right">💚 -1.45%</td></tr><tr><td>🟣 <b>syntex_syntax</b>:check</td><td align="right">5.9536s</td><td align="right">5.8873s</td><td align="right">💚 -1.11%</td></tr><tr><td>Total</td><td align="right">10.4092s</td><td align="right">10.2706s</td><td align="right">💚 -1.33%</td></tr><tr><td>Summary</td><td align="right">1.0000s</td><td align="right">0.9825s</td><td align="right">💚 -1.75%</td></tr></table>
I did see an unexpected 0.23% change for the serial compiler, so this could use a perf run to see if that reproduces.
cc `@SparrowLii`
Ensure that THIR unsafety check is done before stealing it
This ensures that THIR unsafety check is done before stealing it by running it on the typeck root instead of on a closure, which does nothing.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/111520
Don't do intra-pass validation on MIR shims
Fixes#114375
In the test that was committed, we end up generating the drop shim for `struct Foo` that looks like:
```
fn std::ptr::drop_in_place(_1: *mut Foo) -> () {
let mut _0: ();
bb0: {
goto -> bb5;
}
bb1: {
return;
}
bb2 (cleanup): {
resume;
}
bb3: {
goto -> bb1;
}
bb4 (cleanup): {
drop(((*_1).0: foo::WrapperWithDrop<()>)) -> [return: bb2, unwind terminate];
}
bb5: {
drop(((*_1).0: foo::WrapperWithDrop<()>)) -> [return: bb3, unwind: bb2];
}
}
```
In `bb4` and `bb5`, we assert that `(*_1).0` has type `WrapperWithDrop<()>`. However, In a user-facing param env, the type is actually `WrapperWithDrop<Tait>`. These types are not equal in a user-facing param-env (and can't be made equal even if we use `DefiningAnchor::Bubble`, since it's a non-local TAIT).
Use the same DISubprogram for each instance of the same inlined function within a caller
# Issue Details:
The call to `panic` within a function like `Option::unwrap` is translated to LLVM as a `tail call` (as it will never return), when multiple calls to the same function like this is inlined LLVM will notice the common `tail call` block (i.e., loading the same panic string + location info and then calling `panic`) and merge them together.
When merging these instructions together, LLVM will also attempt to merge the debug locations as well, but this fails (i.e., debug info is dropped) as Rust emits a new `DISubprogram` at each inline site thus LLVM doesn't recognize that these are actually the same function and so thinks that there isn't a common debug location.
As an example of this when building for x86_64 Windows (note the lack of `.cv_loc` before the call to `panic`, thus it will be attributed to the same line at the `addq` instruction):
```
.cv_loc 0 1 23 0 # src\lib.rs:23:0
addq $40, %rsp
retq
leaq .Lalloc_f570dea0a53168780ce9a91e67646421(%rip), %rcx
leaq .Lalloc_629ace53b7e5b76aaa810d549cc84ea3(%rip), %r8
movl $43, %edx
callq _ZN4core9panicking5panic17h12e60b9063f6dee8E
int3
```
# Fix Details:
Cache the `DISubprogram` emitted for each inlined function instance within a caller so that this can be reused if that instance is encountered again, this also requires caching the `DILexicalBlock` and `DIVariable` objects to avoid creating duplicates.
After this change the above assembly now looks like:
```
.cv_loc 0 1 23 0 # src\lib.rs:23:0
addq $40, %rsp
retq
.cv_inline_site_id 5 within 0 inlined_at 1 0 0
.cv_inline_site_id 6 within 5 inlined_at 1 12 0
.cv_loc 6 2 935 0 # library\core\src\option.rs:935:0
leaq .Lalloc_5f55955de67e57c79064b537689facea(%rip), %rcx
leaq .Lalloc_e741d4de8cb5801e1fd7a6c6795c1559(%rip), %r8
movl $43, %edx
callq _ZN4core9panicking5panic17hde1558f32d5b1c04E
int3
```
triagebot: add dependency licensing pings
If a compiler dependency is added, it's probably worth having that double-checked by compiler co-leads to confirm the licensing is okay.
r? `@wesleywiser`
Always use `os-release` rather than `/lib` to detect `NixOS` (bootstrap)
[Two users over on zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/122651-general/topic/Bootstrapping.20on.20NixOS) bumped into issues where NixOS wasn't being properly detected.
I believe this was caused by the presence of `/lib` on their machines. `/lib` is not standard on NixOS but can still be created by users or scripts.
We are already checking `/etc/os-release`. The presence of `ID=nixos` in it's output should be trustworthy and we shouldn't then go on to also check for `/lib`.
Add disclaimer on size assertion macro
Sometimes people are inspired by rustc to add size assertions to their code and copy the macro. This is bad because it causes hard build errors. rustc happens to be special where it makes this okay.
For example, see #115028 (not sure whether they were directly inspired by this function), but I think I've also seen other cases.
Warn on elided lifetimes in associated constants (`ELIDED_LIFETIMES_IN_ASSOCIATED_CONSTANT`)
Elided lifetimes in associated constants (in impls) erroneously resolve to fresh lifetime parameters on the impl since #97313. This is not correct behavior (see #38831).
I originally opened #114716 to fix this, but given the time that has passed, the crater results seem pretty bad: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/114716#issuecomment-1682091952
This PR alternatively implements a lint against this behavior, and I'm hoping to bump this to deny in a few versions.