re-add git-commit-hash file to tarballs
rust-lang/rust#100557 removed the `git-commit-hash` file and replaced it with `git-commit-info`. However, build-manifest relies on the `git-commit-hash` file being present, so this adds it back.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
internal: change generic parameter order
tl;dr: This PR changes the `Substitution` for trait items and methods like so:
```rust
trait Trait<TP, const CP: usize> { // note the implicit Self as first parameter
type Type<TC, const CC: usize>;
fn f<TC, const CC: usize>() {}
}
impl<TP, const CP: usize> S {
fn f<TC, const CC: usize>() {}
}
```
- before this PR: `[Self, TP, CP, TC, CC]` for each trait item, `[TP, CP, TC, CC]` for `S::f`
- after this PR: `[TC, CC, Self, TP, CP]` for each trait item, `[TC, CC, TP, CP]` for `S::f`
---
This PR "inverts" the generic parameters/arguments of an item and its parent. This is to fulfill [chalk's expectation](d875af0ff1/chalk-solve/src/rust_ir.rs (L498-L502)) on the order of generic arguments in `Substitution`s for generic associated types and it's one step forward for GATs support (hopefully). Although chalk doesn't put any constraint for other items, it feels more natural to get everything aligned than special casing GATs.
One complication is that `TyBuilder` now demands its users to pass in parent's `Substitution` upon construction unless it's obvious that the the item has no parent (e.g. an ADT never has parent). All users *should* already know the parent of the item in question, and without this, it cannot be easily reasoned about whether we're pushing the argument for the item or for its parent.
Some additional notes:
- f8f5a5ea57: This isn't related to the change, but I felt it's nicer.
- 78977cd86c: There's one major change here other than the generic param order: Default arguments are now bound by the same `Binder` as the item in question rather than a `Binder` limited to parameters they can refer to (i.e. arguments that syntactically appear before them). Now that the order of generic parameters is changed, it would be somewhat complicated to make such `Binder`s as before, and the "full" `Binder`s shouldn't be a problem because we already make sure that the default arguments don't refer to the generic arguments after them with `fallback_bound_vars()`.
- 7556f74b16: This is split from 4385d3dcd0 to make it easy to revert if it turns out that the GATs with const generics panic is actually not resolved with this PR. cc #11878#11957
Fix duplicate usage of `a` article.
This fixes a typo first appearing in #94624 in which test-macro diagnostic uses "a" article twice.
Since I searched the sources for " a a " sequences, I also fixed the same issue in a few files where I found it.
Get rid of exclude-list for Windows-only tests
Main purpose of this change is to get rid of a quite long (and growing) list of excluded targets, while this test should only be useful on Windows (as far as I understand it). The `// only-windows` header seams to implement exactly what we need here.
I don't know why there are some whitespace changes, but `x.py fmt` and `.git/hooks/pre-push` are happy.
fix: use git-commit-info for version information
Fixes#33286.
Fixes#86587.
This PR changes the current `git-commit-hash` file that `./x.py` dist puts in the `rustc-{version}-src.tar.{x,g}z` to contain the hash, the short hash, and the commit date from which the tarball was created, assuming git was available when it was. It uses this for reading the version so that rustc has all the appropriate metadata.
# Testing
Testing this is kind of a pain. I did it with something like
```sh
./x.py dist # ensure that `ignore-git` is `false` in config.toml
cp ./build/dist/rustc-1.65.0-dev-src.tar.gz ../rustc-1.65.0-dev-src.tar.gz
cd .. && tar -xzf rustc-1.65.0-dev-src && cd rustc-1.65.0-dev-src
./x.py build
```
Then, the output of `rustc -vV` with the stage1 compiler should have the `commit-hash` and `commit-date` fields filled, rather than be `unknown`. To be completely sure, you can use `rustc --sysroot` with the stdlib that the original `./x.py dist` made, which will require that the metadata matches.
This fixes a typo first appearing in #94624
in which test-macro diagnostic uses "a" article twice.
Since I searched sources for " a a " sequences,
I also fixed the same issue in a few source files where I found it.
Signed-off-by: Petr Portnov <gh@progrm-jarvis.ru>
This commit "inverts" the order of generic parameters/arguments of an
item and its parent. This is to fulfill chalk's expectation on the
order of `Substitution` for generic associated types and it's one step
forward for their support (hopefully).
Although chalk doesn't put any constraint on the order of `Substitution`
for other items, it feels natural to get everything aligned rather than
special casing GATs.
One complication is that `TyBuilder` now demands its users to pass in
parent's `Substitution` upon construction unless it's obvious that the
the item has no parent (e.g. an ADT never has parent). All users
*should* already know the parent of the item in question, and without
this, it cannot be easily reasoned about whether we're pushing the
argument for the item or for its parent.
Quick comparison of how this commit changes `Substitution`:
```rust
trait Trait<TP, const CP: usize> {
type Type<TC, const CC: usize> = ();
fn f<TC, const CC: usize>() {}
}
```
- before this commit: `[Self, TP, CP, TC, CC]` for each trait item
- after this commit: `[TC, CC, Self, TP, CP]` for each trait item
Change argument handling in `remote-test-server` and add new flags
This PR updates `remote-test-server` to add two new flags:
* `--sequential` disables parallel test execution, accepting one connection at the time instead. We need this for Ferrocene as one of our emulators occasionally deadlocks when running multiple tests in parallel.
* `--bind <ip:port>` allows customizing the IP and port `remote-test-server` binds to, rather than using the default value.
While I was changing the flags, and [after chatting on what to do on Zulip](https://rust-lang.zulipchat.com/#narrow/stream/326414-t-infra.2Fbootstrap/topic/remote-test-server.20flags), I took this opportunity to cleanup argument handling in `remote-test-server`, which is a breaking change:
* The `verbose` argument has been renamed to the `--verbose` flag.
* The `remote` argument has been removed in favor of the `--bind 0.0.0.0:12345` flag. The only thing the argument did was to change the bound IP to 0.0.0.0, which can easily be replicated with `--bind` and also is not secure as our "remote" default.
I'm also open to keep the old arguments with deprecation warnings.
r? `@Mark-Simulacrum`
remove outdated coherence hack
we have a more precise detection for downstream conflicts in candidate assembly: the `is_knowable` check in `candidate_from_obligation_no_cache`.
r? types cc `@nikomatsakis`
Fix perf regression from TypeVisitor changes
Regression occurred in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/101858#issuecomment-1248732579
Instead of just reverting, we only fixed part of the regression. The main regression was due to actually correctly visiting a type that contains types and consts and should therefor be visited. This is not actually observable (yet?), but we should still do it correctly instead of risking major bugs in the future.
fix: infer for-loop item type with `IntoIterator` and `Iterator`
Part of #13299
We've been inferring the type of the yielded values in for-loop as `<T as IntoIterator>::Item`. We infer the correct type most of the time when we normalize the projection type, but it turns out not always. We should infer the type as `<<T as IntoIterator>::IntoIter as Iterator>::Item`.
When one specifies `IntoIter` assoc type of `IntoIterator` but not `Item` in generic bounds, we fail to normalize `<T as IntoIterator>::Item` (even though `IntoIter` is defined like so: `type IntoIter: Iterator<Item = Self::Item>` - rustc does *not* normalize projections based on other projection's bound I believe; see [this playground](https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=e88e19385094cb98fadbf647b4c2082e)).
Note that this doesn't fully fix # 13299 - given the following code, chalk can normalize `<I as IntoIterator>::IntoIter` to `S`, but cannot normalize `<S as Iterator>::Item` to `i32`.
```rust
struct S;
impl Iterator for S { type Item = i32; /* ... */ }
fn f<I: IntoIterator<IntoIter = S>>(it: I) {
for elem in it {}
//^^^^{unknown}
}
```
This is because chalk finds multiple answers that satisfy the query `AliasEq(<S as Iterator>::Item = ?X`: `?X = i32` and `?X = <I as IntoIterator>::Item` - which are supposed to be the same type due to the aforementioned bound on `IntoIter` but chalk is unable to figure it out.
Enable inline stack probes on PowerPC and SystemZ
The LLVM PowerPC and SystemZ targets have both supported `"probe-stack"="inline-asm"` for longer than our current minimum LLVM 13 requirement, so we can turn this on for all `powerpc`, `powerpc64`, `powerpc64le`, and `s390x` targets in Rust. These are all tier-2 or lower, so CI does not run their tests, but I have confirmed that their `linux-gnu` variants do pass on RHEL.
cc #43241
Make the `c` feature for `compiler-builtins` an explicit opt-in
Its build script doesn't support cross-compilation. I tried fixing it, but the cc crate itself doesn't appear to support cross-compiling to windows either unless you use the -gnu toolchain:
```
error occurred: Failed to find tool. Is `lib.exe` installed?
```
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/101172.
Rewrite and refactor format_args!() builtin macro.
This is a near complete rewrite of `compiler/rustc_builtin_macros/src/format.rs`.
This gets rid of the massive unmaintanable [`Context` struct](76531befc4/compiler/rustc_builtin_macros/src/format.rs (L176-L263)), and splits the macro expansion into three parts:
1. First, `parse_args` will parse the `(literal, arg, arg, name=arg, name=arg)` syntax, but doesn't parse the template (the literal) itself.
2. Second, `make_format_args` will parse the template, the format options, resolve argument references, produce diagnostics, and turn the whole thing into a `FormatArgs` structure.
3. Finally, `expand_parsed_format_args` will turn that `FormatArgs` structure into the expression that the macro expands to.
In other words, the `format_args` builtin macro used to be a hard-to-maintain 'single pass compiler', which I've split into a three phase compiler with a parser/tokenizer (step 1), semantic analysis (step 2), and backend (step 3). (It's compilers all the way down. ^^)
This can serve as a great starting point for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/99012, which will only need to change the implementation of 3, while leaving step 1 and 2 unchanged.
It also makes https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/541 easier, which could then upgrade the new `FormatArgs` struct to an `ast` node and remove step 3, moving that step to later in the compilation process.
It also fixes a few diagnostics bugs.
This also [significantly reduces](https://gist.github.com/m-ou-se/b67b2d54172c4837a5ab1b26fa3e5284) the amount of generated code for cases with arguments in non-default order without formatting options, like `"{1} {0}"` or `"{a} {}"`, etc.
Amalgamate file changes for the same file ids in process_changes
When receiving multiple change events for a single file id where the last change is a delete the server panics, as it tries to access the file contents of a deleted file. This occurs due to the VFS changes and the in memory file contents being updated immediately, while `process_changes` processes the events afterwards in sequence which no longer works as it will only observe the final file contents. By folding these events together, we will no longer try to process these intermediate changes, as they aren't relevant anyways.
Potentially fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer/issues/13236