We can't do the easy hack that we did before anymore, where we kept
track of whether any inference variables changed since the last time we
rechecked obligations. Instead, we store the obligations in
canonicalized form; that way we can easily check the inference variables
to see whether they have changed since the goal was canonicalized.
Fix#2922: add unknown length as a condition for a type having unknown.
Incorporate reviews:
* Extract some of the const evaluation workings into functions
* Add fixmes on the hacks
* Add tests for impls on specific array lengths (these work!!! 😁)
* Add tests for const generics (indeed we don't support it yet)
8799: Add basic support for array lengths in types r=flodiebold a=lf-
This recognizes `let a = [1u8, 2, 3]` as having type `[u8; 3]` instead
of the previous `[u8; _]`. Byte strings and `[0u8; 2]` kinds of range
array declarations are unsupported as before.
I don't know why a bunch of our rustc tests had single quotes inside
strings un-escaped by `UPDATE_EXPECT=1 cargo t`, but I don't think it's
bad? Maybe something in a nightly?
Co-authored-by: Jade <software@lfcode.ca>
This recognizes `let a = [1u8, 2, 3]` as having type `[u8; 3]` instead
of the previous `[u8; _]`. Byte strings and `[0u8; 2]` kinds of range
array declarations are unsupported as before.
I don't know why a bunch of our rustc tests had single quotes inside
strings un-escaped by `UPDATE_EXPECT=1 cargo t`, but I don't think it's
bad? Maybe something in a nightly?
Almost all uses actually only care about ADT substs, so it's better to
be explicit. The methods were a bad abstraction anyway since they
already didn't include the inner types of e.g. `TyKind::Ref` anymore.
8364: Memory usage improvements r=jonas-schievink a=alexmaco
These are mostly focused on splitting up enum variants with large size differences between variants by `Box`-ing things up.
In my testing this reduces the memory usage somewhere in the low percentages, even though the measurements are quite noisy.
Co-authored-by: Alexandru Macovei <alexnmaco@gmail.com>
Rationale: only a minority of variants used almost half the size.
By keeping large members (especially in Option) behind a box
the memory cost is only payed when the large variants are needed.
This reduces the size Vec<Expr> needs to allocate.
- don't shift in/out for Chalk mapping (we want to have the same
binders now)
- do shift in when creating the signature for a closure (though it
shouldn't matter much)
- do shift in when lowering a `fn()` type
- correctly deal with the implied binder in TypeWalk
This is just the most trivial check: If no inference variables have been
updated, and there are no new obligations, we can just skip trying to
solve them again. We could be smarter about it, but this already helps
quite a bit, and I don't want to touch this too much before we replace
the inference table by Chalk's.
Fixes#8263 (well, improves it quite a bit).
We have a bug where type-checking `per_query_memory_usage` takes a
couple of seconds. It also reveals another bug: our type inference is
not cancellable.
7907: Autoderef with visibility r=cynecx a=cynecx
Fixes https://github.com/rust-analyzer/rust-analyzer/issues/7841.
I am not sure about the general approach here. Right now this simply tries to check whether the autoderef candidate is reachable from the current module. ~~However this doesn't exactly work with traits (see the `tests::macros::infer_derive_clone_in_core` test, which fails right now).~~ see comment below
Refs:
- `rustc_typeck` checking fields: 66ec64ccf3/compiler/rustc_typeck/src/check/expr.rs (L1610)
r? @flodiebold
Co-authored-by: cynecx <me@cynecx.net>
8136: Introduce QuantifiedWhereClause and DynTy analogous to Chalk r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
This introduces a bunch of new binders in lots of places, which we have to be careful about, but we had to add them at some point. There's a lot of skipping of the binders; once we're done with the Chalk move, we should review the remaining ones.
8146: Document patch policy r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+
🤖
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <aleksey.kladov@gmail.com>
This in particular means storing a chalk_ir::Environment, not our
TraitEnvironment. This makes InEnvironment not usable for Type, where we
need to keep the full TraitEnvironment.
8018: Make Ty wrap TyKind in an Arc r=flodiebold a=flodiebold
... to further move towards Chalk.
This is a bit of a slowdown (218ginstr vs 213ginstr for inference on RA), even though it allows us to unwrap the Substs in `TyKind::Ref` etc..
Co-authored-by: Florian Diebold <flodiebold@gmail.com>
... like it will be in Chalk. We still keep `interned_mut` and
`into_inner` methods that will probably not exist with Chalk.
This worsens performance slightly (5ginstr inference on RA), but doesn't
include other simplifications we can do yet.
In 1.49.0, the definition of Box was modified to support an optional
Allocator[1]. Adapt the parsing of the `box` keyword to supply the
expected number of parameters to the constructor.
[1] f288cd2e17
6818: Add Lifetimes to the HIR r=matklad a=Veykril
This doesn't handle resolve yet as I don't know yet how that will be used. I'll get to that once I start moving the lifetime reference PR to the hir.
This also adds a new `hir` name type for lifetimes and labels, `hir::LifetimeName`.
Co-authored-by: Lukas Wirth <lukastw97@gmail.com>
It's very useful when `pub` is equivalent to "this is crate's public
API", let's enforce this!
Ideally, we should enforce it for local `cargo test`, and only during
CI, but that needs https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/5034.