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
proc-macro-test: Pass target to cargo invocation
When cross compiling macos → dragonfly the dist build fails in the proc-maro-test-impl crate with the following error:
`ld: unknown option: -z\nclang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)`
This appears to be a wart stemming from using an Apple host for cross compiling. Passing the target along to cargo allows it to pick up a linker that it understands and DTRT.
SCIP: Report the correct version of rust-analyzer in the metadata
Previously this was hard coded to "0.1". The SCIP protocol allows this to be an arbitrary string:
```
message ToolInfo {
// Name of the indexer that produced this index.
string name = 1;
// Version of the indexer that produced this index.
string version = 2;
// Command-line arguments that were used to invoke this indexer.
repeated string arguments = 3;
}
```
so use the same string reported by `rust-analyzer --version`.
Previously this was hard coded to "0.1". The SCIP protocol allows this
to be an arbitrary string:
```
message ToolInfo {
// Name of the indexer that produced this index.
string name = 1;
// Version of the indexer that produced this index.
string version = 2;
// Command-line arguments that were used to invoke this indexer.
repeated string arguments = 3;
}
```
so use the same string reported by `rust-analyzer --version`.
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.
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.
internal: unpin serde
Serde no longer uses blobs as of
https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/pull/2590
As such, there's no longer need for us to pin it.
Note that this doesn't upgrade serde version we use: I am fairly confident that the blobs are already there are fine, and now I am fairly confident that all future versions of serde will be fine as well.
Fix table issues in platform support documentation (closes#115047)
mdBook needs an empty line before and after the table block.
In addition, in the tier-3 list three targets forgot about the host column and therefore showed the notes in the host column.
Closes#115047
Add `suggestion` for some `#[deprecated]` items
Consider code:
```rust
fn main() {
let _ = ["a", "b"].connect(" ");
}
```
Currently it shows deprecated warning:
```rust
warning: use of deprecated method `std::slice::<impl [T]>::connect`: renamed to join
--> src/main.rs:2:24
|
2 | let _ = ["a", "b"].connect(" ");
| ^^^^^^^
|
= note: `#[warn(deprecated)]` on by default
```
This PR adds `suggestion` for `connect` and some other deprecated items, so the warning will be changed to this:
```rust
warning: use of deprecated method `std::slice::<impl [T]>::connect`: renamed to join
--> src/main.rs:2:24
|
2 | let _ = ["a", "b"].connect(" ");
| ^^^^^^^
|
= note: `#[warn(deprecated)]` on by default
help: replace the use of the deprecated method
|
2 | let _ = ["a", "b"].join(" ");
| ^^^^
```