rust/compiler/rustc_middle/src/ty/closure.rs

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use crate::hir::place::{
Place as HirPlace, PlaceBase as HirPlaceBase, ProjectionKind as HirProjectionKind,
};
use crate::ty;
use rustc_data_structures::fx::{FxHashMap, FxIndexMap};
use rustc_hir as hir;
use rustc_hir::def_id::{DefId, LocalDefId};
use rustc_span::Span;
use super::{Ty, TyCtxt};
use self::BorrowKind::*;
#[derive(
Clone,
Copy,
Debug,
PartialEq,
Eq,
Hash,
TyEncodable,
TyDecodable,
TypeFoldable,
HashStable
)]
pub struct UpvarPath {
pub hir_id: hir::HirId,
}
/// Upvars do not get their own `NodeId`. Instead, we use the pair of
/// the original var ID (that is, the root variable that is referenced
/// by the upvar) and the ID of the closure expression.
#[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, TypeFoldable, HashStable)]
pub struct UpvarId {
pub var_path: UpvarPath,
pub closure_expr_id: LocalDefId,
}
impl UpvarId {
pub fn new(var_hir_id: hir::HirId, closure_def_id: LocalDefId) -> UpvarId {
UpvarId { var_path: UpvarPath { hir_id: var_hir_id }, closure_expr_id: closure_def_id }
}
}
/// Information describing the capture of an upvar. This is computed
/// during `typeck`, specifically by `regionck`.
#[derive(PartialEq, Clone, Debug, Copy, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, TypeFoldable, HashStable)]
pub enum UpvarCapture<'tcx> {
/// Upvar is captured by value. This is always true when the
/// closure is labeled `move`, but can also be true in other cases
/// depending on inference.
///
/// If the upvar was inferred to be captured by value (e.g. `move`
/// was not used), then the `Span` points to a usage that
/// required it. There may be more than one such usage
/// (e.g. `|| { a; a; }`), in which case we pick an
/// arbitrary one.
ByValue(Option<Span>),
/// Upvar is captured by reference.
ByRef(UpvarBorrow<'tcx>),
}
#[derive(PartialEq, Clone, Copy, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, TypeFoldable, HashStable)]
pub struct UpvarBorrow<'tcx> {
/// The kind of borrow: by-ref upvars have access to shared
/// immutable borrows, which are not part of the normal language
/// syntax.
pub kind: BorrowKind,
/// Region of the resulting reference.
pub region: ty::Region<'tcx>,
}
pub type UpvarListMap = FxHashMap<DefId, FxIndexMap<hir::HirId, UpvarId>>;
pub type UpvarCaptureMap<'tcx> = FxHashMap<UpvarId, UpvarCapture<'tcx>>;
/// Given the closure DefId this map provides a map of root variables to minimum
/// set of `CapturedPlace`s that need to be tracked to support all captures of that closure.
pub type MinCaptureInformationMap<'tcx> = FxHashMap<DefId, RootVariableMinCaptureList<'tcx>>;
/// Part of `MinCaptureInformationMap`; Maps a root variable to the list of `CapturedPlace`.
/// Used to track the minimum set of `Place`s that need to be captured to support all
/// Places captured by the closure starting at a given root variable.
///
/// This provides a convenient and quick way of checking if a variable being used within
/// a closure is a capture of a local variable.
pub type RootVariableMinCaptureList<'tcx> = FxIndexMap<hir::HirId, MinCaptureList<'tcx>>;
/// Part of `MinCaptureInformationMap`; List of `CapturePlace`s.
pub type MinCaptureList<'tcx> = Vec<CapturedPlace<'tcx>>;
/// Represents the various closure traits in the language. This
/// will determine the type of the environment (`self`, in the
/// desugaring) argument that the closure expects.
///
/// You can get the environment type of a closure using
/// `tcx.closure_env_ty()`.
#[derive(Clone, Copy, PartialOrd, Ord, PartialEq, Eq, Hash, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable)]
#[derive(HashStable)]
pub enum ClosureKind {
// Warning: Ordering is significant here! The ordering is chosen
// because the trait Fn is a subtrait of FnMut and so in turn, and
// hence we order it so that Fn < FnMut < FnOnce.
Fn,
FnMut,
FnOnce,
}
impl<'tcx> ClosureKind {
// This is the initial value used when doing upvar inference.
pub const LATTICE_BOTTOM: ClosureKind = ClosureKind::Fn;
/// Returns `true` if a type that impls this closure kind
/// must also implement `other`.
pub fn extends(self, other: ty::ClosureKind) -> bool {
matches!(
(self, other),
(ClosureKind::Fn, ClosureKind::Fn)
| (ClosureKind::Fn, ClosureKind::FnMut)
| (ClosureKind::Fn, ClosureKind::FnOnce)
| (ClosureKind::FnMut, ClosureKind::FnMut)
| (ClosureKind::FnMut, ClosureKind::FnOnce)
| (ClosureKind::FnOnce, ClosureKind::FnOnce)
)
}
/// Returns the representative scalar type for this closure kind.
/// See `TyS::to_opt_closure_kind` for more details.
pub fn to_ty(self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Ty<'tcx> {
match self {
ty::ClosureKind::Fn => tcx.types.i8,
ty::ClosureKind::FnMut => tcx.types.i16,
ty::ClosureKind::FnOnce => tcx.types.i32,
}
}
}
/// A composite describing a `Place` that is captured by a closure.
#[derive(PartialEq, Clone, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, TypeFoldable, HashStable)]
pub struct CapturedPlace<'tcx> {
/// The `Place` that is captured.
pub place: HirPlace<'tcx>,
/// `CaptureKind` and expression(s) that resulted in such capture of `place`.
pub info: CaptureInfo<'tcx>,
/// Represents if `place` can be mutated or not.
pub mutability: hir::Mutability,
}
impl CapturedPlace<'tcx> {
/// Returns the hir-id of the root variable for the captured place.
/// e.g., if `a.b.c` was captured, would return the hir-id for `a`.
pub fn get_root_variable(&self) -> hir::HirId {
match self.place.base {
HirPlaceBase::Upvar(upvar_id) => upvar_id.var_path.hir_id,
base => bug!("Expected upvar, found={:?}", base),
}
}
/// Returns the `LocalDefId` of the closure that captureed this Place
pub fn get_closure_local_def_id(&self) -> LocalDefId {
match self.place.base {
HirPlaceBase::Upvar(upvar_id) => upvar_id.closure_expr_id,
base => bug!("expected upvar, found={:?}", base),
}
}
/// Return span pointing to use that resulted in selecting the current capture kind
pub fn get_capture_kind_span(&self, tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>) -> Span {
if let Some(capture_kind_expr_id) = self.info.capture_kind_expr_id {
tcx.hir().span(capture_kind_expr_id)
} else if let Some(path_expr_id) = self.info.path_expr_id {
tcx.hir().span(path_expr_id)
} else {
// Fallback on upvars mentioned if neither path or capture expr id is captured
// Safe to unwrap since we know this place is captured by the closure, therefore the closure must have upvars.
tcx.upvars_mentioned(self.get_closure_local_def_id()).unwrap()
[&self.get_root_variable()]
.span
}
}
}
/// Return true if the `proj_possible_ancestor` represents an ancestor path
/// to `proj_capture` or `proj_possible_ancestor` is same as `proj_capture`,
/// assuming they both start off of the same root variable.
///
/// **Note:** It's the caller's responsibility to ensure that both lists of projections
/// start off of the same root variable.
///
/// Eg: 1. `foo.x` which is represented using `projections=[Field(x)]` is an ancestor of
/// `foo.x.y` which is represented using `projections=[Field(x), Field(y)]`.
/// Note both `foo.x` and `foo.x.y` start off of the same root variable `foo`.
/// 2. Since we only look at the projections here function will return `bar.x` as an a valid
/// ancestor of `foo.x.y`. It's the caller's responsibility to ensure that both projections
/// list are being applied to the same root variable.
pub fn is_ancestor_or_same_capture(
proj_possible_ancestor: &[HirProjectionKind],
proj_capture: &[HirProjectionKind],
) -> bool {
// We want to make sure `is_ancestor_or_same_capture("x.0.0", "x.0")` to return false.
// Therefore we can't just check if all projections are same in the zipped iterator below.
if proj_possible_ancestor.len() > proj_capture.len() {
return false;
}
proj_possible_ancestor.iter().zip(proj_capture).all(|(a, b)| a == b)
}
/// Part of `MinCaptureInformationMap`; describes the capture kind (&, &mut, move)
/// for a particular capture as well as identifying the part of the source code
/// that triggered this capture to occur.
#[derive(PartialEq, Clone, Debug, Copy, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, TypeFoldable, HashStable)]
pub struct CaptureInfo<'tcx> {
/// Expr Id pointing to use that resulted in selecting the current capture kind
///
/// Eg:
/// ```rust,no_run
/// let mut t = (0,1);
///
/// let c = || {
/// println!("{}",t); // L1
/// t.1 = 4; // L2
/// };
/// ```
/// `capture_kind_expr_id` will point to the use on L2 and `path_expr_id` will point to the
/// use on L1.
///
/// If the user doesn't enable feature `capture_disjoint_fields` (RFC 2229) then, it is
/// possible that we don't see the use of a particular place resulting in capture_kind_expr_id being
/// None. In such case we fallback on uvpars_mentioned for span.
///
/// Eg:
/// ```rust,no_run
/// let x = 5;
///
/// let c = || {
/// let _ = x
/// };
/// ```
///
/// In this example, if `capture_disjoint_fields` is **not** set, then x will be captured,
/// but we won't see it being used during capture analysis, since it's essentially a discard.
pub capture_kind_expr_id: Option<hir::HirId>,
/// Expr Id pointing to use that resulted the corresponding place being captured
///
/// See `capture_kind_expr_id` for example.
///
pub path_expr_id: Option<hir::HirId>,
/// Capture mode that was selected
pub capture_kind: UpvarCapture<'tcx>,
}
pub fn place_to_string_for_capture(tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>, place: &HirPlace<'tcx>) -> String {
let name = match place.base {
HirPlaceBase::Upvar(upvar_id) => tcx.hir().name(upvar_id.var_path.hir_id).to_string(),
_ => bug!("Capture_information should only contain upvars"),
};
let mut curr_string = name;
for (i, proj) in place.projections.iter().enumerate() {
match proj.kind {
HirProjectionKind::Deref => {
curr_string = format!("*{}", curr_string);
}
HirProjectionKind::Field(idx, variant) => match place.ty_before_projection(i).kind() {
ty::Adt(def, ..) => {
curr_string = format!(
"{}.{}",
curr_string,
def.variants[variant].fields[idx as usize].ident.name.as_str()
);
}
ty::Tuple(_) => {
curr_string = format!("{}.{}", curr_string, idx);
}
_ => {
bug!(
"Field projection applied to a type other than Adt or Tuple: {:?}.",
place.ty_before_projection(i).kind()
)
}
},
proj => bug!("{:?} unexpected because it isn't captured", proj),
}
}
curr_string.to_string()
}
#[derive(Clone, PartialEq, Debug, TyEncodable, TyDecodable, TypeFoldable, Copy, HashStable)]
pub enum BorrowKind {
/// Data must be immutable and is aliasable.
ImmBorrow,
/// Data must be immutable but not aliasable. This kind of borrow
/// cannot currently be expressed by the user and is used only in
/// implicit closure bindings. It is needed when the closure
/// is borrowing or mutating a mutable referent, e.g.:
///
/// ```
/// let x: &mut isize = ...;
/// let y = || *x += 5;
/// ```
///
/// If we were to try to translate this closure into a more explicit
/// form, we'd encounter an error with the code as written:
///
/// ```
/// struct Env { x: & &mut isize }
/// let x: &mut isize = ...;
/// let y = (&mut Env { &x }, fn_ptr); // Closure is pair of env and fn
/// fn fn_ptr(env: &mut Env) { **env.x += 5; }
/// ```
///
/// This is then illegal because you cannot mutate a `&mut` found
/// in an aliasable location. To solve, you'd have to translate with
/// an `&mut` borrow:
///
/// ```
/// struct Env { x: & &mut isize }
/// let x: &mut isize = ...;
/// let y = (&mut Env { &mut x }, fn_ptr); // changed from &x to &mut x
/// fn fn_ptr(env: &mut Env) { **env.x += 5; }
/// ```
///
/// Now the assignment to `**env.x` is legal, but creating a
/// mutable pointer to `x` is not because `x` is not mutable. We
/// could fix this by declaring `x` as `let mut x`. This is ok in
/// user code, if awkward, but extra weird for closures, since the
/// borrow is hidden.
///
/// So we introduce a "unique imm" borrow -- the referent is
/// immutable, but not aliasable. This solves the problem. For
/// simplicity, we don't give users the way to express this
/// borrow, it's just used when translating closures.
UniqueImmBorrow,
/// Data is mutable and not aliasable.
MutBorrow,
}
impl BorrowKind {
pub fn from_mutbl(m: hir::Mutability) -> BorrowKind {
match m {
hir::Mutability::Mut => MutBorrow,
hir::Mutability::Not => ImmBorrow,
}
}
/// Returns a mutability `m` such that an `&m T` pointer could be used to obtain this borrow
/// kind. Because borrow kinds are richer than mutabilities, we sometimes have to pick a
/// mutability that is stronger than necessary so that it at least *would permit* the borrow in
/// question.
pub fn to_mutbl_lossy(self) -> hir::Mutability {
match self {
MutBorrow => hir::Mutability::Mut,
ImmBorrow => hir::Mutability::Not,
// We have no type corresponding to a unique imm borrow, so
// use `&mut`. It gives all the capabilities of an `&uniq`
// and hence is a safe "over approximation".
UniqueImmBorrow => hir::Mutability::Mut,
}
}
}