parser: Remove old diagnostic notes for type ascription syntax
Type ascription syntax was removed by #109128 in 2023, so “remove this again in a few months” is long overdue.
Happily, this also reduces the amount of parser diagnostic code that cares whether the compiler is unstable.
---
See also the recent #138898, which removed some other related dead code but declined to touch the diagnostics.
It's possible that some of these parser tests are no longer useful at all, but I haven't investigated them for this PR.
Rename `LifetimeName` as `LifetimeKind`.
It's a much better name, more consistent with how we name such things.
Also rename `Lifetime::res` as `Lifetime::kind` to match. I suspect this field used to have the type `LifetimeRes` and then the type was changed but the field name remained the same.
r? ``@BoxyUwU``
Fix `register_group_alias` for tools
In clippy we're looking at renaming `clippy::all` and registering an alias for it but currently that doesn't work for tools
The `lint_ids` of the alias are now populated at the time of registration to make it easier to handle
Use a session counter to make anon dep nodes unique
This changes the unique session hash used to ensure unique anon dep nodes per session from a timestamp to a counter.
This is nicer for debugging as it makes the dep graph deterministic.
hygiene: Rename semi-transparent to semi-opaque
"Semi-transparent" is just too damn long for a name, especially when used multiple times on a single line, it bothered me when working on #139083.
An optimist sees a macro as semi-opaque, a pessimist sees it as semi-transparent.
Or is it the other way round?
Don't compute name of associated item if it's an RPITIT
Use `Option::then` in favor of `Option::then_some` to not compute `AssocItem::name` if it fails the condition. Alternatively, I'd be open to changing this just to an `if`.
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/139873
r? ```@nnethercote```
Make CodeStats' type_sizes public
Add another way to get type sizes in CodeStats. I find it weird that the only way to get this information in block for all types is via printing directly to stdout. So this PR adds that flexibility.
Add unstable parsing of `--extern foo::bar=libbar.rlib` command line options
This is a tiny step towards implementing the rustc side of support for implementing packages as optional namespaces (#122349). We add support for parsing command line options like `--extern foo::bar=libbar.rlib` when the `-Z namespaced-crates` option is present.
We don't do anything further with them. The next step is to plumb this down to the name resolver.
This PR also generally refactors the extern argument parsing code and adds some unit tests to make it clear what forms should be accepted with and without the flag.
cc ```@epage``` ```@ehuss```
Stabilize `-Zdwarf-version` as `-Cdwarf-version`
I propose stabilizing `-Zdwarf-version` as `-Cdwarf-version`. This PR adds a new `-Cdwarf-version` flag, leaving the unstable `-Z` flag as is to ease the transition period. The `-Z` flag will be removed in the future.
# `-Zdwarf-version` stabilization report
## What is the RFC for this feature and what changes have occurred to the user-facing design since the RFC was finalized?
No RFC/MCP, this flag was added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98350 and was not deemed large enough to require additional process.
The tracking issue for this feature is #103057.
## What behavior are we committing to that has been controversial? Summarize the major arguments pro/con.
None that has been extensively debated but there are a few questions that could have been chosen differently:
1. What should the flag name be?
The current flag name is very specific to DWARF. Other debuginfo formats exist (msvc's CodeView format or https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stabs) so we could have chosen to generalize the flag name (`-{C,Z} debuginfo-version=dwarf-5` for example). While this would extend cleanly to support formats other than DWARF, there are some downsides to this design. Neither CodeView nor Stabs have specification or format versions so it's not clear what values would be supported beyond `dwarf-{2,3,4,5}` or `codeview`. We would also need to take care to ensure the name does not lead users to think they can pick a format other than one supported by the target. For instance, what would `--target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc -Cdebuginfo-version=dwarf-5` do?
2. What is the behavior when flag is used on targets that do not support DWARF?
Currently, passing `-{C,Z} dwarf-version` on targets like `*-windows-msvc` does not do anything. It may be preferable to emit a warning alerting the user that the flag has no effect on the target platform. Alternatively, we could emit an error but this could be annoying since it would require the use of target specific RUSTFLAGS to use the flag correctly (and there isn't a way to target "any platform that uses DWARF" using cfgs).
3. Does the precompiled standard library potentially using a different version of DWARF a problem?
I don't believe this is an issue as debuggers (and other such tools) already must deal with the possibility that an application uses different DWARF versions across its statically or dynamically linked libraries.
## Are there extensions to this feature that remain unstable? How do we know that we are not accidentally committing to those.
No extensions per se, although future DWARF versions could be considered as such. At present, we validate the requested DWARF version is between 2 and 5 (inclusive) so new DWARF versions will not automatically be supported until the validation logic is adjusted.
## Summarize the major parts of the implementation and provide links into the code (or to PRs)
- Targets define their preferred or default DWARF version: 34a5ea911c/compiler/rustc_target/src/spec/mod.rs (L2369)
- We use the target default but this can be overriden by `-{C,Z} dwarf-version` 34a5ea911c/compiler/rustc_session/src/session.rs (L738)
- The flag is validated 34a5ea911c/compiler/rustc_session/src/session.rs (L1253-L1258)
- When debuginfo is generated, we tell LLVM to use the requested value or the target default 34a5ea911c/compiler/rustc_codegen_llvm/src/debuginfo/mod.rs (L106)
## Summarize existing test coverage of this feature
- Test that we actually generate the appropriate DWARF version
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/tests/assembly/dwarf5.rs
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/tests/assembly/dwarf4.rs
- Test that LTO with different DWARF versions picks the highest version
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/tests/assembly/dwarf-mixed-versions-lto.rs
- Test DWARF versions 2-5 are valid while 0, 1 and 6 report an error
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/tests/ui/debuginfo/dwarf-versions.rs
- Ensure LLVM does not report a warning when LTO'ing different DWARF versions together
- https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/blob/master/tests/ui/lto/dwarf-mixed-versions-lto.rs
## Has a call-for-testing period been conducted? If so, what feedback was received?
No call-for-testing has been conducted but Rust for Linux has been using this flag without issue.
## What outstanding bugs in the issue tracker involve this feature? Are they stabilization-blocking?
All reported bugs have been resolved.
## Summarize contributors to the feature by name for recognition and assuredness that people involved in the feature agree with stabilization
- Initial implementation in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98350 by `@pcwalton`
- Stop emitting `.debug_pubnames` and `.debug_pubtypes` when using DWARF 5 in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/117962 by `@weihanglo.`
- Refactoring & cleanups (#135739), fix LLVM warning on LTO with different DWARF versions (#136659) and argument validation (#136746) by `@wesleywiser`
## What FIXMEs are still in the code for that feature and why is it ok to leave them there?
No FIXMEs related to this feature.
## What static checks are done that are needed to prevent undefined behavior?
This feature cannot cause undefined behavior.
We ensure the DWARF version is one of the supported values [here](34a5ea911c/compiler/rustc_session/src/session.rs (L1255-L1257)).
## In what way does this feature interact with the reference/specification, and are those edits prepared?
No changes to reference/spec, unstable rustc docs are moved to the stable book as part of the stabilization PR.
## Does this feature introduce new expressions and can they produce temporaries? What are the lifetimes of those temporaries?
No.
## What other unstable features may be exposed by this feature?
`-Zembed-source` requires use of DWARF 5 extensions but has its own feature gate.
## What is tooling support like for this feature, w.r.t rustdoc, clippy, rust-analzyer, rustfmt, etc.?
No support needed for rustdoc, clippy, rust-analyzer, rustfmt or rustup.
Cargo could expose this as an option in build profiles but I would expect the decision as to what version should be used would be made for the entire crate graph at build time rather than by individual package authors.
cc-rs has support for detecting the presence of `-{C,Z} dwarf-version` in `RUSTFLAGS` and providing the corresponding flag to Clang/gcc (https://github.com/rust-lang/cc-rs/pull/1395).
---
Closes#103057
Split `TypeFolder` and `FallibleTypeFolder` atwain
Right now there is a coherence problem with `TypeFolder` and `FallibleTypeFolder`. Namely, it's impossible to implement a `FallibleTypeFolder` that is generic over interner, b/c it has a *downstream* conflict with the blanket impl:
```
impl<I, F> FallibleTypeFolder<I> for F where F: TypeFolder<I> {}
```
Because downstream crates may implement `TypeFolder<SomeLocalInterner>` for the fallible type folder.
This PR removes the relationship between `FallibleTypeFolder` and `TypeFolder`; it leads to *modest* code duplication, but otherwise does not affect perf and really doesn't matter in general.
It's a much better name, more consistent with how we name such things.
Also rename `Lifetime::res` as `Lifetime::kind` to match. I suspect this
field used to have the type `LifetimeRes` and then the type was changed
but the field name remained the same.
Remove safe remove
`safe_remove_dir_all` and `safe_remove_file` use `canonicalize` to workaround a `MAX_PATH` limitation. However, this has not been needed in a long time, since the standard library handles this situation itself.
I've kept `safe_remove_file` (without `canonicalize`) because it also returns `Ok` if the file is not found. While, `safe_remove_file` is only used twice, matching on the error kind is sufficiently verbose that maybe it's still worth it?
Normalize ADT field in `find_tails_for_unsizing`
See the comment inline and in the test.
TL;DR is that we're getting getting a type from a `type_of` query and then matching on it structurally in codegen, so we're obligated to normalize it. The fact that this wasn't triggered earlier is that all of the types that have `CoerceUnsized` implementations never encounter aliases when peeling the ADT down to their base reference/ptr type.
**NOTE**: I also renamed some things and reorganized the function a bit.
Fixes#139812Fixes#74451, which I didn't think was interesting enough to add another test.
r? oli-obk
Reject test executables when not supported by target
Currently, compiling tests for SOLID produces an ICE, because SOLID does not support executables.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/138047
This is pretty weird code. As the `HACK` comment indicates, we push the
empty ident here only to make the path longer, so certain checks to
occur within `lint_if_path_starts_with_module`. `dummy` is a better
choice because it explicitly communicates that the actual value doesn't
matter.
These were low value even before #137978 resulted in empty names being
used much less. (Why check for non-emptiness in these three places?
There are thousands of places in the compiler you could check.)
Overhaul `AssocItem`
`AssocItem` has multiple fields that only make sense some of the time. E.g. the `name` can be empty if it's an RPITIT associated type. It's clearer and less error prone if these fields are moved to the relevant `kind` variants.
r? ``@fee1-dead``
Allow const patterns of matches to contain pattern types
Trying to pattern match on a type containing a pattern type will currently fail with an ICE
```rust
error: internal compiler error: compiler/rustc_mir_build/src/builder/matches/test.rs:459:18: invalid type for non-scalar compare: (u32) is 1..
--> src/main.rs:22:5
|
22 | TWO => {}
| ^^^
```
because the compiler tries to generate a MIR `BinOp(Eq)` operation on a pattern type, which is not supported. While we could support that, there are side effects of allowing this (none that would compile, but the compiler would simultaneously think it could `==` pattern types and that it could not because `PartialEq` is not implemented. So instead I change the logic for pattern matching to transmute pattern types to their base type before comparing.
r? ```@BoxyUwU```
cc #123646 ```@scottmcm``` ```@joshtriplett```
Enable contracts for const functions
Use `const_eval_select!()` macro to enable contract checking only at runtime. The existing contract logic relies on closures, which are not supported in constant functions.
This commit also removes one level of indirection for ensures clauses since we no longer build a closure around the ensures predicate.
Resolves#136925
**Call-out:** This is still a draft PR since CI is broken due to a new warning message for unreachable code when the bottom of the function is indeed unreachable. It's not clear to me why the warning wasn't triggered before.
r? ```@compiler-errors```
Printing "no pattern" as `_` isn't ideal, but better than crashing, and
HIR pretty-printing already has plenty of imperfections. The added `f2`
and `f6` examples are ones that triggered the crash.
Note that some of the added examples are printed badly, e.g.
`fn(, ...)`. The next commit will fix those.
Fixes#139633.
To accurately reflect that RPITIT assoc items don't have a name. This
avoids the use of `kw::Empty` to mean "no name", which is error prone.
Helps with #137978.
Specify `--print info=file` syntax in `--help`
Closes#139794
I moved the listing of information that can be printed to the help string as it's getting rather long and it makes the `[=FILE]` part easier to see