lints: mostly translatable diagnostics
As lints are created slightly differently than other diagnostics, intended to try make them translatable first and then look into the applicability of diagnostic structs but ended up just making most of the diagnostics in the crate translatable (which will still be useful if I do make a lot of them structs later anyway).
r? ``@compiler-errors``
clean up the borrowing in rustc_hir_pretty
A whole lot of the `&`s and `ref`s were redundant. I hope doing this in one big commit is fine, because all of the changes are pretty self-contained.
`@rustbot` label: +C-cleanup
fix interpreter validity check on Box
Follow-up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98554: avoid walking over parts of the value twice.
And then move all that logic into the general visitor so not each visitor implementation has to deal with it...
Interpret: AllocRange Debug impl, and use it more consistently
The two commits are pretty independent but it did not seem worth having two PRs for them.
r? ``@oli-obk``
more `need_type_info` improvements
this now deals with macros in suggestions and the source cost computation does what I want for `channel` 🎉
r? ``@estebank``
Add method to mutate MIR body without invalidating CFG caches.
In addition to adding this method, a handful of passes are updated to use it. There's still quite a few passes that could in principle make use of this as well, but do not at the moment because they use `VisitorMut` or `MirPatch`, which needs additional support for this.
The method name is slightly unwieldy, but I don't expect anyone to be writing it a lot, and at least it says what it does. If anyone has a suggestion for a better name though, would be happy to rename.
r? rust-lang/mir-opt
incr.comp.: Make split-dwarf commandline options [TRACKED].
This commandline options have an influence on the contents of object files (and .dwo files), so they need to be `[TRACKED]`.
r? `@davidtwco`
interpret: don't rely on ScalarPair for overflowed arithmetic
This is for https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/97861.
Cc `@eddyb`
I would like to avoid making this depend on `dest.layout.abi` to avoid a branch that we are not usually covering both sides of. Though OTOH this seems like fairly straight-forward code. But let's benchmark this option first to see how bad that extra `force_allocation` really is.
All derive ops currently use match-destructuring to access fields. This
is reasonable for enums, but sub-optimal for structs. E.g.:
```
fn eq(&self, other: &Point) -> bool {
match *other {
Self { x: ref __self_1_0, y: ref __self_1_1 } =>
match *self {
Self { x: ref __self_0_0, y: ref __self_0_1 } =>
(*__self_0_0) == (*__self_1_0) &&
(*__self_0_1) == (*__self_1_1),
},
}
}
```
This commit changes derive ops on structs to use field access instead, e.g.:
```
fn eq(&self, other: &Point) -> bool {
self.x == other.x && self.y == other.y
}
```
This is faster to compile, results in smaller binaries, and is simpler to
generate. Unfortunately, we have to keep the old pattern generating code around
for `repr(packed)` structs because something like `&self.x` (which doesn't show
up in `PartialEq` ops, but does show up in `Debug` and `Hash` ops) isn't
allowed. But this commit at least changes those cases to use let-destructuring
instead of match-destructuring, e.g.:
```
fn hash<__H: ::core:#️⃣:Hasher>(&self, state: &mut __H) -> () {
{
let Self(ref __self_0_0) = *self;
{ ::core:#️⃣:Hash::hash(&(*__self_0_0), state) }
}
}
```
There are some unnecessary blocks remaining in the generated code, but I
will fix them in a follow-up PR.
Fix bug in `rustdoc -Whelp`
Previously, this printed the debugging options, not the lint options,
and only handled `-Whelp`, not `-A/-D/-F`.
This also fixes a few other misc issues:
- Fix `// check-stdout` for UI tests; previously it only worked for run-fail and compile-fail tests
- Add lint headers for tool lints, not just builtin lints
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/98533#issuecomment-1172004197
r? ```@GuillaumeGomez```
get rid of `tcx` in deadlock handler when parallel compilation
This is a very obscure and hard-to-trace problem that affects thread scheduling. If we copy `tcx` to the deadlock handler thread, it will perform unpredictable behavior and cause very weird problems when executing `try_collect_active_jobs`(For example, the deadlock handler thread suddenly preempts the content of the blocked worker thread and executes the unknown judgment branch, like #94654).
Fortunately we can avoid this behavior by precomputing `query_map`. This change fixes the following ui tests failure on my environment when set `parallel-compiler = true`:
```
[ui] src/test\ui\async-await\no-const-async.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\infinite\infinite-struct.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\infinite\infinite-tag-type-recursion.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\issues\issue-3008-1.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\issues\issue-3008-2.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\issues\issue-32326.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\issues\issue-57271.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\issues\issue-72554.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\parser\fn-header-semantic-fail.rs
[ui] src/test\ui\union\union-nonrepresentable.rs
```
Updates #75760Fixes#94654
CTFE interning: don't walk allocations that don't need it
The interning of const allocations visits the mplace looking for references to intern. Walking big aggregates like big static arrays can be costly, so we only do it if the allocation we're interning contains references or interior mutability.
Walking ZSTs was avoided before, and this optimization is now applied to cases where there are no references/relocations either.
---
While initially looking at this in the context of #93215, I've been testing with smaller allocations than the 16GB one in that issue, and with different init/uninit patterns (esp. via padding).
In that example, by default, `eval_to_allocation_raw` is the heaviest query followed by `incr_comp_serialize_result_cache`. So I'll show numbers when incremental compilation is disabled, to focus on the const allocations themselves at 95% of the compilation time, at bigger array sizes on these minimal examples like `static ARRAY: [u64; LEN] = [0; LEN];`.
That is a close construction to parts of the `ctfe-stress-test-5` benchmark, which has const allocations in the megabytes, while most crates usually have way smaller ones. This PR will have the most impact in these situations, as the walk during the interning starts to dominate the runtime.
Unicode crates (some of which are present in our benchmarks) like `ucd`, `encoding_rs`, etc come to mind as having bigger than usual allocations as well, because of big tables of code points (in the hundreds of KB, so still an order of magnitude or 2 less than the stress test).
In a check build, for a single static array shown above, from 100 to 10^9 u64s (for lengths in powers of ten), the constant factors are lowered:
(log scales for easier comparisons)

(linear scale for absolute diff at higher Ns)

For one of the alternatives of that issue
```rust
const ROWS: usize = 100_000;
const COLS: usize = 10_000;
static TWODARRAY: [[u128; COLS]; ROWS] = [[0; COLS]; ROWS];
```
we can see a similar reduction of around 3x (from 38s to 12s or so).
For the same size, the slowest case IIRC is when there are uninitialized bytes e.g. via padding
```rust
const ROWS: usize = 100_000;
const COLS: usize = 10_000;
static TWODARRAY: [[(u64, u8); COLS]; ROWS] = [[(0, 0); COLS]; ROWS];
```
then interning/walking does not dominate anymore (but means there is likely still some interesting work left to do here).
Compile times in this case rise up quite a bit, and avoiding interning walks has less impact: around 23%, from 730s on master to 568s with this PR.
Fix FFI-unwind unsoundness with mixed panic mode
UB maybe introduced when an FFI exception happens in a `C-unwind` foreign function and it propagates through a crate compiled with `-C panic=unwind` into a crate compiled with `-C panic=abort` (#96926).
To prevent this unsoundness from happening, we will disallow a crate compiled with `-C panic=unwind` to be linked into `panic-abort` *if* it contains a call to `C-unwind` foreign function or function pointer. If no such call exists, then we continue to allow such mixed panic mode linking because it's sound (and stable). In fact we still need the ability to do mixed panic mode linking for std, because we only compile std once with `-C panic=unwind` and link it regardless panic strategy.
For libraries that wish to remain compile-once-and-linkable-to-both-panic-runtimes, a `ffi_unwind_calls` lint is added (gated under `c_unwind` feature gate) to flag any FFI unwind calls that will cause the linkable panic runtime be restricted.
In summary:
```rust
#![warn(ffi_unwind_calls)]
mod foo {
#[no_mangle]
pub extern "C-unwind" fn foo() {}
}
extern "C-unwind" {
fn foo();
}
fn main() {
// Call to Rust function is fine regardless ABI.
foo::foo();
// Call to foreign function, will cause the crate to be unlinkable to panic-abort if compiled with `-Cpanic=unwind`.
unsafe { foo(); }
//~^ WARNING call to foreign function with FFI-unwind ABI
let ptr: extern "C-unwind" fn() = foo::foo;
// Call to function pointer, will cause the crate to be unlinkable to panic-abort if compiled with `-Cpanic=unwind`.
ptr();
//~^ WARNING call to function pointer with FFI-unwind ABI
}
```
Fix#96926
`@rustbot` label: T-compiler F-c_unwind