Skip parenthesis around tuple struct field calls
The pretty-printer previously did not distinguish between named vs unnamed fields when printing a function call containing a struct field. It would print the call as `(self.fun)()` for a named field which is correct, and `(self.0)()` for an unnamed field which is redundant.
This PR changes function calls of tuple struct fields to print without parens.
**Before:**
```rust
struct Tuple(fn());
fn main() {
let tuple = Tuple(|| {});
(tuple.0)();
}
```
**After:**
```rust
struct Tuple(fn());
fn main() {
let tuple = Tuple(|| {});
tuple.0();
}
```
Skip parenthesis if `.` makes statement boundary unambiguous
There is a rule in the parser that statements and match-arms never end in front of a `.` or `?` token (except when the `.` is really `..` or `..=` or `...`). So some of the leading subexpressions that need parentheses inserted when followed by some other operator like `-` or `+`, do not need parentheses when followed by `.` or `?`.
Example:
```rust
fn main() {
loop {}.to_string() + "";
match () {
_ => loop {}.to_string() + "",
};
}
```
`-Zunpretty=expanded` before:
```console
#![feature(prelude_import)]
#[prelude_import]
use std::prelude::rust_2021::*;
#[macro_use]
extern crate std;
fn main() {
(loop {}).to_string() + "";
match () { _ => (loop {}).to_string() + "", };
}
```
After:
```console
#![feature(prelude_import)]
#[prelude_import]
use std::prelude::rust_2021::*;
#[macro_use]
extern crate std;
fn main() {
loop {}.to_string() + "";
match () { _ => loop {}.to_string() + "", };
}
```
CI: Add LTO support to clang in dist-x86_64-linux
After https://github.com/rust-lang/cc-rs/pull/1279, we attempt to pass `-flto=thin` to clang. In `dist-x86_64-linux`, we don't build clang with the `LLVMgold.so` library so this fails. This attempts to resolve this
First, pass the binutils plugin include directory to Clang, [which will build the library](2d6d723a85/llvm/docs/GoldPlugin.rst (how-to-build-it))
Second, this library depends on the *version of libstdc++ that we built* specifically. However, despite both the RPATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH pointing to `/rustroot/lib`, we incorrectly resolve to the system libstdc++, which doesn't load.
```
# LD_DEBUG=libs,files
2219: file=libstdc++.so.6 [0]; needed by /rustroot/bin/../lib/LLVMgold.so [0]
2219: find library=libstdc++.so.6 [0]; searching
2219: search path=/rustroot/bin/../lib/../lib (RPATH from file /rustroot/bin/../lib/LLVMgold.so)
2219: trying file=/rustroot/bin/../lib/../lib/libstdc++.so.6
2219: search path=/usr/lib64/tls:/usr/lib64 (system search path)
2219: trying file=/usr/lib64/tls/libstdc++.so.6
2219: trying file=/usr/lib64/libstdc++.so.6
```
Using `LD_PRELOAD` causes it to correctly load the library
I think this is probably not the most maintainable way to do this, so opening to see if this is desired and if there's a better way of doing this
Add `--no-capture`/`--nocapture` as bootstrap arguments
I often try `x test ... --nocapture` => 'unknown argument' => `x test ... -- --nocapture`. As we forward several other compiletest flags, let's recognise this one in bootstrap as well.
compiletest: Remove empty 'expected' files when blessing
Fixes#134793Fixes#134196
This also refactors `compare_output` to return an enum; returning a usize was done for convenience but is misleading
Make `ty::Error` implement all auto traits
I have no idea what's up with the crashes test I fixed--I really don't want to look into it since it has to do something with borrowck and multiple layers of opaques. I think the underlying idea of allowing error types to implement all auto traits is justified though.
Fixes#134796Fixes#131050
r? lcnr
Add a compiler intrinsic to back `bigint_helper_methods`
cc https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/85532
This adds a new `carrying_mul_add` intrinsic, to implement `wide_mul` and `carrying_mul`.
It has fallback MIR for all types -- including `u128`, which isn't currently supported on nightly -- so that it'll continue to work on all backends, including CTFE.
Then it's overridden in `cg_llvm` to use wider intermediate types, including `i256` for `u128::carrying_mul`.
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #134606 (ptr::copy: fix docs for the overlapping case)
- #134622 (Windows: Use WriteFile to write to a UTF-8 console)
- #134759 (compiletest: Remove the `-test` suffix from normalize directives)
- #134787 (Spruce up the docs of several queries related to the type/trait system and const eval)
- #134806 (rustdoc: use shorter paths as preferred canonical paths)
- #134815 (Sort triples by name in platform_support.md)
- #134816 (tools: fix build failure caused by PR #134420)
- #134819 (Fix mistake in windows file open)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Sort triples by name in platform_support.md
When looking for riscv32emc support, I missed it at first because it was at the end of the tier3 target list [here](https://doc.rust-lang.org/rustc/platform-support.html#tier-3). These lists are *mostly* dictionary sorted so I assumed it should be near the riscv32i* targets.
This PR puts all targets back in dictionary order. There were only a few outside of tier3.
I ended up writing a small program to sort them because I did not trust myself to do it manually, but I stopped short of fully automating it.
I have manually reviewed the output to confirm it still has the same number of entries, and that the changed values do follow the ordering I would expect.
For folks who would prefer to review code than manual textual changes, the sorting program (including inputs) is [here.](https://github.com/9names/platform_sort_arch/blob/main/src/main.rs)
rustdoc: use shorter paths as preferred canonical paths
This is a solution to [the `std::sync::poison` linking problem](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134692#issuecomment-2560373308), and, in general, makes intra-doc links shorter and clearer.
> Done. This helped with the search, but not with the things like `MutexGuard`'s doc's reference to `Mutex::lock` being converted to the absolute (unstable) `std::sync::poison::Mutex` path.
cc `@tgross35`
r? `@GuillaumeGomez`
Spruce up the docs of several queries related to the type/trait system and const eval
- Editorial
- Proper rustdoc summary/synopsis line by making use of extra paragraphs: Leads to better rendered output on module pages, in search result lists and overall, too
- Use rustdoc warning blocks for admonitions of the form "do not call / avoid calling this query directly"
- Use intra-doc links of the form ``[`Self::$query`]`` to cross-link queries. Indeed, such links are generally a bit brittle due to the existence of `TyCtxtFeed` which only contains a subset of queries. Therefore the docs of `feedable` queries cannot cross-link to non-`feedable` ones. I'd say it's fine to use intra-doc links despite the potential/unlikely occasional future breakage (if a query with the aforementioned characteristics becomes `feedable`). `Self::` is nicer than `TyCtxt::` (which would be more stable) since it accounts for other contexts like `TyCtxt{Feed,At,Ensure{,WithValue}}`
- Informative
- Generally add, flesh out and correct some doc comments
- Add *Panic* sections (to a few selected queries only). The lists of panics aren't necessarily exhaustive and focus on the more "obvious" or "important" panics.
- Where applicable add a paragraph calling attention to the relevant [`#[rustc_*]` TEST attribute](https://rustc-dev-guide.rust-lang.org/compiler-debugging.html#rustc_-test-attributes)
The one non-doc change (it's internal and not observable):
Be even more defensive in `query constness`'s impl (spiritual follow-up to #134122) (see self review comment).
Fixes#133494.
r\? **any**(compiler-errors, oli-obk)
compiletest: Remove the `-test` suffix from normalize directives
This suffix was an artifact of using the same condition-checking engine as the `ignore-*` and `only-*` directives, but in practice we have only 2 tests that legitimately use a condition, and both of them only care about 32-bit vs 64-bit.
This PR detaches `normalize-*` directives from the condition checker, and replaces it with a much simpler system of four explicit `NormalizeKind` values. It then takes advantage of that simplicity to get rid of the `-test` suffix.
---
Addresses one of the points of #126372.
The new name-checking code is a bit quaint, but I think it's a definite improvement over the status quo.
---
The corresponding dev-guide update is https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/2172.
r? jieyouxu
Windows: Use WriteFile to write to a UTF-8 console
If the console code page is UTF-8 then we can simply write to it without needing to convert to UTF-16 and calling `WriteConsole`.
ptr::copy: fix docs for the overlapping case
Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/549
As discussed in that issue, it doesn't make any sense for `copy` to read a byte via `src` after it was already written via `dst`. The entire point of this method is that is copies correctly even if they overlap, and that requires always reading any given location before writing it.
Cc `@rust-lang/opsem`
Fix renaming symlinks on Windows
Previously we only detected mount points and not other types of links when determining reparse point behaviour.
Also added some tests to avoid this regressing again in the future.
docs: inline `std::ffi::c_str` types to `std::ffi`
Rustdoc has no way to show that an item is stable, but only at a different path. `std::ffi::c_str::NulError` is not stable, but `std::ffi::NulError` is.
To avoid marking these types as unstable when someone just wants to follow a link from `CString`, inline them into their stable paths.
Fixes#134702
r? `@tgross35`
unwinding: bump version to fix naked_asm on Xous
With #80608 the `unwinding` crate no longer builds. The upstream crate has been updated to build by manually adding directives to the naked_asm stream.
Bump the dependency in Rust to get this newer version. This fixes the build for Xous, and closes#134403.