Make some simple queries no longer cache on disk
I don't think we need to cache queries with really simple local providers, like loading hir and accessing an attr
r? `@ghost`
Box AssertKind
r? `@nnethercote` this feels like your kind of thing
I want to add a new variant to `AssertKind` that needs 3 operands, and that ends up breaking a bunch of size assertions. So... what if we go the opposite direction first; shrinking `AssertKind` by boxing it?
Mark`feature(return_position_impl_trait_in_trait)` and`feature(async_fn_in_trait)` as not incomplete
I think they've graduated, since as far as I'm aware, they don't cause compiler crashes or unsoundness anymore.
Fix elaboration with associated type bounds
When computing a trait's supertrait predicates, do not add any associated type *trait* bounds to that list of supertrait predicates. This is because supertrait predicates are expected to have the same `Self` type as the trait.
For example, given:
```rust
trait Foo: Bar<Assoc: Send>
```
Before, we would compute that the supertrait predicates of `T: Foo` are `T: Bar` and `<T as Bar>::Assoc: Send`. However, the last bound is a trait predicate for a totally different type than `T`, and existing code that uses supertrait bounds such as vtable construction, closure fn signature deduction, etc. all rely on the invariant that we have a list of predicates for self type `T`.
Fixes#76593
The reason for all the extra diagnostic noise is that we're recomputing predicates with a different filter now. These diagnostics should be deduplicated for any end-user though.
---
This does bring up an interesting question -- is the predicate `<T as Bar>::Assoc: Send` an implied bound of `T: Foo`? Because currently the only bounds implied by a (non-alias) trait are its supertraits. I guess I could fix this too, but it would require even more changes, and I'm inclined to punt this question along.
Stabilize debugger_visualizer
This stabilizes the `debugger_visualizer` attribute (#95939).
* Marks the `debugger_visualizer` feature as `accepted`.
* Marks the `debugger_visualizer` attribute as `ungated`.
* Deletes feature gate test, removes feature gate from other tests.
Closes#95939
Add `ConstParamTy` trait
This is a bit sketch, but idk.
r? `@BoxyUwU`
Yet to be done:
- [x] ~~Figure out if it's okay to implement `StructuralEq` for primitives / possibly remove their special casing~~ (it should be okay, but maybe not in this PR...)
- [ ] Maybe refactor the code a little bit
- [x] Use a macro to make impls a bit nicer
Future work:
- [ ] Actually™ use the trait when checking if a `const` generic type is allowed
- [ ] _Really_ refactor the surrounding code
- [ ] Refactor `marker.rs` into multiple modules for each "theme" of markers
Don't validate constants in const propagation
Validation is neither necessary nor desirable.
The constant validation is already omitted at mir-opt-level >= 3, so there there are not changes in MIR test output (the propagation of invalid constants is covered by an existing test in tests/mir-opt/const_prop/invalid_constant.rs).
This greatly simplifies how hard it is to set a custom bug report url; previously tools had to copy
the entire hook implementation.
- Switch clippy to the new hook
This also adds a `extra_info` callback so clippy can include its own version number, which differs
from rustc's.
- Call `install_ice_hook` in rustfmt
It's only used in tests. Which is bad, because it means that
`FileEncoder` is used in the compiler but isn't used in tests!
`tests/opaque.rs` now tests encoding/decoding round-trips via file.
Because this is slower than memory, this commit also adjusts the
`u16`/`i16` tests so they are more like the `u32`/`i32` tests, i.e. they
don't test every possible value.
Round-trip encoding/decoding of many types is tested in
`compiler/rustc_serialize/tests/opaque.rs`. There is also a small amount
of encoding/decoding testing in three files in `tests/ui-fulldeps`.
There is no obvious reason why these three files are necessary. They
were originally added in 2014. Maybe it wasn't possible for a proc
macro to run in a unit test back then?
This commit just moves the testing from those three files into the unit
test.
Add `#[no_coverage]` to the test harness's `fn main`
There are two main motivations for adding `#[no_coverage]` to the test harness's entry point:
- The entry point is trivial compiler-generated code that doesn't correspond to user source, and it always runs, so there's no value in instrumenting it for coverage.
- Because it has dummy spans, it causes the instrumentor implementation to emit invalid coverage mappings that confuse `llvm-cov` and result in strange coverage reports.
Fixes#110749.
Leave promoteds untainted by errors when borrowck fails
Previously, when borrowck failed it would taint all promoteds within the MIR body. An attempt to evaluated the promoteds would subsequently fail with spurious "note: erroneous constant used". For example:
```console
...
note: erroneous constant used
--> tests/ui/borrowck/tainted-promoteds.rs:7:9
|
7 | a = &0 * &1 * &2 * &3;
| ^^
note: erroneous constant used
--> tests/ui/borrowck/tainted-promoteds.rs:7:14
|
7 | a = &0 * &1 * &2 * &3;
| ^^
note: erroneous constant used
--> tests/ui/borrowck/tainted-promoteds.rs:7:19
|
7 | a = &0 * &1 * &2 * &3;
| ^^
note: erroneous constant used
--> tests/ui/borrowck/tainted-promoteds.rs:7:24
|
7 | a = &0 * &1 * &2 * &3;
| ^^
```
Borrowck failure doesn't indicate that there is anything wrong with promoteds. Leave them untainted.
Fixes#110856.
Make `mem::replace` simpler in codegen
Since they'd mentioned more intrinsics for simplifying stuff recently,
r? `@WaffleLapkin`
This is a continuation of me looking at foundational stuff that ends up with more instructions than it really needs. Specifically I noticed this one because `Range::next` isn't MIR-inlining, and one of the largest parts of it is a `replace::<usize>` that's a good dozen instructions instead of the two it could be.
So this means that `ptr::write` with a `Copy` type no longer generates worse IR than manually dereferencing (well, at least in LLVM -- MIR still has bonus pointer casts), and in doing so means that we're finally down to just the two essential `memcpy`s when emitting `mem::replace` for a large type, rather than the bonus-`alloca` and three `memcpy`s we emitted before this ([or the 6 we currently emit in 1.69 stable](https://rust.godbolt.org/z/67W8on6nP)). That said, LLVM does _usually_ manage to optimize the extra code away. But it's still nice for it not to have to do as much, thanks to (for example) not going through an `alloca` when `replace`ing a primitive like a `usize`.
(This is a new intrinsic, but one that's immediately lowered to existing MIR constructs, so not anything that MIRI or the codegen backends or MIR semantics needs to do work to handle.)