All hooks receive a `TyCtxtAt` argument.
Currently hooks can be called through `TyCtxtAt` or `TyCtxt`. In the
latter case, a `TyCtxtAt` is constructed with a dummy span and passed to
the hook.
However, in practice hooks are never called through `TyCtxtAt`, and
always receive a dummy span. (I confirmed this via code inspection, and
double-checked it by temporarily making the `TyCtxtAt` code path panic
and running all the tests.)
This commit removes all the `TyCtxtAt` machinery for hooks. All hooks
now receive `TyCtxt` instead of `TyCtxtAt`. There are two existing hooks
that use `TyCtxtAt::span`: `const_caller_location_provider` and
`try_destructure_mir_constant_for_user_output`. For both hooks the span
is always a dummy span, probably unintentionally. This dummy span use is
now explicit. If a non-dummy span is needed for these two hooks it would
be easy to add it as an extra argument because hooks are less
constrained than queries.
Some more refactorings towards removing driver queries
Follow up to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/127184
## Custom driver breaking change
The `after_analysis` callback is changed to accept `TyCtxt` instead of `Queries`. The only safe query in `Queries` to call at this point is `global_ctxt()` which allows you to enter the `TyCtxt` either way. To fix your custom driver, replace the `queries: &'tcx Queries<'tcx>` argument with `tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>` and remove your `queries.global_ctxt().unwrap().enter(|tcx| { ... })` call and only keep the contents of the closure.
## Custom driver deprecation
The `after_crate_root_parsing` callback is now deprecated. Several custom drivers are incorrectly calling `queries.global_ctxt()` from inside of it, which causes some driver code to be skipped. As such I would like to either remove it in the future or if custom drivers still need it, change it to accept an `&rustc_ast::Crate` instead.
Since it's inception a long time ago, the parallel compiler and its cfgs
have been a maintenance burden. This was a necessary evil the allow
iteration while not degrading performance because of synchronization
overhead.
But this time is over. Thanks to the amazing work by the parallel
working group (and the dyn sync crimes), the parallel compiler has now
been fast enough to be shipped by default in nightly for quite a while
now.
Stable and beta have still been on the serial compiler, because they
can't use `-Zthreads` anyways.
But this is quite suboptimal:
- the maintenance burden still sucks
- we're not testing the serial compiler in nightly
Because of these reasons, it's time to end it. The serial compiler has
served us well in the years since it was split from the parallel one,
but it's over now.
Let the knight slay one head of the two-headed dragon!
- Replace non-standard names like 's, 'p, 'rg, 'ck, 'parent, 'this, and
'me with vanilla 'a. These are cases where the original name isn't
really any more informative than 'a.
- Replace names like 'cx, 'mir, and 'body with vanilla 'a when the lifetime
applies to multiple fields and so the original lifetime name isn't
really accurate.
- Put 'tcx last in lifetime lists, and 'a before 'b.
We already do this for a number of crates, e.g. `rustc_middle`,
`rustc_span`, `rustc_metadata`, `rustc_span`, `rustc_errors`.
For the ones we don't, in many cases the attributes are a mess.
- There is no consistency about order of attribute kinds (e.g.
`allow`/`deny`/`feature`).
- Within attribute kind groups (e.g. the `feature` attributes),
sometimes the order is alphabetical, and sometimes there is no
particular order.
- Sometimes the attributes of a particular kind aren't even grouped
all together, e.g. there might be a `feature`, then an `allow`, then
another `feature`.
This commit extends the existing sorting to all compiler crates,
increasing consistency. If any new attribute line is added there is now
only one place it can go -- no need for arbitrary decisions.
Exceptions:
- `rustc_log`, `rustc_next_trait_solver` and `rustc_type_ir_macros`,
because they have no crate attributes.
- `rustc_codegen_gcc`, because it's quasi-external to rustc (e.g. it's
ignored in `rustfmt.toml`).
That is, change `diagnostic_outside_of_impl` and
`untranslatable_diagnostic` from `allow` to `deny`, because more than
half of the compiler has be converted to use translated diagnostics.
This commit removes more `deny` attributes than it adds `allow`
attributes, which proves that this change is warranted.
rework `-Zverbose`
implements the changes described in https://github.com/rust-lang/compiler-team/issues/706
the first commit is only a name change from `-Zverbose` to `-Zverbose-internals` and does not change behavior. the second commit changes diagnostics.
possible follow up work:
- `ty::pretty` could print more info with `--verbose` than it does currently. `-Z verbose-internals` shows too much info in a way that's not helpful to users. michael had ideas about this i didn't fully understand: 408984200
- `--verbose` should imply `-Z write-long-types-to-disk=no`. the code in `ty_string_with_limit` should take `--verbose` into account (apparently this affects `Ty::sort_string`, i'm not familiar with this code). writing a file to disk should suggest passing `--verbose`.
r? `@compiler-errors` cc `@estebank`
- Sort dependencies and features sections.
- Add `tidy` markers to the sorted sections so they stay sorted.
- Remove empty `[lib`] sections.
- Remove "See more keys..." comments.
Excluded files:
- rustc_codegen_{cranelift,gcc}, because they're external.
- rustc_lexer, because it has external use.
- stable_mir, because it has external use.