This makes it easier to open the messages file while developing on features.
The commit was the result of automatted changes:
for p in compiler/rustc_*; do mv $p/locales/en-US.ftl $p/messages.ftl; rmdir $p/locales; done
for p in compiler/rustc_*; do sed -i "s#\.\./locales/en-US.ftl#../messages.ftl#" $p/src/lib.rs; done
Use associated type bounds in some places in the compiler
Use associated type bounds for some nested `impl Trait<Assoc = impl Trait2>` cases. I'm generally keen to introduce new lang features that are more mature into the compiler, but maybe let's see what others think?
Side-note: I was surprised that the only use-cases of nested impl trait in the compiler are just iterator related?!
Instead of loading the Fluent resources for every crate in
`rustc_error_messages`, each crate generates typed identifiers for its
own diagnostics and creates a static which are pulled together in the
`rustc_driver` crate and provided to the diagnostic emitter.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
Change reported_violations to use IndexSet
It is being used to iterate and to insert, without a lot of lookups
so hopefully it won't be a perf hit
Change MiniGraph.nodes to use IndexSet
It is being used to iterate and to insert, without performing lookups
so hopefully it won't be a perf hit
Change RegionConstraintData.givens to a FxIndexSet
This might result in a perf hit. Remove was being used in `givens`,
and `FxIndexSet` doesn't allow calling remove without losing the
fixed iteration order. So it was necessary to change remove to
`shift_remove`, but this method is slower.
Change OpaqueTypesVisitor to use stable sets and maps
This could also be a perf hit.
Make TraitObject visitor use a stable set
On later stages, the feature is already stable.
Result of running:
rg -l "feature.let_else" compiler/ src/librustdoc/ library/ | xargs sed -s -i "s#\\[feature.let_else#\\[cfg_attr\\(bootstrap, feature\\(let_else\\)#"
It looks like the last time had left some remaining cfg's -- which made me think
that the stage0 bump was actually successful. This brings us to a released 1.62
beta though.
Currently, any higher-ranked region errors involving opaque types
fall back to a generic "higher-ranked subtype error" message when
run under NLL. This PR adds better error message handling for this
case, giving us the same kinds of error messages that we currently
get without NLL:
```
error: implementation of `MyTrait` is not general enough
--> $DIR/opaque-hrtb.rs:12:13
|
LL | fn foo() -> impl for<'a> MyTrait<&'a str> {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ implementation of `MyTrait` is not general enough
|
= note: `impl MyTrait<&'2 str>` must implement `MyTrait<&'1 str>`, for any lifetime `'1`...
= note: ...but it actually implements `MyTrait<&'2 str>`, for some specific lifetime `'2`
error: aborting due to previous error
```
To accomplish this, several different refactoring needed to be made:
* We now have a dedicated `InstantiateOpaqueType` struct which
implements `TypeOp`. This is used to invoke `instantiate_opaque_types`
during MIR type checking.
* `TypeOp` is refactored to pass around a `MirBorrowckCtxt`, which is
needed to report opaque type region errors.
* We no longer assume that all `TypeOp`s correspond to canonicalized
queries. This allows us to properly handle opaque type instantiation
(which does not occur in a query) as a `TypeOp`.
A new `ErrorInfo` associated type is used to determine what
additional information is used during higher-ranked region error
handling.
* The body of `try_extract_error_from_fulfill_cx`
has been moved out to a new function `try_extract_error_from_region_constraints`.
This allows us to re-use the same error reporting code between
canonicalized queries (which can extract region constraints directly
from a fresh `InferCtxt`) and opaque type handling (which needs to take
region constraints from the pre-existing `InferCtxt` that we use
throughout MIR borrow checking).
Remove `in_band_lifetimes` from `rustc_infer`
See #91867 for more information.
This crate actually had a typo `'ctx` in one of its functions:
```diff
-pub fn same_type_modulo_infer(a: Ty<'tcx>, b: Ty<'ctx>) -> bool {
+pub fn same_type_modulo_infer<'tcx>(a: Ty<'tcx>, b: Ty<'tcx>) -> bool {
```
Also, I wasn't entirely sure about the lifetimes in `suggest_new_region_bound`:
```diff
pub fn suggest_new_region_bound(
- tcx: TyCtxt<'tcx>,
+ tcx: TyCtxt<'_>,
err: &mut DiagnosticBuilder<'_>,
fn_returns: Vec<&rustc_hir::Ty<'_>>,
```
Should all of those lifetimes really be distinct?
This crate actually had a typo `'ctx` in one of its functions:
```diff
-pub fn same_type_modulo_infer(a: Ty<'tcx>, b: Ty<'ctx>) -> bool {
+pub fn same_type_modulo_infer<'tcx>(a: Ty<'tcx>, b: Ty<'tcx>) -> bool {
```
This performs a substitution of code following the pattern:
let <id> = if let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
To simplify it to:
let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
By adopting the let_else feature.
Rust contains various size checks conditional on target_arch = "x86_64",
but these checks were never intended to apply to
x86_64-unknown-linux-gnux32. Add target_pointer_width = "64" to the
conditions.