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4883 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthias Krüger
308ea7120b
Rollup merge of #135860 - fmease:compiler-mv-obj-save-dyn-compat-ii, r=jieyouxu
Compiler: Finalize dyn compatibility renaming

Update the Reference link to use the new URL fragment from https://github.com/rust-lang/reference/pull/1666 (this change has finally hit stable). Fixes a FIXME.

Follow-up to #130826.
Part of #130852.

~~Blocking it on #133372.~~ (merged)

r? ghost
2025-01-31 12:28:15 +01:00
bors
7f36543a48 Auto merge of #136332 - jhpratt:rollup-aa69d0e, r=jhpratt
Rollup of 9 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #132156 (When encountering unexpected closure return type, point at return type/expression)
 - #133429 (Autodiff Upstreaming - rustc_codegen_ssa, rustc_middle)
 - #136281 (`rustc_hir_analysis` cleanups)
 - #136297 (Fix a typo in profile-guided-optimization.md)
 - #136300 (atomic: extend compare_and_swap migration docs)
 - #136310 (normalize `*.long-type.txt` paths for compare-mode tests)
 - #136312 (Disable `overflow_delimited_expr` in edition 2024)
 - #136313 (Filter out RPITITs when suggesting unconstrained assoc type on too many generics)
 - #136323 (Fix a typo in conventions.md)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-01-31 09:42:28 +00:00
Jacob Pratt
ae9dbf169f
Rollup merge of #132156 - estebank:closure-return, r=Nadrieril,compiler-errors
When encountering unexpected closure return type, point at return type/expression

```
error[E0271]: expected `{closure@fallback-closure-wrap.rs:18:40}` to be a closure that returns `()`, but it returns `!`
  --> $DIR/fallback-closure-wrap.rs:19:9
   |
LL |     let error = Closure::wrap(Box::new(move || {
   |                                        -------
LL |         panic!("Can't connect to server.");
   |         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `()`, found `!`
   |
   = note: expected unit type `()`
                   found type `!`
   = note: required for the cast from `Box<{closure@$DIR/fallback-closure-wrap.rs:18:40: 18:47}>` to `Box<dyn FnMut()>`
```

```
error[E0271]: expected `{closure@dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:6:10}` to be a closure that returns `bool`, but it returns `Option<()>`
  --> $DIR/dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:6:16
   |
LL |     call(|| -> Option<()> {
   |     ---- ------^^^^^^^^^^
   |     |          |
   |     |          expected `bool`, found `Option<()>`
   |     required by a bound introduced by this call
   |
   = note: expected type `bool`
              found enum `Option<()>`
note: required by a bound in `call`
  --> $DIR/dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:3:25
   |
LL | fn call(_: impl Fn() -> bool) {}
   |                         ^^^^ required by this bound in `call`
```

```
error[E0271]: expected `{closure@f670.rs:28:13}` to be a closure that returns `Result<(), _>`, but it returns `!`
    --> f670.rs:28:20
     |
28   |     let c = |e| -> ! {
     |             -------^
     |                    |
     |                    expected `Result<(), _>`, found `!`
...
32   |     f().or_else(c);
     |         ------- required by a bound introduced by this call
-Ztrack-diagnostics: created at compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/error_reporting/traits/fulfillment_errors.rs:1433:28
     |
     = note: expected enum `Result<(), _>`
                found type `!`
note: required by a bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else`
    --> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/result.rs:1406:39
     |
1406 |     pub fn or_else<F, O: FnOnce(E) -> Result<T, F>>(self, op: O) -> Result<T, F> {
     |                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else`
```

CC #111539.
2025-01-31 00:26:29 -05:00
bors
c37fbd873a Auto merge of #135318 - compiler-errors:vtable-fixes, r=lcnr
Fix deduplication mismatches in vtables leading to upcasting unsoundness

We currently have two cases where subtleties in supertraits can trigger disagreements in the vtable layout, e.g. leading to a different vtable layout being accessed at a callsite compared to what was prepared during unsizing. Namely:

### #135315

In this example, we were not normalizing supertraits when preparing vtables. In the example,

```
trait Supertrait<T> {
    fn _print_numbers(&self, mem: &[usize; 100]) {
        println!("{mem:?}");
    }
}
impl<T> Supertrait<T> for () {}

trait Identity {
    type Selff;
}
impl<Selff> Identity for Selff {
    type Selff = Selff;
}

trait Middle<T>: Supertrait<()> + Supertrait<T> {
    fn say_hello(&self, _: &usize) {
        println!("Hello!");
    }
}
impl<T> Middle<T> for () {}

trait Trait: Middle<<() as Identity>::Selff> {}
impl Trait for () {}

fn main() {
    (&() as &dyn Trait as &dyn Middle<()>).say_hello(&0);
}
```

When we prepare `dyn Trait`, we see a supertrait of `Middle<<() as Identity>::Selff>`, which itself has two supertraits `Supertrait<()>` and `Supertrait<<() as Identity>::Selff>`. These two supertraits are identical, but they are not duplicated because we were using structural equality and *not* considering normalization. This leads to a vtable layout with two trait pointers.

When we upcast to `dyn Middle<()>`, those two supertraits are now the same, leading to a vtable layout with only one trait pointer. This leads to an offset error, and we call the wrong method.

### #135316

This one is a bit more interesting, and is the bulk of the changes in this PR. It's a bit similar, except it uses binder equality instead of normalization to make the compiler get confused about two vtable layouts. In the example,

```
trait Supertrait<T> {
    fn _print_numbers(&self, mem: &[usize; 100]) {
        println!("{mem:?}");
    }
}
impl<T> Supertrait<T> for () {}

trait Trait<T, U>: Supertrait<T> + Supertrait<U> {
    fn say_hello(&self, _: &usize) {
        println!("Hello!");
    }
}
impl<T, U> Trait<T, U> for () {}

fn main() {
    (&() as &'static dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>
        as &'static dyn Trait<&'static (), &'static ()>)
        .say_hello(&0);
}
```

When we prepare the vtable for `dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>`, we currently consider the PolyTraitRef of the vtable as the key for a supertrait. This leads two two supertraits -- `Supertrait<&'static ()>` and `for<'a> Supertrait<&'a ()>`.

However, we can upcast[^up] without offsetting the vtable from `dyn for<'a> Trait<&'static (), &'a ()>` to `dyn Trait<&'static (), &'static ()>`. This is just instantiating the principal trait ref for a specific `'a = 'static`. However, when considering those supertraits, we now have only one distinct supertrait -- `Supertrait<&'static ()>` (which is deduplicated since there are two supertraits with the same substitutions). This leads to similar offsetting issues, leading to the wrong method being called.

[^up]: I say upcast but this is a cast that is allowed on stable, since it's not changing the vtable at all, just instantiating the binder of the principal trait ref for some lifetime.

The solution here is to recognize that a vtable isn't really meaningfully higher ranked, and to just treat a vtable as corresponding to a `TraitRef` so we can do this deduplication more faithfully. That is to say, the vtable for `dyn for<'a> Tr<'a>` and `dyn Tr<'x>` are always identical, since they both would correspond to a set of free regions on an impl... Do note that `Tr<for<'a> fn(&'a ())>` and `Tr<fn(&'static ())>` are still distinct.

----

There's a bit more that can be cleaned up. In codegen, we can stop using `PolyExistentialTraitRef` basically everywhere. We can also fix SMIR to stop storing `PolyExistentialTraitRef` in its vtable allocations.

As for testing, it's difficult to actually turn this into something that can be tested with `rustc_dump_vtable`, since having multiple supertraits that are identical is a recipe for ambiguity errors. Maybe someone else is more creative with getting that attr to work, since the tests I added being run-pass tests is a bit unsatisfying. Miri also doesn't help here, since it doesn't really generate vtables that are offset by an index in the same way as codegen.

r? `@lcnr` for the vibe check? Or reassign, idk. Maybe let's talk about whether this makes sense.

<sup>(I guess an alternative would also be to not do any deduplication of vtable supertraits (or only a really conservative subset) rather than trying to normalize and deduplicate more faithfully here. Not sure if that works and is sufficient tho.)</sup>

cc `@steffahn` -- ty for the minimizations
cc `@WaffleLapkin` -- since you're overseeing the feature stabilization :3

Fixes #135315
Fixes #135316
2025-01-31 04:09:11 +00:00
Esteban Küber
d116767113 review comment: change span argument 2025-01-30 18:38:42 +00:00
Esteban Küber
d2a781a2ec Remove unwrap()s 2025-01-30 18:38:42 +00:00
Esteban Küber
87d323c81e Add closure labels 2025-01-30 18:38:42 +00:00
Esteban Küber
03e9a38390 On E0271 for a closure behind a binding, point at binding in call too
```
error[E0271]: expected `{closure@return-type-doesnt-match-bound.rs:18:13}` to be a closure that returns `Result<(), _>`, but it returns `!`
    --> tests/ui/closures/return-type-doesnt-match-bound.rs:18:20
     |
18   |     let c = |e| -> ! { //~ ERROR to be a closure that returns
     |             -------^
     |                    |
     |                    expected `Result<(), _>`, found `!`
...
22   |     f().or_else(c);
     |         ------- -
     |         |
     |         required by a bound introduced by this call
     |
     = note: expected enum `Result<(), _>`
                found type `!`
note: required by a bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else`
    --> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/result.rs:1406:39
     |
1406 |     pub fn or_else<F, O: FnOnce(E) -> Result<T, F>>(self, op: O) -> Result<T, F> {
     |                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else`
```
2025-01-30 18:38:41 +00:00
Esteban Küber
d3a148fe07 When encountering unexpected closure return type, point at return type/expression
```
error[E0271]: expected `{closure@fallback-closure-wrap.rs:18:40}` to be a closure that returns `()`, but it returns `!`
  --> $DIR/fallback-closure-wrap.rs:19:9
   |
LL |     let error = Closure::wrap(Box::new(move || {
   |                                        -------
LL |         panic!("Can't connect to server.");
   |         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `()`, found `!`
   |
   = note: expected unit type `()`
                   found type `!`
   = note: required for the cast from `Box<{closure@$DIR/fallback-closure-wrap.rs:18:40: 18:47}>` to `Box<dyn FnMut()>`
```

```
error[E0271]: expected `{closure@dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:6:10}` to be a closure that returns `bool`, but it returns `Option<()>`
  --> $DIR/dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:6:16
   |
LL |     call(|| -> Option<()> {
   |     ---- ------^^^^^^^^^^
   |     |          |
   |     |          expected `bool`, found `Option<()>`
   |     required by a bound introduced by this call
   |
   = note: expected type `bool`
              found enum `Option<()>`
note: required by a bound in `call`
  --> $DIR/dont-ice-for-type-mismatch-in-closure-in-async.rs:3:25
   |
LL | fn call(_: impl Fn() -> bool) {}
   |                         ^^^^ required by this bound in `call`
```

```
error[E0271]: expected `{closure@f670.rs:28:13}` to be a closure that returns `Result<(), _>`, but it returns `!`
    --> f670.rs:28:20
     |
28   |     let c = |e| -> ! {
     |             -------^
     |                    |
     |                    expected `Result<(), _>`, found `!`
...
32   |     f().or_else(c);
     |         ------- required by a bound introduced by this call
-Ztrack-diagnostics: created at compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/error_reporting/traits/fulfillment_errors.rs:1433:28
     |
     = note: expected enum `Result<(), _>`
                found type `!`
note: required by a bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else`
    --> /home/gh-estebank/rust/library/core/src/result.rs:1406:39
     |
1406 |     pub fn or_else<F, O: FnOnce(E) -> Result<T, F>>(self, op: O) -> Result<T, F> {
     |                                       ^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `Result::<T, E>::or_else`
```
2025-01-30 18:38:37 +00:00
Michael Goulet
d98b99af56 More assertions, tests, and miri coverage 2025-01-30 17:44:28 +00:00
Lukas Markeffsky
0055fb92db check the types in ty::Value to value conversion
and remove `ty::Const::try_to_scalar` because it becomes redundant
2025-01-30 18:13:16 +01:00
Lukas Markeffsky
10fc0b159e introduce ty::Value
Co-authored-by: FedericoBruzzone <federico.bruzzone.i@gmail.com>
2025-01-30 17:47:44 +01:00
Michael Goulet
739ef83f31 Normalize vtable entries before walking and deduplicating them 2025-01-30 15:34:00 +00:00
Michael Goulet
fdc4bd22b7 Do not treat vtable supertraits as distinct when bound with different bound vars 2025-01-30 15:33:58 +00:00
Michael Goulet
08d7e9dfe5 Rework rustc_dump_vtable 2025-01-30 15:30:04 +00:00
bors
5a45ab9738 Auto merge of #136038 - compiler-errors:outlives, r=lcnr
Simplify and consolidate the way we handle construct `OutlivesEnvironment` for lexical region resolution

This is best reviewed commit-by-commit. I tried to consolidate the API for lexical region resolution *first*, then change the API when it was finally behind a single surface.

r? lcnr or reassign
2025-01-30 11:40:32 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
e8289d801c
Rollup merge of #136205 - compiler-errors:len-3, r=BoxyUwU
Properly check that array length is valid type during built-in unsizing in index

This results in duplicated errors, but this class of errors is not new; in general, we aren't really equipped to detect cases where a WF error due to a field type would be shadowed by the parent struct of that field also not being WF.

This also adds a note for these types of mismatches to make it clear that this is due to an array type.

Fixes #134352

r? boxyuwu
2025-01-29 15:29:41 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
f8d103df43
Rollup merge of #133382 - mu001999-contrib:diag/fnitem, r=lcnr
Suggest considering casting fn item as fn pointer in more cases

Fixes #132648
2025-01-29 15:29:27 +01:00
bors
ccc9ba5c30 Auto merge of #136225 - fmease:rollup-fm7m744, r=fmease
Rollup of 7 pull requests

Successful merges:

 - #135625 ([cfg_match] Document the use of expressions.)
 - #135902 (Do not consider child bound assumptions for rigid alias)
 - #135943 (Rename `Piece::String` to `Piece::Lit`)
 - #136104 (Add mermaid graphs of NLL regions and SCCs to polonius MIR dump)
 - #136143 (Update books)
 - #136147 (ABI-required target features: warn when they are missing in base CPU)
 - #136164 (Refactor FnKind variant to hold &Fn)

r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
2025-01-29 05:00:20 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
dbb092b671
Rollup merge of #135943 - hkBst:opt_imports, r=estebank
Rename `Piece::String` to `Piece::Lit`

This renames Piece::String to Piece::Lit to avoid shadowing std::string::String and removes "pub use Piece::*;".
2025-01-29 03:12:19 +01:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
42f46437ba
Rollup merge of #135902 - compiler-errors:item-non-self-bound-in-new-solver, r=lcnr
Do not consider child bound assumptions for rigid alias

r? lcnr

See first commit for the important details. For second commit, I also stacked a somewhat opinionated name change, though I can separate that if needed.

Fixes https://github.com/rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative/issues/149
2025-01-29 03:12:19 +01:00
bors
122fb29eb6 Auto merge of #136011 - compiler-errors:query-norm-vaniquishes-us, r=jackh726
Revert #135914: Remove usages of `QueryNormalizer` in the compiler

Reverts #135914.

r? jackh726
2025-01-29 02:12:12 +00:00
Michael Goulet
8e0909d98a Move param env bound deep normalization to OutlivesEnvironment building 2025-01-28 19:11:05 +00:00
Michael Goulet
009d68740f Make item self/non-self bound naming less whack 2025-01-28 19:08:50 +00:00
Michael Goulet
48b7e38c06 Move outlives env computation into methods 2025-01-28 18:55:03 +00:00
Michael Goulet
2b8930c71c Consolidate OutlivesEnv construction with resolve_regions 2025-01-28 18:55:03 +00:00
Marijn Schouten
3026545ab5 parse_format optimize import use 2025-01-28 19:33:00 +01:00
Michael Goulet
7e68422859 Properly check that array length is valid type during built-in unsizing in index 2025-01-28 17:52:28 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
9f22f35876
Rollup merge of #136066 - compiler-errors:local-spans, r=lcnr
Pass spans to `perform_locally_in_new_solver`

Nothing changes yet, but we may be able to use these spans in the future once we start dealing w the response region constraints better.

r? lcnr
2025-01-28 18:17:25 +01:00
mu001999
4203627ced Suggest considering casting fn item as fn pointer in more cases 2025-01-28 20:17:36 +08:00
Guillaume Gomez
03fdcffa1e
Rollup merge of #136114 - compiler-errors:more-idents, r=jieyouxu
Use identifiers more in diagnostics code

This should make the diagnostics code slightly more correct when rendering idents in mixed crate edition situations. Kinda a no-op, but a cleanup regardless.

r? oli-obk or reassign
2025-01-27 15:38:30 +01:00
Michael Goulet
ac1c6c50f4 Use identifiers in diagnostics more often 2025-01-27 01:23:34 +00:00
León Orell Valerian Liehr
57b5d3af62
Compiler: Finalize dyn compatibility renaming 2025-01-26 21:20:31 +01:00
Michael Goulet
6e1690a504 Pass spans to perform_locally_in_new_solver 2025-01-25 20:53:34 +00:00
Luca Versari
6bdc8778db Add a suggestion to cast target_feature fn items to fn pointers.
See
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/134090#issuecomment-2612197095
for the motivation behind this suggestion.
2025-01-25 21:36:40 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
8824ae6a6c
Rollup merge of #135949 - estebank:shorten-ty, r=davidtwco
Use short type string in E0308 secondary span label

We were previously printing the full type on the "this expression has type" label.

```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
  --> $DIR/secondary-label-with-long-type.rs:8:9
   |
LL |     let () = x;
   |         ^^   - this expression has type `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
   |         |
   |         expected `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`, found `()`
   |
   = note:  expected tuple `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
           found unit type `()`
   = note: the full type name has been written to '$TEST_BUILD_DIR/diagnostic-width/secondary-label-with-long-type/secondary-label-with-long-type.long-type-3987761834644699448.txt'
   = note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```

Reported in a comment of #135919.
2025-01-24 23:25:45 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ca5fa664ae
Rollup merge of #135749 - compiler-errors:param-ordering, r=davidtwco
Do not assume const params are printed after type params

Fixes #135737
2025-01-24 23:25:43 +01:00
Michael Goulet
4e3e91555c Revert "Rollup merge of #135914 - compiler-errors:vanquish-query-norm, r=jackh726"
This reverts commit 556d901c36, reversing
changes made to be15391703.
2025-01-24 16:55:29 +00:00
Michael Goulet
97e07da611 Do not assume const params are printed after type params 2025-01-24 16:51:20 +00:00
bors
8231e8599e Auto merge of #135272 - BoxyUwU:generic_arg_infer_reliability_2, r=compiler-errors
Forbid usage of `hir` `Infer` const/ty variants in ambiguous contexts

The feature `generic_arg_infer` allows providing `_` as an argument to const generics in order to infer them. This introduces a syntactic ambiguity as to whether generic arguments are type or const arguments. In order to get around this we introduced a fourth `GenericArg` variant, `Infer` used to represent `_` as an argument to generic parameters when we don't know if its a type or a const argument.

This made hir visitors that care about `TyKind::Infer` or `ConstArgKind::Infer` very error prone as checking for `TyKind::Infer`s in  `visit_ty` would find *some* type infer arguments but not *all* of them as they would sometimes be lowered to `GenericArg::Infer` instead.

Additionally the `visit_infer` method would previously only visit `GenericArg::Infer` not *all* infers (e.g. `TyKind::Infer`), this made it very easy to override `visit_infer` and expect it to visit all infers when in reality it would only visit *some* infers.

---

This PR aims to fix those issues by making the `TyKind` and `ConstArgKind` types generic over whether the infer types/consts are represented by `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` or out of line (e.g. by a `GenericArg::Infer` or accessible by overiding `visit_infer`). We then make HIR Visitors convert all const args and types to the versions where infer vars are stored out of line and call `visit_infer` in cases where a `Ty`/`Const` would previously have had a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer` variant:

API Summary
```rust
enum AmbigArg {}

enum Ty/ConstArgKind<Unambig = ()> {
   ...
   Infer(Unambig),
}

impl Ty/ConstArg {
  fn try_as_ambig_ty/ct(self) -> Option<Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>>;
}
impl Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg> {
  fn as_unambig_ty/ct(self) -> Ty/ConstArg;
}

enum InferKind {
  Ty(Ty),
  Const(ConstArg),
  Ambig(InferArg),
}

trait Visitor {
  ...
  fn visit_ty/const_arg(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result;
  fn visit_infer(&mut self, id: HirId, sp: Span, kind: InferKind) -> Self::Result;
}

// blanket impl'd, not meant to be overriden
trait VisitorExt {
  fn visit_ty/const_arg_unambig(&mut self, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result;
}

fn walk_unambig_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg) -> Self::Result;
fn walk_ty/const_arg(&mut V, Ty/ConstArg<AmbigArg>) -> Self::Result;
```

The end result is that `visit_infer` visits *all* infer args and is also the *only* way to visit an infer arg, `visit_ty` and `visit_const_arg` can now no longer encounter a `Ty/ConstArgKind::Infer`. Representing this in the type system means that it is now very difficult to mess things up, either accessing `TyKind::Infer` "just works" and you won't miss *some* type infers- or it doesn't work and you have to look at `visit_infer` or some `GenericArg::Infer` which forces you to think about the full complexity involved.

Unfortunately there is no lint right now about explicitly matching on uninhabited variants, I can't find the context for why this is the case 🤷‍♀️

I'm not convinced the framing of un/ambig ty/consts is necessarily the right one but I'm not sure what would be better. I somewhat like calling them full/partial types based on the fact that `Ty<Partial>`/`Ty<Full>` directly specifies how many of the type kinds are actually represented compared to `Ty<Ambig>` which which leaves that to the reader to figure out based on the logical consequences of it the type being in an ambiguous position.

---

tool changes have been modified in their own commits for easier reviewing by anyone getting cc'd from subtree changes. I also attempted to split out "bug fixes arising from the refactoring" into their own commit so they arent lumped in with a big general refactor commit

Fixes #112110
2025-01-24 11:12:01 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
556d901c36
Rollup merge of #135914 - compiler-errors:vanquish-query-norm, r=jackh726
Remove usages of `QueryNormalizer` in the compiler

I want to get rid of the `QueryNormalizer`, possibly changing it to be special cased just for normalizing erasing regions, or perhaps adapting `normalize_erasing_regions` to use the assoc type normalizer if caching is sufficient and removing it altogther.

This removes the last two usages of `.query_normalize` in the *compiler*. There are a few usages left in rustdoc and clippy, which exist only because the query normalizer is more resilient to errors and non-well-formed alias types. I will remove those next.

r? lcnr or reassign
2025-01-24 08:08:09 +01:00
Esteban Küber
32cf7ccadc Use short type string in E0308 secondary span label
We were previously printing the full type on the "this expression has type" label.

```
error[E0308]: mismatched types
  --> $DIR/secondary-label-with-long-type.rs:8:9
   |
LL |     let () = x;
   |         ^^   - this expression has type `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
   |         |
   |         expected `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`, found `()`
   |
   = note:  expected tuple `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
           found unit type `()`
   = note: the full type name has been written to '$TEST_BUILD_DIR/diagnostic-width/secondary-label-with-long-type/secondary-label-with-long-type.long-type-3987761834644699448.txt'
   = note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```

Reported in a comment of #135919.
2025-01-24 01:10:33 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
4496f23ca9
Rollup merge of #135492 - metamuffin:bug-invalid-await-suggest, r=compiler-errors
Add missing check for async body when suggesting await on futures.

Currently the compiler suggests adding `.await` to resolve some type conflicts without checking if the conflict happens in an async context. This can lead to the compiler suggesting `.await` in function signatures where it is invalid. Example:

```rs
trait A {
    fn a() -> impl Future<Output = ()>;
}
struct B;
impl A for B {
    fn a() -> impl Future<Output = impl Future<Output = ()>> {
        async { async { () } }
    }
}
```
```
error[E0271]: expected `impl Future<Output = impl Future<Output = ()>>` to be a future that resolves to `()`, but it resolves to `impl Future<Output = ()>`
 --> bug.rs:6:15
  |
6 |     fn a() -> impl Future<Output = impl Future<Output = ()>> {
  |               ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected `()`, found future
  |
note: calling an async function returns a future
 --> bug.rs:6:15
  |
6 |     fn a() -> impl Future<Output = impl Future<Output = ()>> {
  |               ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
note: required by a bound in `A::{synthetic#0}`
 --> bug.rs:2:27
  |
2 |     fn a() -> impl Future<Output = ()>;
  |                           ^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `A::{synthetic#0}`
help: consider `await`ing on the `Future`
  |
6 |     fn a() -> impl Future<Output = impl Future<Output = ()>>.await {
  |                                                             ++++++
```

The documentation of suggest_await_on_expect_found (`compiler/rustc_trait_selection/src/error_reporting/infer/suggest.rs:156`) even mentions such a check but does not actually implement it.

This PR adds that check to ensure `.await` is only suggested within async blocks.

There were 3 unit tests whose expected output needed to be changed because they had the suggestion outside of async. One of them (`tests/ui/async-await/dont-suggest-missing-await.rs`) actually tests that exact problem but expects it to be present.

Thanks to `@llenck` for initially noticing the bug and helping with fixing it
2025-01-23 19:54:24 +01:00
Boxy
2bdeff2fb8 visit_x_unambig 2025-01-23 06:01:36 +00:00
Boxy
98d80e22d0 Split hir TyKind and ConstArgKind in two and update hir::Visitor 2025-01-23 06:01:36 +00:00
Boxy
0f10ba60ff Make hir::TyKind::TraitObject use tagged ptr 2025-01-23 06:01:36 +00:00
Michael Goulet
00a0ef4206 Remove query normalize from dropck outlives type op 2025-01-23 05:56:23 +00:00
Matthias Krüger
318466aec0
Rollup merge of #135866 - BoxyUwU:dont_pick_fnptr_nested_goals, r=lcnr
Don't pick `T: FnPtr` nested goals as the leaf goal in diagnostics for new solver

r? `@lcnr`

See `tests/ui/traits/next-solver/diagnostics/dont-pick-fnptr-bound-as-leaf.rs` for a minimized example of what code this affects the diagnostics off. The output of running nightly `-Znext-solver` on that test is the following:
```
error[E0277]: the trait bound `Foo: Trait` is not satisfied
  --> src/lib.rs:14:20
   |
14 |     requires_trait(Foo);
   |     -------------- ^^^ the trait `FnPtr` is not implemented for `Foo`
   |     |
   |     required by a bound introduced by this call
   |
note: required for `Foo` to implement `Trait`
  --> src/lib.rs:7:16
   |
7  | impl<T: FnPtr> Trait for T {}
   |         -----  ^^^^^     ^
   |         |
   |         unsatisfied trait bound introduced here
note: required by a bound in `requires_trait`
  --> src/lib.rs:11:22
   |
11 | fn requires_trait<T: Trait>(_: T) {}
   |                      ^^^^^ required by this bound in `requires_trait`
```

Part of rust-lang/trait-system-refactor-initiative#148
2025-01-22 19:29:43 +01:00
Matthias Krüger
ef0e6863c6
Rollup merge of #135816 - BoxyUwU:root_normalizes_to_goal_ice, r=lcnr
Use `structurally_normalize` instead of manual `normalizes-to` goals in alias relate errors

r? `@lcnr`

I added `structurally_normalize_term` so that code that is generic over ty or const can use the structurally normalize helpers. See `tests/ui/traits/next-solver/diagnostics/alias_relate_error_uses_structurally_normalize.rs` for a description of the reason for the (now fixed) ICEs
2025-01-22 19:29:39 +01:00
Taylor Cramer
d00d4dfe0d Refactor dyn-compatibility error and suggestions
This CL makes a number of small changes to dyn compatibility errors:
- "object safety" has been renamed to "dyn-compatibility" throughout
- "Convert to enum" suggestions are no longer generated when there
  exists a type-generic impl of the trait or an impl for `dyn OtherTrait`
- Several error messages are reorganized for user readability

Additionally, the dyn compatibility error creation code has been
split out into functions.

cc #132713
cc #133267
2025-01-22 09:20:57 -08:00