It mirrors `ExprKind::Binary`, and contains a `BinOpKind`. This makes
`AssocOp` more like `ExprKind`. Note that the variants removed from
`AssocOp` are all named differently to `BinOpToken`, e.g. `Multiply`
instead of `Mul`, so that's an inconsistency removed.
The commit adds `precedence` and `fixity` methods to `BinOpKind`, and
calls them from the corresponding methods in `AssocOp`. This avoids the
need to create an `AssocOp` from a `BinOpKind` in a bunch of places, and
`AssocOp::from_ast_binop` is removed.
`AssocOp::to_ast_binop` is also no longer needed.
Overall things are shorter and nicer.
`AssocOp::AssignOp` contains a `BinOpToken`. `ExprKind::AssignOp`
contains a `BinOpKind`. Given that `AssocOp` is basically a cut-down
version of `ExprKind`, it makes sense to make `AssocOp` more like
`ExprKind`. Especially given that `AssocOp` and `BinOpKind` use semantic
operation names (e.g. `Mul`, `Div`), but `BinOpToken` uses syntactic
names (e.g. `Star`, `Slash`).
This results in more concise code, and removes the need for various
conversions. (Note that the removed functions `hirbinop2assignop` and
`astbinop2assignop` are semantically identical, because `hir::BinOp` is
just a synonum for `ast::BinOp`!)
The only downside to this is that it allows the possibility of some
nonsensical combinations, such as `AssocOp::AssignOp(BinOpKind::Lt)`.
But `ExprKind::AssignOp` already has that problem. The problem can be
fixed for both types in the future with some effort, by introducing an
`AssignOpKind` type.
- Remove dead link to `rustc_attr` crate.
- Add link to `rustc_attr_parsing` crate.
- Split up first paragraph so it looks better at crate-level summary
Make -Z unpretty=mir suggest -Z dump-mir as well for discoverability
While debugging something else, I got quite annoyed with `-Z unpretty=mir` showing me post-processed MIR instead of the one just after it is built. I ended up asking on Zulip and got pointed to `-Z dump-mir`. While this feature is documented in the rustc dev guide, I think it'd be good if the possibility of making use of it was staring you in the face while you need it.
revert accidental change in get_closest_merge_commit
This was accidentally merged as part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/137594. I need this local diff to be able to debug miri syncs, and then typed `git commit -a` too fast and didn't realize it includes this change... sorry for that.
r? ``@Kobzol``
Don't suggest constraining unstable associated types
Fixes#137624
This could be made a bit more specific, considering the local crate's stability or nightly status or something, but I think in general we should not be suggesting associated type bounds on unstable associated items.
Teach structured errors to display short `Ty<'_>`
Make it so that in every structured error annotated with `#[derive(Diagnostic)]` that has a field of type `Ty<'_>`, the printing of that value into a `String` will look at the thread-local storage `TyCtxt` in order to shorten to a length appropriate with the terminal width. When this happen, the resulting error will have a note with the file where the full type name was written to.
```
error[E0618]: expected function, found `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)``
--> long.rs:7:5
|
6 | fn foo(x: D) { //~ `x` has type `(...
| - `x` has type `((..., ..., ..., ...), ..., ..., ...)`
7 | x(); //~ ERROR expected function, found `(...
| ^--
| |
| call expression requires function
|
= note: the full name for the type has been written to 'long.long-type-14182675702747116984.txt'
= note: consider using `--verbose` to print the full type name to the console
```
Follow up to and response to the comments on #136898.
r? ``@oli-obk``
When the manually stripped entity receives a name as the first use
through a simple `let` statement, this name can be used in the generated
`if let Some(…)` expression instead of a placeholder.
Fix#14183
changelog: [`manual_strip`]: reuse existing identifier in suggestion
when possible
Change interners to start preallocated with an increased capacity
Inspired by https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/137005.
Added a `with_capacity` function to `InternedSet`. Changed the `CtxtInterners` to start with `InternedSets` preallocated with a capacity.
This *does* increase memory usage at very slightly(by ~1 MB at the start), altough that increase quickly disaperars for larger crates(since they require such capacity anyway).
A local perf run indicates this improves compiletimes for small crates(like `ripgrep`), without a negative effect on larger ones.
Include version number of libs being built in cargo lib metadata (esp. `librustc_driver*.so`)
Previously, on a non-stable channel, it's possible for two builds from different versioned sources (e.g. 1.84.0 vs 1.84.1) to produce a `librustc_driver*.so` with the same filename hashes. This causes problems with side-by-side installs wrt. linker search paths because 1.84.1 rustc bin and 1.84.0 rustc bin may try to link to the "same" `librustc_driver*.so` (same filename hash) but fail because the contents of the so is actually different.
We try to mitigate this by including the version number of artifacts being built via `__CARGO_DEFAULT_LIB_METADATA` (kind of an ugly hack, but I don't think cargo has a way for us to tell cargo to use a package version override).
Fixes#136701 (mitigates, really).
### Testing
Tested manually[^host] by:
```bash
$ cat src/version
1.86.0
$ ./x build library # w/ compiler profile, (non-stable) dev channel
$ lddtree build/host/stage1/bin/rustc
rustc => build/host/stage1/bin/rustc (interpreter => /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2)
librustc_driver-ea1b1b2291881cc4.so => build/host/stage1/bin/../lib/librustc_driver-ea1b1b2291881cc4.so
[...]
```
and observing that changing `src/version` to bump a point release causes `librustc_driver*.so` to have a different hash while sources are unmodified otherwise.
```bash
$ cat src/version
1.86.1
$ ./x build library # w/ compiler profile, (non-stable) dev channel
$ lddtree build/host/stage1/bin/rustc
rustc => build/host/stage1/bin/rustc (interpreter => /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2)
librustc_driver-746badadbcb74721.so => build/host/stage1/bin/../lib/librustc_driver-746badadbcb74721.so
[...]
```
cc `@clan` `@demize` could you check that if you backport this change against 1.84.{0,1} as reported in #136701, that the produced `rustc` binary works, under the context of the Gentoo build system setup?
[^host]: on a `x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu` host, no cross
Rollup of 14 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #136576 (pass optimization level to llvm-bitcode-linker)
- #137154 (Add UTF-8 validation fast paths in `Wtf8Buf`)
- #137311 (Enable `f16` for MIPS)
- #137320 (fix(rustdoc): Fixed stability version in rustdoc)
- #137529 (remove few unused args)
- #137544 (tests: Add regression test for derive token invalidation (#81099))
- #137559 (run some tests on emscripten again)
- #137601 (ssa/mono: deduplicate `type_has_metadata`)
- #137603 (codegen_llvm: avoid `Deref` impls w/ extern type)
- #137604 (trait_sel: resolve vars in host effects)
- #137609 (Complete the list of resources used in rustdoc output)
- #137613 (hir_analysis: skip self type of host effect preds in variances_of)
- #137614 (fix doc in library/core/src/pin.rs)
- #137622 (fix attribute-related ICE when parsing macro on the rhs of a name-value attribute)
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
hir_analysis: skip self type of host effect preds in variances_of
Discovered as part of an implementation of rust-lang/rfcs#3729 - w/out this then when introducing const trait bounds: many more interesting tests change with different output, missing errors, new errors, etc related to this but they all depend on feature flags and are much more complex than this test.
r? ``@oli-obk``